BCC Faculty Members Win HIM Team Excellence Award

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Laurie Vilord and Marsha Estabrook-Adams, two Berkshire Community College (BCC) adjunct faculty members in the Business & Computer Information Systems department, have been awarded a the Health Information Management (HIM) Team Excellence Award from the Massachusetts Health Information Management Association (MaHIMA).  
 
Vilord and Estabrook-Adams, along with Advisory Board President Ann Marie Perry, will be officially recognized at the MaHIMA Annual Conference on Monday, June 17, 2024 at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester. 
 
HIM Team Excellence Awards recognize outstanding efforts by a department or team in meeting the challenges of the ever-changing HIM environment through a new process or technique.?Awards are given in three categories:?Best Practice, Financial Impact and Collaboration.  
 
Vilord and Estabrook-Adams are receiving the award in the Collaboration category for instilling their "time, effort and passion" into building the Medical Coding/HIM certificate program at BCC and for securing professional certification for the program through the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) Professional Certificate Approval Program (PCAP). 
 
"I graduated from both the Medical Coding and Health Information Management certificate programs at BCC nine years ago and have enjoyed a successful career as an inpatient medical coder at a VA hospital," Vilord said. "Working with Marsha to bring the PCAP certification to these programs represents a culmination beyond our AHIMA credentials. These programs offer great job opportunities in STEM careers for Berkshire county residents." 
 
"The MaHIMA Team Excellence award provides recognition that this BCC program has achieved the highest national standards. This information is being celebrated in a forum that includes the Massachusetts HIMA membership of our professional peers. The award acknowledges and communicates BCC's place at the state and national level as providing a leading Medical Coding and HIM certificate education," said Estabrook-Adams. 
 
Other winners of MaHIMA Team Excellence Awards include Signature Healthcare's Health Information Management Team (Best Practice); Tufts Medicine's Coding DRG Validators and CDI Second-Level Review Team (Financial Impact); and Mass General Brigham's Quality and Safety Team (Collaboration). 
 

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Lenco Celebrates $5M in Capital Investments

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Executive Vice President Lenny Light says it's not the equipment but the staff that gives Lenco its competitive advantage. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Lenco Armored Vehicles has embarked on a $5 million capital investment project for faster, better manufacturing. 
 
A ribbon was cut on Monday in front of the company's new Trumpf TruLaser 3080, a machine designed to cut extra-large sheets of metal. This will increase the efficiency of building armored tactical vehicles, such as the BearCat, by about 40 percent. 
 
Executive Vice President Lenny Light recalled the Lenco's beginnings in 1981, when it operated out of 3,000 square feet on Merrill Road with 15 employees.  Today, Lenco has 170,000 square feet of manufacturing space and nearly 150 employees. 
 
"The work that we do here in Pittsfield contributes to millions of dollars being put back into our local economy. We're the largest commercial armored rescue vehicle manufacturer in the United States. We're one of the most respected brands locally. We also now own the largest fiber laser in the United States. It's the only one of its kind in the Northeast," he said, motioning to the massive, modern machinery. 
 
"But the equipment that we have is not our competitive advantage — our welders, our forklifts, our cranes — any company can buy this same exact equipment." 
 
Rather than the equipment, he said, it's the staff who shows up every day with a can-do attitude that gives Lenco its competitive advantage. 
 
Planning for the industrial cutter began 18 months ago, when the company needed to decide if it was the right equipment for the future. Trumpf, named for its founder, is a German-headquartered global manufacturer of high-end metal processing (computer numerical control) machines, including laser technology. The TruLaser 3080 uses a high-intensity laser beam to cut through metals with speed and accuracy.
 
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