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The pool is open two nights a week at the renamed North Adams Recreation Center, the former YMCA.
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Mayor Jennifer Macksey, left, Russell Beauchamp and Sonia DiSanti ready for the pool reopening on Thursday night.
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There was a wait for the racquetball court.
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The large tube is part of the ventilation system to control the humidity.
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Levi and Colton Sweet were eager but leery of entering the pool.
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The pool is open Tuesday and Thursday nights with hopes opening on those mornings soon.
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The painted and cleaned lobby.

North Adams Recreation Center Opens Long-Closed Pool

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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New exercise bikes at the recreation center along with new flooring. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Splashing and squealing signaled the reopening of the pool Thursday at the former YMCA after nearly two dry years.
 
Now dubbed the North Adams Recreation Center, the building attached to Brayton Elementary School has been scrubbed clean and opened last month for some activities. 
 
But the crown jewel, the pool, had to wait until the city could hire lifeguards. 
 
Sonia DiSanti, who learned to swim at the old Y, stepped up to cover two evenings a week for now.
 
"I did aquatics, fitness and sports when I was here, I was here as a lifeguard since I was 15," said DiSanti, now executive director of Youth Center Inc. "I'm really thrilled about it."
 
The building is open limited hours on Tuesdays and Thursdays; the pool is only open in the evening those days from 5:30 to 8 p.m. for now. 
 
Mayor Jennifer Macksey said the goal is to not put too much programming in until an operator can take over the building. 
 
"So we had racquetball, Zumba, basketball, pickleball and cycling going for about a month," she said, during a tour of the facility. 
 
"I don't want to build programs that they're going to switch up. So we've been very sensitive to what we do, because I don't want them to come in and say, well, the city did this, and why are you doing that? And we're trying to build programs that they'll keep and continue."
 
DiSanti really stepped up to help get the pool open, she said, after the city ran a class for five people to train as lifeguards — none of whom were willing to work during the day. The mayor said there are couple in the pipeline now with the hope of getting the pool open in the mornings. 
 
"We won't be open seven days but we at least want to be open three solid days," she said. "So that's what we're working toward."
 
The pool was closed in March 2023 after the roof failed a structural inspection; a year later, the YMCA announced it would pull out. The organization had been in the city since 1886 and moved into the current building in 1971 after its Summer Street building was targeted for demolition as part of urban renewal.
 
By 1990, the Y was struggling financially and the city purchased its land and assets for $325,000 to clear its debt and to provide a location for the new and attached Brayton School. It was leased back to the nonprofit, which was responsible for its upkeep. 
 
When the Y left earlier this year, it took everything from the equipment to the soap dispensers, said the mayor, who described the condition of the building as "gross."
 
The walls have been freshly painted, the floors cleaned and buffed, carpeting removed and new flooring put in place in several areas. New cycles have been purchased along with other equipment and the former child-care area cleaned and painted for future use.
 
In the pool area, the roof has been repaired and three laminated beams had to be replaced. A new heating and ventilation system has been installed to control the humidity and prevent a repeat of the roof issues.
 
The pool has been "scrubbed and scrubbed and scrubbed and scrubbed," she said and the filters cleaned. Commissioner of Public Services Timothy Lescarbeau has been overseeing the filtration and pool pH and the lifeguards will be responsible for testing and cleaning at night. Notably, the building smelled clean and there's no odor of chlorine when you enter it.
 
"It's not perfect, but it's clean," said the mayor, who pointed out some other areas to attend, including the shared gym with the elementary school. 
 
On Thursday night, the parking lot was filling up and area residents were filing in to use the pool, the racquetball court, the gym and the cycling stations. Classes are being held on Tuesday and Thursday mornings for spin, pickleball and racquetball, and in the evenings for fit fusion, racquetball and opening cycling.
 
Russell Beauchamp is in charge as a seasonal employee. Macksey said the $5 charge for activities is so far covering payroll but she hopes to bring on an operator in the coming months. She said she's been in talks with the Boys and Girls Club in Pittsfield, which has also helped with lifeguard training. 
 
The work to date has been done with the city's American Rescue Plan Act funds, which will be expiring. 
 
"We need income in the building," she said. "But I also feel this is a public service. I think this is really going to help rebuild and engage our young at heart population and provide a place, especially in the winter, for kids to come ... to get them away from the video games and the TV and that kind of stuff. ... 
 
"If it means I'm here a night a week, I'm here a night a week."

Tags: pool,   recreation center,   YMCA,   

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Letter: Save Notch Forest

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor: I'm writing in regards to the Save Notch Forest signs that I have seen.

As a proud Masshole native from North Adams, that has transplanted to Southwest Vermont, I was curious as to what the signs were about.

I am grateful that I checked out the site on the sign to learn of the extensive and heinous logging plans of the Mass Audubon society near the North Adams reservoir.

As someone who travels back down to Mass sometimes daily and ventures to the reservoir 95 percent of that time for just the peace and beauty of being able to just sit there in awe.

Each time I go, I am guaranteed to see the bald eagle that perches on the pine or birch on the eastern end of the reservoir. I've had quite a few joyfully, awesome experiences with watching it. Be when it was just chilling peacefully or swooping at the geese getting them all flustered but I loved hearing it's call after the beautiful Loons floating in the reservoir.

There was this time I could hear it calling and crying, but unable to see it. I then look up to see a hawk gliding back and forth along the reservoir, doing it's best to taunt and harass the Eagle. From the direction of the cries, I figured the bald eagle's nest must be somewhere behind that tree it usually sits on on the water's edge.

I just do not understand how Mass Audubon Society can intentionally destroy the bald eagle's habitat ... let alone the loons ... let alone all of the other heinous logging aspects that come with its proposal near the North Adams water supply. Way up mountainous terrain on already strained roads that are slowly sliding off the mountainside and near public habitation.

There are a million other places on Greylock, North Adams or Massachusetts in general, what about the other side in South Williamstown/New Ashford? More space, more direct, less people, no water supply or endangered species habitat to destroy for the fun of it.

Why does it have to be Greylock and North Adams you experiment with? Why experiment at all?

I'm grateful I stumbled upon the mighty little forest army fighting for what's good and right, let alone common sense. I am also eternally grateful for the abundant awe inspiring magic of Greylock and all she bestows.

Felicia Packard
Bennington, Vt.

 

 

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