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Nicole Senecal puts the finishing touches on her painted crosswalk at Eagle and Main Streets. Four artists are embellishing eight crosswalks in the downtown this week.
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At Holden and Main. Holden Street will be closed in the evening on Wednesday and possibly Thursday.

North Adams Begins Decorative Crosswalk Painting

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
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Center and Marshall got a wavy design from Gail Sellers and Dan Morgan.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Watch out for road closures in the downtown as the city's crosswalks are embellished with original art over the next week. 
 
The painting began Tuesday, with some crosswalks completed and others getting some outlines down for later details. 
 
The work is expected to be finished in time for First Friday on June 6. 
 
On Wednesday, artist Nicole Senecal was painting the crosswalk at Main and Eagle, which will match the artwork at Main and Ashland. 
 
"For me, its spreading happiness, spread a little paint and get to make people feel happy," she said. "I'm grateful that North Adams is doing it so I can be a part of it. It's a really cool project."
 
Senecal's design was a path of beehive hexagons with flowers and leaves in blue, white, yellow and green.
 
At Marshall and Center streets, a wavy yellow design was painted by Gail Sellers and Dan Morgan. 
 
Some councilors have been advocating for some time for painted crosswalks, which were last done more than a decade ago by Art About Town. 
 
Councilor Andrew Fitch had promoted the idea most recently for painting crosswalks and electrical boxes. The boxes were painted last year and this year, the city put out a call for artists to paint eight crosswalks. 
 
Four artists were chosen and each are receiving an honorarium of $2,000 for design and implementation. The project is a collaboration of the North Adams Cultural District Committee, Assets for Artists, Fitch and Mayor Jennifer Macksey's office, and funded through the Cultural Council. 
 
Fitch thanked the mayor on Tuesday for moving forward with the project.
 
"Thank you so much for helping to brighten up downtown and really look forward to seeing those
completed," he said. 
 
The other crosswalks being painted are at Main Street and American Legion Drive and Holden, Center and Holden, Eagle and Church and Eagle Street and Center Street. Closures will run from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. 
 
Holden Street, from Center Street to Main Street, will be closed on Wednesday, May 28, from 8 p.m. until late evening and possibly again on Thursday, May 29. The street will be open for the morning commute. 

Tags: crosswalk,   

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North Adams Updated on Schools, Council President Honored With 'Distinction'

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

Superintendent Timothy Callahan gives a presentation on the school system at Tuesday's City Council meeting. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The City Council got an update on what's up in the school system and its president was inducted into the mayor's Women's Leadership Hall of Fame.
 
Mayor Jennifer Macksey, as the city's first woman mayor, established the Hall of Fame in 2022, during March, Women's History Month, to recognize local women who have had a positive impact on the city. Past inductees have included the council's first woman president Fran Buckley, Gov. Jane Swift and boxing pioneer Gail Grandchamp. 
 
She described President Ashley Shade as a colleague and a friend and a former student. 
 
"Ashley is known not just for her leadership, but for her compassion, her ability to listen, to understand and to stand up for those whose voices are often gone unheard," the mayor said. "She has been a tireless advocate for the LGBTQ plus community and marginalized communities at both the local and national level here in North Adams."
 
Elected in 2021, Shade is the first openly transgender person to hold the role of council president in Massachusetts. She also leads the first-ever woman majority council in the city's history. 
 
The McCann Technical School graduate also has served on boards and commissions, "always working to make our city more inclusive, equitable and welcoming," said the mayor. "Ashley not leads not only with strength, but with a heart, and our community is a much stronger place because of it."
 
Shade, wearing her signature pink suit, was presented with a plaque from the mayor designating her a "woman of distinction."
 
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