Pittsfield's $226M Budget Mostly Personnel, Expenses, Debt Service

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Mayor Peter Marchetti said the $226 million fiscal year 2026 budget is mostly personnel, expenses, and debt services.

The total for city and school personnel is $110.6 million, health insurance is $33 million, the retirement contribution is $18 million, and debt service is $19.8 million. This represents $181.7 million, or 80 percent of the spending plan.

"So as we begin the conversation, we're talking about people, we're talking about benefits, and we're talking about debt service for the most part," he said to the City Council on Wednesday, the first day of hearings for the FY26 budget.

The proposed $226,246,942 budget is a nearly 4.8 percent increase from the previous year. It includes $86,450,361 for the school department, $11,202,345 for the department of public services, and $15,468,750 for the Pittsfield police.

Marchetti has also asked that $2 million in free cash be applied to offset the FY26 tax rate.

The city expects to raise about $118.8 million in property taxes, and the spending plan includes $19.2 million from water and sewer enterprise funds and $81.3 million in state aid ($68.4 million being Chapter 70 funds for schools).

At the beginning of the year, the mayor foresaw a potential 15 percent increase in the city's health insurance but fortunately, it wound up being around eight percent. During the Massachusetts Municipal Association Conference at the end of January, officials were told that the increase for MIIA/ Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts is between 9 percent and 19 percent, with an average of 14.8 percent.

"We later learned that ours was a 10.9 percent increase, but after doing a really deeper dive and analyzing who is on what insurance plan, that increase is really only an 8.2 percent increase at a little over $2.5 million," Marchetti reported.


After years of deliberation, Pittsfield saw a new trash system with Casella Waste Systems in 2024 that uses 48-gallon toters for trash and recycling. The city was spending about $5.2 million on trash per year, and the new contract trims the budget by about $600,000 to $4.6 million.

"What I get to do today is stand here and say I was right," Marchetti said about the trash system approved during his first year in office.

"We pushed hard for a system for a purpose, and we have been able to see a $600,000 savings in our recycling and trash collection."

The mayor also touted the $27.5 million investment in roadwork throughout 2025 and 2026 that is funded by about $4 million in free cash, $3 million in Chapter 90 funds, $5.2 million in city capital, and $15 million in other state funds.

This includes an "aggressive timeline" of resurfacing neighborhood streets, preventative maintenance, a water main and resurfacing on King Street, West Street streetscape work, East Street streetscape work, and the resurfacing of Route 7.

"I did coffee with the mayor this morning at the senior center, and I said, ‘Well, I finally did it,'" Marchetti joked.

"I've heard all about the potholes and how we can't use our roads, and ‘Mayor, what are you gonna do about our potholes?' to ‘Mayor, when are you gonna stop all the construction in the city? Because I can't seem to get from point A to point B.'"

On Wednesday, the City Council preliminarily approved an  $86 million spending plan for the Pittsfield Public Schools. On Thursday, it tackled departmental budgets for the mayor's office, RSVP, the Berkshire Athenaeum, the office of community development, the Pittsfield Municipal Airport, the department of DEI, human resources, the Council on Aging, the city clerk, veterans' services, and the Department of Cultural Development.


Tags: fiscal 2026,   pittsfield_budget,   

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NAMI Raises Sugar With 10th Annual Cupcake Wars

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. To contact the Crisis Text Line, text HELLO to 741741. More information on crisis hotlines in Massachusetts can be found here


Whitney's Farm baker Jenn Carchedi holds her awards for People's Choice and Best Tasting.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) of Berkshire County held its 10th annual cupcake wars fundraiser Thursday night at the Country Club of Pittsfield.

The event brought local bakeries and others together to raise money for the organization while enjoying a friendly competition of cupcake tasting.

Local bakeries Odd Bird Farm, Canyon Ranch, Whitney's Farm and Garden, and Monarch butterfly bakery each created a certain flavor of cupcake and presented their goods to the theme of "Backyard Barbecue." When Sweet Confections bakery had to drop out because to health reasons, NAMI introduced a mystery baker which turned out to be Big Y supermarket.

The funds raised Thursday night through auctions of donated items, the cupcakes, raffles, and more will go toward the youth mental health wellness fair, peer and family support groups, and more. 

During the event, the board members mentioned the many ways the funds have been used, stating that they were able to host their first wellness fair that brought in more than 250 people because of the funds raised from last year and plan to again this year on July 11. 

"We're really trying to gear towards the teen community, because there's such a stigma with mental illness, and they sometimes are hesitant to come forward and admit they have a problem, so they try to self medicate and then get themselves into a worse situation," said NAMI President Ruth Healy.

"We're really trying to focus on that group, and that's going to be the focus of our youth mental health wellness fair is more the teen community. So every penny that we raise helps us to do more programming, and the more we can do, the more people recognize that we're there to help and that there is hope."

They mentioned they are now able to host twice monthly peer and family support groups at no cost for individuals and families with local training facilitators. They also are now able to partner with Berkshire Medical Center to perform citizenship monitoring where they have volunteers go to different behavioral mental health units to listen to patients and staff to provide service suggestions to help make the unit more effective. Lastly, they also spoke of how they now have a physical office space, and that they were able to attend the Berkshire Coalition for Suicide Prevention as part of the panel discussion to help offer resources and have also been able to have gift bags for patients at BMC Jones 2 and 3.

Healy said they are also hoping to expand into the schools in the county and bring programming and resources to them.

She said the programs they raise money for are important in reaching someone with mental issues sooner.

"To share the importance of recognizing, maybe an emerging diagnosis of a mental health condition in their family member or themselves, that maybe they could get help before the situation becomes so dire that they're thinking about suicide as a solution, the sooner we can reach somebody, the better the outcome," she said.

The cupcakes were judged by Downtown Pittsfield Inc. Managing Director Rebecca Brien, Pittsfield High culinary teacher Todd Eddy, and Lindsay Cornwell, executive director Second Street Second Chances.

The 100 guests got miniature versions of the cupcakes to decide the Peoples' Choice award.

The winners were:

  • Best Tasting: Whitney's Farm (Honey buttermilk cornbread cupcakes)
  • Best Presentation: Odd Bird Farm Bakery (Blueberry lemon cupcakes)
  • Best Presentation of Theme: Canyon Ranch (Strawberry shortcake)
  • People's Choice: Whitney's Farm

Jenn Carchedi has been the baker at Whitney's for six years and this was her third time participating in an event she cares deeply about.

"It meant a lot. Because personally, for me, mental health awareness is really important. I feel like coming together as a community, and Whitney's Farm is more like a community kind of place," she said

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