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Newly elected Williamstown Select Board member Shana Dixon, center, checks out the results with current board members Randal Fippinger, left, and Stephanie Boyd.

Dixon Elected to Williamstown Select Board

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Shana Dixon said Tuesday night that she had a sense during the day that the Select Board election was going her way.
 
Not because of what people said to her, but because of what they did.
 
"You know what people [going into the polling place] did?" Dixon said after winning a 497-377 vote against incumbent Jane Patton. "A lot of people gave silent head shakes. A lot of people were very quiet about it. A lot of people were not trying to show any emotion or eye contact. But what they would do is they'd walk by and give a little [thumbs up] … so people couldn't see them acknowledging me.
 
"People are scared to really speak their minds. … I think people have been bullied in this community, whether it's seen or unseen, and I think they feel comfortable with me. They feel they can trust me. I'm a very approachable person, so that helps a lot of people just show their love.
 
"So I appreciate that."
 
Unofficially, 874 votes were cast, with 10 blank votes, from among the town's 4,677 registered voters, a 19 percent turnout.
 
That is up from 438 votes in 2024, when there were no contested races on the ballot.
 
On Tuesday, there were two contested races.
 
Patton, a 12-year incumbent on the Select Board, was running not for re-election to her own seat but to fill out the remaining year left on the three-year term of Andrew Hogeland, who moved from town in the winter.
 
Dixon instead won that seat and will have a chance to run as an incumbent for a full three-year term in May 2026.
 
Two other Select Board seats were on the ballot. Matthew Neely, who was appointed to fill a few months of Hogeland's term, and Peter Beck ran unopposed for three-year terms on the five-person body.
 
The other contested race was for four-year seats on the Milne Library Board of Trustees.
 
Five candidates were running for four seats on the library board.
 
Robin Lenz (594), Micah Manary (577), Katherine Myers (544) and Benjamin Lee-Cohen (486) were the top four vote-getters in the five-person race. Adriana Brown finished just out of the money with 427 votes.
 
All other positions on the ballot were uncontested.
 
Dixon, currently the chair of the town's Diversity, Inclusion and Racial Equity Committee, was making her run at elected office in town.
 
"It feels amazing," she said of the win. "I'll make my kids [19 and 11] proud."
 
When asked why she ran in the first place, Dixon was clear.
 
"To make more of an impact for marginalized communities," she said.
 
And when she did have a chance to chat with those voters heading into Williamstown Elementary School on Tuesday?
 
"I got really good feedback," Dixon said. "They were just so proud to get another perspective, somebody that would advocate for what's right and somebody that would just show up for them."

Tags: election 2025,   town elections,   


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Mount Greylock School Committee Discusses Collaboration Project with North County Districts

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — News that the group looking at ways to increase cooperation among secondary schools in North County reached a milestone sparked yet another discussion about that group's objectives among members of the Mount Greylock Regional School Committee.
 
At Thursday's meeting, Carolyn Greene reported that the Northern Berkshire Secondary Sustainability task force, where she represents the Lanesborough-Williamstown district, had completed a request for proposals in its search for a consulting firm to help with the process that the task force will turn over to a steering committee comprised of four representatives from four districts: North Berkshire School Union, North Adams Public Schools, Hoosac Valley Regional School District and Mount Greylock Regional School District.
 
Greene said the consultant will be asked to, "work on things like data collection and community outreach in all of the districts that are participating, coming up with maybe some options on how to share resources."
 
"That wraps up the work of this particular working group," she added. "It was clear that everyone [on the group] had the same goals in mind, which is how do we do education even better for our students, given the limitations that we all face.
 
"It was a good process."
 
One of Greene's colleagues on the Mount Greylock School Committee used her report as a chance to challenge that process.
 
"I strongly support collaboration, I think it's a terrific idea," Steven Miller said. "But I will admit I get terrified when I see words like 'regionalization' in documents like this. I would feel much better if that was not one of the items we were discussing at this stage — that we were talking more about shared resources.
 
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