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Williamstown native Justin Poirot said the effort to help victims of Hurricane Helene stemmed from a simple Facebook post. The outpouring from the community was so great, he's considering a second trip.

Mount Greylock Grad Trucks Locally Donated Supplies to North Carolina

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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Piles of donations were waiting for Justin Poirot at the Colonial Shopping Center on Wednesday. The final stop was to be in Pittsfield but his trailer was already overfull. 
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Justin Poirot, a 1997 Mount Greylock Regional graduate, stopped at the Colonial Plaza on Wednesday to top off his trailer before heading to North Carolina.
 
"I grew up in Berkshire County, and I lived in Florida for 27 years so I have seen what hurricanes can do directly and how they affect people," Poirot said. "Even when the story is out of the news, people are still struggling and they aren't getting the help they need."
 
The goal was to fill a trailer with 7,000 pounds of food, clothing, necessities and tools to help North Carolinians, thousands of whom are still dealing with power outages, road washouts and flooding after Hurricane Helene hit the Appalachian region on Sept. 26.
 
Poirot did pickups in Hadley, South Hadley and Ware on Tuesday. By Wednesday in Williamstown, he was full.
 
"People came out in droves," he said. "I am going to have extra … this was going to be the second to last stop but I don't think I can take anymore."
 
He said he would sort through the donations and make sure to bring down the absolute essentials before figuring out a second trip down South.
 
Supplies needed include baby formula and diapers, cat and dog food, canned and nonperishable items, blankets and sleeping bags, tools such as shovels and axes, among other things.
 
"People brought a lot of gas stoves, a lot of warm clothing, food for animals lots of things for children and babies," he said.
 
The North Adams Elks have donated 40 cases of bottled water and Drury High School students were drawing and writing cards and poems through a community service program with teacher Pat Boulger.
 
Poirot has been in touch with his brother as well as mission groups working in the affected area. He said they plan to bring the donations to Black Mountain and Chimney Rock.
 
Poirot attended Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in the state of Florida and spent more than 20 years as a police officer in Gainesville, including as a helicopter pilot for the force. He more recently retired and now lives in South Hadley.
 
He said he was blown away by the kindness within the community.
 
"I'm blown away. This is all just started from a single Facebook post," he said. "So the need for a second run obviously is there. We are having too much, and that is not a bad thing because it's all going back."
 
Poirot said he plans to leave at the "crack of dawn" Thursday morning, deliver the goods Friday and Saturday, then return home Sunday.

Tags: donations,   hurricane,   

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Mount Greylock Regional Class of 2026 'Embraced the Unexpected'

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

Speaker William Apotsos says the class took the red pill, embracing the unexpected; classmate Madison Powell tells them they're still becoming the people they will be. 
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Mount Greylock Regional School sent 67 graduates off with diplomas and a cap toss on Saturday. 
 
The seniors queued up to enter the school gym with "Pomp and Circumstance" and scattered out the doors to "Choose Joy." 
 
It was the choices to be present that had gotten the Mounties to this day, said William Apotsos, whom the class had selected as their graduating speaker. "They didn't just decide to be present, they refused to be absent."
 
When one little girl had thanked him for being there to referee a youth soccer game, it drove "home the importance of not only being present but refusing to be absent," he said. 
 
Being present had been difficult in the transition between remote learning during the pandemic and returning to the school, when the class had to figure out how to be present together — physically, mentally and socially. 
 
"There is always the safe route. Stick to what you know, stick around people you know, and never really leave your metaphorical shell that you built up over your time at home. ... Then there was the more dangerous: put yourself out there, embrace your impact option,"  Apotsos said. 
 
"It's very much a red pill and blue pill situation, and what I am most proud of, that pretty much every single person on this stage took the red pill. They chose to embrace the unexpected and decide that they wouldn't let a couple years of isolation determine who they were going to be."
 
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