image description
Living In Recovery will host its third annual overdose awareness memorial and vigil on Aug. 31 at The Common and Park Square.

Pittsfield Parks Commission OKs Summer Events

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — With warm weather on the horizon, the Parks Commission OKed summer events during its regular meeting on Tuesday.
 
An arts festival and an earth expo were approved for The Common.
 
On July 6, the Mill Town Foundation will host the first Common Ground Arts Festival.  The free event will include live music, dance performances, and family-friendly activities.  
 
"It's basically an extension of, or kind of a 2.0 version of Tanglewood in The City where we're getting more nonprofits from the area involved for live music, dance performances, yoga, some wellness stuff but a similar feel to Tanglewood in The City that will have vendors and performances on the stage," Program Manager Andy Wrba explained.
 
He added that around 750 attendees would be a win, and the foundation would be happy to get in touch with the Pittsfield Police for extra detail.
 
On August 10, the Berkshire Earth Expo will take place at The Common alongside the Downtown Pittsfield Farmer's Market.  
 
The event will be hosted by Living the Change Berkshires, which aims to address climate change.
 
"We basically invite organizations that are involved with environmental issues, nature issues, climate change issues to come to sort of a vendors market so we will have people sitting there tabling," representative Anne Legene said.
 
"We're thinking of about probably around 40 at the most and it's basically an extension of the farmers market. Roots Rising is aware and is also collaborating with us but they did want us to get a separate permit."
 
Living In Recovery will host its third annual overdose awareness memorial and vigil on Aug. 31 at The Common and Park Square.
 
"We'll have a memorial service on The Common just like the last couple of years, interfaith prayers or offerings of support to the families of the bereaved, and then from there, we'll walk over to Park Square where we'll hold a candlelight vigil," Program Director Julie MacDonald explained.
 
At Park Square, there will be a sign representing each Berkshire County person lost to an overdose in the past year with an illuminated battery-operated candle overnight.  
 
From April 4 to April 18, the Elizabeth Freeman Center will have a teal flag placed in Park Square to recognize Sexual Assault Awareness Month.
 
"We have served over 416 people at our agency in the last year of sexual assault. In one's lifetime over one in four women and one in 26 men have been a victim of a rape or sexual assault in their lifetime. Something we don't want to talk about. It's pretty uncomfortable," Administrative Assistant Esther Anderson explained.
 
"We just like to bring awareness of it and we'd like the opportunity to place our flags in Park Square on the fourth of April and we will pick them up."
 
 

Tags: events,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Youth For The Future: Adwita Arunkumar

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Williams Elementary School fourth-grader Adwita Arunkumar has been selected as our April Youth for the Future for her mentoring of a younger child.

Youth for the Future is a 12-month series that honors young individuals that have made an impact on their community. This year's sponsor is Patriot Car Wash. Nominate a youth here

Adwita has cortical visual impairment; she has been working with her teacher, Lynn Shortis, and her, paraprofessional Nadine Henner.

"My journey with CVI means that I learned in a different way. I work hard every day with Miss Henner and Miss Lynn, to show how smart I am," she said.

"Adwita is a remarkable student. She's a remarkable child. She has, as she shared, cortical visual impairment, which is a brain-based visual processing disorder, which means the information coming in through the eyes is interfered with somewhere along the pathways, and we never quite know what's being interpreted and how and how it's being seen," said Shortis.

"So she has a lot of accommodations and specialized instruction to help her learn."

Recently Adwita has chosen to mentor 4-year-old Cayden Ziemba, who is also visually impaired.

"I decided to be a mentor to Cayden so that she can learn some new things. I teach her how to walk with the cane, with the diagonal and tap technique, I am teaching her Braille," she said. "I enjoy spending time with Cayden, playing games and being a good role model."

Shortis said the mentoring opportunity came up when Cayden was entering preschool at Williams, and they introduced her to Adwita. 

"Adwita works really, really hard academically. She's very smart, but there are a lot of challenges in that, because of the way that it's so visual and she's a natural. She's just, it's automatic," Shortis said. "It's kind of like a switch is turned on and she becomes this extremely confident and proud person in this teacher role."

Adwita also has been helping Cayden on how to use her cane on the bus and became a mentor in a unexpected ways.

"Immediately at the start of this year, she would meet Cayden at the bus. She has taught Cayden how to use her cane to go down the bus stairs. Again, Adwita learned that skill, so it wasn't something I had to say to her, this is what you need to have Cayden do. She just automatically picked that up and transferred that information," said Shortis. "Cayden is now going down the bus step steps independently with her cane. And then she really works hard with Adwita in traveling through the hallways, Adwita leads her to her class every morning, helps her put her things away and get ready for her morning."

Adwita said she hopes Cayden can feel excited about school and that other students can feel good about themselves as well.

"I want them to know that Braille is cool to learn. You can feel the bumpiness with your fingers. I want people to know how you can still learn if your brain works differently sometimes. I need to have a lot of patience working with a 3-year-old. I need to be creative and energized," she said.

She hopes to one day take her mentoring skills to the head of the class as a teacher.

"I want to become a teacher and teach other students when I grow up. I might want to teach math, because I am great at it," she said. "I also want to teach others about CVI. CVI doesn't stop me from being able to do anything I want to. I want students to not feel stressed out and know that they can do anything they want by working hard and persevering."

Her one-to-one paraprofessional said she likes seeing the bond that has grown between the two girls, and can picture Adwita being a teacher one day.

"I do see her in the future being a teacher because of her patience, understanding and just natural-born instinctive skills on how to work with young children," Henner said.

Shortis also said their bond is quite special and their relationship has helped to bring out the confidence in each other.

"The beauty of it, there's just something about it their bond is, I don't even really have a word to describe the bond that the two of them have. I think they share something in common, that they're both visually impaired, and regardless of the fact that their visual impairment differs and the you know the cause of it differs," she said.

"They can relate. And they both have the cane. They're both learning some Braille. But there's something else that's there that just the two of them connected immediately, and you see it. You just you see it in their overall relationship."

 
View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories