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Dalton's Garceau Sets NCAA DIII Record in Winning National Title

UMass-Boston AthleticsPrint Story | Email Story
GENEVA, Ohio – In a performance that will echo through the halls of UMass-Boston athletics history, junior hurdler Aryianna Garceau of Dalton, Mass., delivered a masterclass in speed and precision at the 2025 NCAA Division III Outdoor Track & Field Championships, capturing her second consecutive national title in the 100m hurdles with a record-breaking time of 13.54 seconds.
 
Ranked third heading into Saturday's final after a 13.91 finish in Friday's preliminary rounds, Garceau entered the blocks focused and fearless. What followed was a flawless series of 10 hurdles and a drive to the line that etched her name in Division III history. Her 13.54 finish not only secured national gold, but also set a new NCAA Division III all-time record and a new Championship Meet record, making her officially the fastest hurdler in DIII history.
 
Garceau's back-to-back national titles in the 60m hurdles and the 100m hurdles mark only the third time in UMass Boston history that an athlete has accomplished such a feat in consecutive indoor and outdoor seasons, joining program icons Wadeline Jonathas and Genesia Eddins. 
 
Capping off a historic year, Garceau finishes the 2024–25 academic calendar undefeated against Division III competition. Her spring season included USTFCCCA All-Region honors in the 100m, 100m hurdles, and 200m; All-Little East Conference First Team selections in all three events; LEC Track Athlete of the Year honors; a NEICAAA All-New England title; two school records; and a wind-aided 13.53—then the third-fastest 100m hurdles time in DIII history (all conditions). She now stands alone with the fastest ever wind-legal finish in DIII at 13.54 seconds, which sets her apart from all competitors historically. 
 
With her gold medal performance on the national stage, Garceau earned 10 points for UMass Boston—individually outscoring 13 of the 15 New England programs in attendance. Only the eventual team champion, MIT, finished with more. As UMass Boston's sole representative, Garceau elevated the Beacons into the ranks of the top New England teams at this year's NCAA Outdoor Championships, representing her university with exceptional pride and distinction.
 
Garceau leaves the track this season not just as a double NCAA champion, but as a generational talent, setting a new standard for what it means to wear the Beacon blue.
 
"We are so glad things came together at the right time,” Beacons head coach Ozzie Brown said. “We had a plan all year, and she was able to execute at both NCAA Championships. It's even sweeter that the wind was legal so we have the national record to bring home with us this time as well.”
 
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Dalton Police Station OK for Zoning, Once Location Is Chosen

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The proposed police station is eligible for a special permit in all zones except a Planned Industrial Development zone, following a public hearing and board consensus. 
 
The town has been exploring solutions to address the station's needs, forming the Public Safety Advisory Committee in July 2024 after reports highlighted the department's deteriorating condition.
 
Now more than a year into the initiative, progress seems to have stalled because of conflicting opinions on where the proposed station would go, Police Chief Deanna Strout said during previous meetings. 
 
The sticking points have been cost and location, which has had the advisory committee in gridlock for months. Several public officials have expressed their desire to have a new station constructed on town-owned land for the cost savings. 
 
However, the only land sizable to fit the facility is next to the Senior Center, but some neighbors have conveyed their disapproval for that space, which had been earmarked for affordable housing.
 
So, the committee sought guidance from the Zoning Board but left with few answers. 
 
"We wanted to have a discussion with you as a board about where you would consider this and what your thoughts as a board were specifically,"  Town Manager Eric Anderson said to the board at the Tuesday meeting. 
 
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