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North Adams Schools Preparing for Big Move, Greylock Closure

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The North Adams Public Schools is already preparing for its big move this summer. 
 
The closure of Greylock School at the end of the school year and the reconfiguring of grades between Brayton and Colegrove Park means relocating classrooms, teachers and students.
 
Superintendent Barbara Malkas told the School Committee on Tuesday that the goal is to have everything moved by Aug. 15; all packing will be completed by June 14.
 
"We expect that we will be vacating all classrooms and moving packing materials to staging areas located at each building," she said. Staff will be working around the summer program being held at Greylock so Brayton and Colegrove Park elementeries will be prepared for return to school. 
 
"We'll worry about decommissioning Greylock as we move into the fall."
 
The committee authorized the use of up to $75,000 from the School Choice account to support the summer moving expenses. Committee member Richard Alcombright asked if that was going to be enough.
 
Business Administrator Nancy Rauscher said the quotes and estimates they had received were about $75,000, "so we believe that will be more than enough."
 
Special accounts will be set up relative to the move and then charge against them.
 
"We have rented a U-Haul truck to help with supporting the various moves," Malkas said. "We also have some built-in salaries, seasonal salaries, with respect to custodians, facilities for technology, to again help us facilitate moving."
 
There are also costs related to taking down and reinstalling smart boards from Greylock and Rauscher said the estimate also includes funds for principals to bring in specific staff, such as for help with libraries. 
 
 To date, staff at all three schools have been working with facilities to prepare floor plans and room assignments. Each classroom being moves has 15 boxes and packing materials and teachers are being given time to pack what they need. The district is also hiring five custodial staff and a technician to help with information technology setups. Rauscher said they have the capacity to take on more help if needed. 
 
Students in prekindergarten through Grade 2 will move to Brayton; all those in Grades 3-6 will shift to Colegrove Park. 
 
"On Aug. 23 we have finalize our preparations for school opening because we will be opening on the 26th with district convocation," Malkas said. "Then in September or October we will be working through the process of decommissioning Greylock Elementary School. ...
 
"Then the committee will have to meet and look at what needs to happen in terms of identifying the need for any supplies or equipment that might be considered surplus."
 
Once declared surplus, the committee can decide how it wants to sell or dispose of the materials. Malkas said this needs to happen by early October because the school will not be winterized. 
 
Teachers are being told to take July off and relax because they won't be able to get into either Colgrove or Brayton, the superintendent said. 
 
"Really there's so many people involved in making this happen," she said. "Until I know that, you know, facilities is set, technology is set, the services are set ... then we'll say yes, teachers can start coming into the building and getting ready."
 
July will also be time for the summer school program, being held at Greylock, Drury High School and Many Forks Farm in Clarksburg. Coordinator Nancy Pecor, who also manages the Adult Basic Education, gave the School Committee the rundown on some 375 hours of programming planned during the month. 
 
The annual 21st Century Summer Program runs four weeks in July four hours per day for Kindercamp and seven for Summer Science Camp. Other programming includes the Science Explorers, Imagination Station and Fitness Power with Detective Stephanie Mirante. 
 
Many Forks will host part of four-week programs for Grades 5-9 learning about crops, animals, construction and cooking. This is a collaboration between the schools, the farm and Greenagers. 
 
Drury will have two sessions of about 60 students with activities such as music, guitar, role playing, animation and Magic the Gathering. Ten high school interns will also  be working with the lower grades during the summer program. 
 
Two one-week leadership camps for Grades 5-8 will be held at Windsor Lake in July and August, focusing on team building and first-responders skills and being capped off with a day at Ramblewild. 
 
Sunshine Camp will also return to Windsor Lake as well as other special education programs. 
 
The School Committee will not meet again until Aug. 27. 

Tags: NAPS,   school closures,   

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Letter: On Timberspeak in North Adams

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor:

Like every other resident of North Adams, I was until very recently unaware of a sneaky logging plan for a patch of pristine public lands on the south side of Mount Greylock called Notch Woods.

Excuse me, it's not a logging plan, it's a forest management plan, or is it a forest stewardship plan? Whatever obfuscating rhetoric you choose, the timber industry is about to rip 70 acres of iconic public land to shreds, and on that razed ground build back what might be their crowning achievement in euphemism, wait for it, a "climate resilient forest."

You can almost hear the snickering timber industry executives. What we need instead is a forest seemingly impossible to come by, one resilient to human intervention.

Although the city of North Adams unfortunately fell for the "climate resilient forest" pitch over two years ago, our civic leadership withheld the cutting plan from its citizens so we now have almost no time to organize and disrupt the imminent sound of mechanical treatments, scheduled to begin in a couple of months. ("Mechanical treatment" is timberspeak for "sawblades gouging into wood," FYI.)

"So what's the big deal," you might ask? "70 acres doesn't sound so bad. Quit crying, lumber has to come from somewhere, why not North Adams?"

Here's why:

We're only the pilot program. Notch Woods is home to the Bellows Pipe trail, voted by Conde Nast Traveler as one of the top 25 hikes in the country on which to enjoy fall foliage, and in an obscene example of irony, the trail walked by perhaps nature's most eloquent advocate, Henry David Thoreau, as he summitted the tallest peak in Massachusetts. If the timber industry can pull off this swindle on a historically recognized piece of public land, the precedent will be set for its ability to target public land anywhere.

"Hello, are you concerned about climate change? You are?? So are we!!! I knew we'd have a lot in common. Good news is that we've got a fantastic solution for you and your community ... ."

Sound cool?

Maybe you'll be as lucky as we are in North Adams to enjoy the privilege of getting your very own brand-new "climate resilient forest" delivered at no cost by the benevolent hands of the timber industry.

The only catch is that they have to cut down all your trees before they can begin to rebuild.

Noah Haidle
North Adams, Mass. 

 

 

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