Start Time Changed for Pittsfield July 4 5K

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. -- The Berkshire Health Systems 4th of July 5K start time has been moved to 9 a.m., the Berkshire Running Center announced on social media on Saturday.
 
The organizer of the annual road race said that the time was changed by half an hour in order to accommodate parade road closures.
 
On Sunday morning, the center said that 904 runners were signed up for the 5-kilometer race through downtown Pittsfield, including runners from five different countries and 22 states.
 
This is the 37th running of the holiday 5K, which will use the same course as Pittsfield's annual Independence Day parade.
 
Runners will start the course on Wahconah Street adjacent to the Wilson Street and Wahconah Street intersection. Wahconah Street will be closed to traffic at 8 a.m. to provide safe passage for all the participants.
 
Online registration is open until Monday at 5 p.m. through the Berkshire Running Foundation website, www.berkshirerun.org and click on events or through www.zippyreg.com. In-person registration and bib pick up is from 3 to 6 p.m. on Tuesday, July 2, and Wednesday, July 3, at Berkshire Running Center, 5 Cheshire Rd Suite 119, downstairs in the Allendale Shopping Center.
 
There is no day-of-race registration for the race.
 
Proceeds from the event will support Berkshire Health Systems Community Wellness Programming.
 
For more information on this event please contact Shiobbean Lemme at director@berkshirerun.org.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Pittsfield's Ward 2 Councilor Petitions to Explore Police Station at Morningside

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Ward 2 Councilor Cameron Cunningham wants the city to explore turning Morningside Community School, which will not reopen in the fall, into a police station. 

He announced on social media that he will file a petition requesting the city to study converting the Morningside Community School building into a new Pittsfield Police Department headquarters and community resource hub.

"Morningside families deserve to feel comfortable and safe in their neighborhood. Converting the building into a police headquarters at 100 Burbank Street could put an integrated, visible public safety presence in the heart of a neighborhood that has asked for an end to this pattern of violence, he wrote. 

"Combined with youth programming, violence prevention resources, and community services in the same building, this is the kind of structural change that Morningside needs. The building must not be allowed to sit vacant deteriorating. It's time to use it to make Morningside safer. 

Cunningham's petition, which he posted, asks that Pittsfield conduct a feasibility study on the proposal, considering at minimum, considering the building's physical condition and cost of necessary rehabilitation, an estimated cost of relocating the Pittsfield Police Department, opportunities for the co-location of community services, available funding mechanisms to offset costs, and a recommended timeline. 

The pattern of violence references a deadly shooting near Morningside last week. 

Police are seeking an "armed and dangerous suspect," identified as Terry Martizna, for the murder of 29-year-old Pittsfield resident Justin Crawford.

Crawford was one of two individuals who were shot on Thursday, June 18, near the intersection of Pleasure Avenue and Tyler Street in Pittsfield. The second person, who has not been identified, was treated for a non-life-threatening injury at Berkshire Medical Center.

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