PITTSFIELD, Mass. — State Commissioner of Higher Education Noe Ortega will be the keynote speaker for Berkshire Community College's 65th commencement at Tanglewood in Lenox on Friday, May 30, at 4:30 p.m.
Ortega was sworn in as commissioner in 2022. He has led the Department of Higher Education through a time of historic investment by the state Legislature and Healey-Driscoll administration in affordability and access for all learners in the commonwealth.
"We are truly excited to have Commissioner Ortega speak to our graduates this year," said BCC President Ellen Kennedy. "We know he has spent a lot of his career focused on access, especially for underserved populations, and I think he'll have a compelling story and sage advice to share with our students this year."
He received his bachelor of arts in political science from St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas, his master of science in school counseling from Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi, and his Ph.D. in higher education policy from the University of Michigan. His research has focused on postsecondary success for historically underserved students and higher education finance at American public colleges and universities.
Before coming to Massachusetts, he was the secretary of education for the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and, as deputy secretary and commissioner for Pennsylvania's Office of Postsecondary and Higher Education, he led efforts to close postsecondary attainment gaps and to diversify Pennsylvania's educator workforce. Prior to that, he held several academic and administrative roles at the University of Michigan.
Ortega began his education career by spending seven years as director of Kogakusha, a language institute in Osaka, Japan, where he trained teachers in early childhood language acquisition. He then spent nearly a decade working in the areas of financial aid and enrollment management at public and private universities in Texas and also served as a P-16 specialist for the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.
During Ortega's tenure, Massachusetts has more than doubled its investment in the state's financial aid programs. These investments have made the commonwealth's public community colleges free and made its public four-year colleges and universities tuition and fee free for Pell Grant-eligible students, while reducing costs for middle-income students.
He is dedicated to closing equity gaps through the Board of Higher Education's four strategic priorities: student success and affordability, economic mobility, public good, and innovation.
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Pittsfield ConCom OKs Wahconah Park Demo, Ice Rink
The property at 105 Wahconah St. has drawn attention for several years after the grandstand was deemed unsafe in 2022. Planners have determined that starting from square one is the best option, and the park's front lawn is seen as a great place to site the new pop-up ice skating rink while baseball is paused.
"From a higher level, the project's really two phases, and our goal is that phase one is this demolition phase, and we have a few goals that we want to meet as part of this step, and then the second step is to rehabilitate the park and to build new a new grandstand," James Scalise of SK Design explained on behalf of the city.
"But we'd like these two phases to happen in series one immediately after the other."
On Thursday, the ConCom issued orders of conditions for both city projects.
Mayor Peter Marchetti received a final report from the Wahconah Park Restoration Committee last year recommending a $28.4 million rebuild of the grandstand and parking lot. In July, the Parks Commission voted to demolish the historic, crumbling grandstand and have the project team consider how to retain the electrical elements so that baseball can continue to be played.
Last year, there was $18 million committed between grant funding and capital borrowing.
This application approved only the demolition of the more than 100-year-old structure. Scalise explained that it establishes the reuse of the approved flood storage and storage created by the demolition, corrects the elevation benchmark, and corrects the wetland boundary.
Jewish Federation of the Berkshires President Arlene Schiff opened the festivities with a recognition of the victims of Sunday's mass shooting in Australia and praise for a hero who helped stop the killing.
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The Friday morning fire that gutted the Wagon Wheel Inn is still under investigation, and several people who were living at the motel have moved to another one.
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