A rally at Field Park on Saturday drew more than 200 people, part of May Day protests nationwide since Thursday. Standouts were also planned in Pittsfield and West Stockbridge.
State Sen. Paul Mark speaks to the gathering before heading to Pittsfield's standout. He also attended one in Holyoke.
The rally had planned to march to Spring Street but the threatening sky canceled that.
State Sen. Paul Mark becomes the 1,001 signature on Hailey Peters petition to the federal delegation to 'fire' Elon Musk.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Speakers at a May Day rally at Field Park stressed the need to rise together to push back against actions being taken by the Trump administration that they say weaken civil rights.
"They are dismantling our voting rights. They are gutting protections for workers. They are attacking public education, banning books and silencing honest history," said Dennis Powell, president of the Berkshire Chapter of the NAACP. "They are playing politics with our health care, putting corporate profits above human lives. They sow division, fear and hatred, because they know that we are weaker when we are divided ...
"So we are here to say we are not weak. We are rising."
At least 200 people were holding signs at the park and waving to a chorus of tooting horns, and a few catcalls. Saturday's event followed thousands held worldwide on Thursday for May Day and was the latest local protest of the president and multibillionaire Elon Musk's actions in hollowing out government agencies, and the government's detaining of immigrants and a flurry of executive orders targeting everything from education to showerheads.
"It's a dark time, but I think the resistance movement is building, and I think people are starting to get the message, like, we need to keep doing this," said Wendy Penner of Greylock Together, organizer of the rally. "This isn't going to be like a one and done thing in terms of standouts protests. And my hope is it's building, not just in Massachusetts, but it's building in all the purple and red states across the country."
She believes more and more people are disgusted by what's happening and that standouts and rallies will have an exponential effect, what researchers call the "theory of change" when the 3.5 percent of the population participates in a nonviolent resistance.
"When it's in the news in the blue states, then I think it's empowering our officials to use their leverage and power," Penner said. "And then when their colleagues are wavering, they can have conversations about how to get support. So it's kind of an inside/outside game, right? We're doing our thing on the outside, and we're trying to put all that pressure on the folks on the inside."
Hailey Peters of North Adams presented a petition with 1,000 signatures to state Sen. Paul Mark to present to the state's federal delegation to do whatever they could to "fire" Musk and dismantle his Department of Government Efficiency, and restore departments and public employees.
"This petition wasn't electronic," said Peters. "It is an old-fashioned, person-to-person effort. These signatures were collected by your constituents in rains at rallies, on street corners and at gatherings. ... they were collected by passing through hands young and old, picked up at houses, and one even survived a fall into the Hoosic River."
She described the signatures as being about 1,000 conversations "discussing democracy, building a community and taking an active step to save our country."
Tens of thousands of government workers have already been fired or targeted while the president is seeking to replace civil service positions with political appointees, said Peters, and there's fears that DOGE is collecting personal data from Social Security, the Internal Revenue Service and the Department of Health and Human Services.
Mark attended a rally in Holyoke in the morning and was heading to another gathering in Pittsfield afterward. Other officials were attending the funeral of U.S. Rep. James McGovern's daughter on Saturday morning, he said, adding he had paid respects at the wake the night before.
"Seeing everyone here today makes me and my colleagues in the Legislature know we are a community," said Mark, a Democrat who represents 57 communities in Western Mass. "We have people that are fighting there with us, and we can fight as hard as we need to to push back at these horrendous things that should not be happening in this great country."
As a former union member and in light of International Workers Day, the senator's focus was on labor, and he told the story of his own family's struggles in the 1990s when his father lost his job.
"Right now, what is happening around this country, with these unannounced layoffs, with this attack on working people, federal workers, the cutting of grants, this is resulting in people like 11-year-old Paul Mark all over this country," he said. "It's happening now because a billionaire and a multi-billionaire guiding him decided they need to take more money, that they need a tax cut, and because of that, they are intentionally damaging our community and communities all over this country. This matters to everybody, no matter what party you are or if you're no party."
"Down the street," said the senator, referring to Lexington and Concord, "we started a revolution because the government then got a little too big for their britches. And I'm here to tell everybody that's listening out in Washington, Massachusetts isn't letting the king come back."
The gathering also heard from immigrants' rights advocate Fernando Leon, who recalled the eight to 10 immigrants taken from the Berkshires by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the impression that immigrants are a burden.
"In 2020, immigrants paid $650 million in local and state taxes," he said. "Thirty-five percent of main street business owners in Massachusetts are immigrants. Undocumented immigrants contribute to Social Security and Medicare but are not eligible for federal benefits. When immigrants move to Massachusetts, the economy grows. ...
"We are here to push against the lies. Let me be clear — no human being is illegal. But what happened on March 19, that was criminal."
Elizabeth Recko-Morrison of the Berkshire Labor Council said the quality of service delivery depends on supporting the workforce and the Project 2025 blueprint being used by Trump would limit union power, and threaten wage and labor protections.
"It is our unions that add power to our individual voices during good times and the horrific ones like those we are experiencing now," she said. "Unionized workers built the middle class, and we damn well intend to keep it alive."
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Williams College Lone Suitor for Development of Water Street Lot
By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
Williams College hopes to replace the current Facilities Services building on Latham Street and use that space for a new athletics complex.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — If the town accepts an offer from Williams College, a 1.27-acre lot that long has been eyed as a possible venue for housing and economic development instead will find a use similar to its history.
The college was the lone respondent to the town's request for proposals to purchase and develop 59 Water St., a dirt lot known around town as the "old town garage site." This was first reported Wednesday by Greylock News.
If successful, the college plans to use the former town garage property for the school's Facilities Services building. Or it could be turned back into a parking lot.
Williams' offer includes a $500,000 upfront payment and a 10-year agreement to make $50,000 annual donations to the Mount Greylock Regional School District according to the proposal unsealed on Wednesday afternoon.
If it closes the deal, the college said it will explore development of a three- to four-story Facilities Services building with "a structured parking facility providing approximately 170 spaces."
"[I]f site constraints impact our ability to develop both structured parking and the Facilities Services building, our backup proposal is to develop the parking structure with approximately 170 spaces, also with capacity to support institutional and public needs," the college's proposal reads.
The college's current Facilities property at 60 Latham St. has an assessed value — for the .42-acre lot only — of $113,000 and an annual property tax bill of $1,606, according to the town's website.
Bergeron answered that officials in both member towns told the district they did not want Mount Greylock using taxpayers' money to build their reserves. click for more
Our Friday Front Porch is a weekly feature spotlighting attractive homes for sale in Berkshire County. This week, we are showcasing 84 North Summer St.
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