Dalton Special Town Meeting Set Monday

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — After a lengthy and contentious town meeting that spanned two days, voters will reconvene during a special town meeting to decide on six warrant articles this Monday at 7 p.m. at Wahconah Regional High School. 
 
During the annual town meeting on May 5, which garnered 277 registered voters, the police budget was singled out from the rest of the operating budget with an eye to making more cuts.
 
The Police Department requested a budget of $1,664,924, an increase of $129,668 over the previous fiscal year.
 
That line was pulled from the operating budget on a secret ballot and failed to pass 162-117. Finance Committee Chair William Drosehn made a motion to level fund the police budget, which also failed. 
 
Voters will decide on the budget again under Article one. During a Select Board meeting in May, the Police Chief Deanna Strout defended her department’s proposed budget and cautioned against significant cuts that, she says, would result in losing officers, K-9s, and community policing programs.
 
After her detailed presentation, the board voted to support the original police budget of $1,664,924 at the upcoming special town meeting. Select Board member Marc Strout, the chief's husband, was not present for that vote. 
 
The Finance Committee, however, voted on Tuesday to recommend a budget of $1,644,378, $20,546 less than what the Select Board voted to support. 
 
The decision narrowly passed 5-4, with committee members Drosehn, Thomas Irwin, Susan Carrol, and Shaun Beverly voting against. 
 
Carrol stated that she voted against the budget decrease because she wanted to hear from Strout first. Strout was unable to give a presentation to the committee because she was not informed of the meeting until 2:13 on the day of the meeting, and she was already scheduled to work the Taconic prom. 
 
Irwin, Drosehn, and Beverly voted against it because they believed that additional cuts could be made to the budget. 
 
Voters will also decide whether to transfer $45,000 from free cash to fund professional and technical work, including the possibility of a lawyer and an engineering company, to ensure the compliance of Berkshire Concrete Corporation’s special permit and town orders. More information here
 
For the last seven months, several dozen residents have been going to numerous meetings in town urging action to stop sand from leaving parcel No. 105-16, owned by Berkshire Concrete, a subsidiary of Petricca Industries.
 
During public outcry, it was discovered that a "clerical error" had omitted parcel No. 105-16 from the permit application, resulting in a cease and desist order to stop the dust from leaving the site. 
 
The residents organized a Clean Air Coalition to provide updates on what they described as slow progress towards a resolution. 
 
Several months passed, and residents still felt unheard by Petricca Industries and believed the board’s letters to their lawyers were performative and did not resolve the issue.
 
 
The conditions on the site improved, but a portion of the unauthorized dig site was not reclaimed because the coalition stated that Petricca and Alan LeBihan plan to apply for a special permit in June or July to continue excavating on lot 105-16, located at the back of Raymond Drive. 
 
The coalition also claimed that Petricca was "reluctant to have continuous dust pollution monitoring installed on the perimeter of Lot 105-16 and other key areas on the eastern edge of Berkshire Concrete's operation." 
 
Voters will also decide whether to amend Article 22 from the annual town meeting warrant, which appropriated from free cash $250,000 to purchase and equip a truck with sewer flushing equipment for the Department of Public Works. 
 
At the last town meeting, voters approved replacing the DPW’s sewer truck, which is a 1992 International that was an Army surplus. 
 
"We use it to tow the trailer, which is a 2007, which has, I think, a little over 3,000 hours on it," said Edward "Bud" Hall, DPW superintendent. However, not enough funds were allocated for the purchase. 
 
During the town meeting, Hall cautioned that the quotes for a truck and trailer were closer to $275,000, not $250,000; however, the town only approved $250,000. 
 
In a follow-up, Hall explained that the Finance Committee did not get input from him when the committee amended the article. 
 
Also included in the warrant is a request to reduce the amount allocated for the fiscal year 2026 operating budget by $90,500 due to lower amounts identified during the town audit and sewer treatment evaluation.
 
There is also a request to transfer $40,391 from free cash to cover a deficit in the “Snow and Ice” account. Of that amount, $23,461 is for salaries and $16,930 is for expenses.
 
Finally, there is a request to rescind the appropriation of $34,116 from the Sewer Stabilization Account to cover the City of Pittsfield's additional costs for sewage treatment.
 
Following the town meeting, it was determined that the town does not require this additional amount. The original budget is sufficient to cover the revised invoice from the City of Pittsfield, which has been reduced by $141,292.
 
The town meeting warrant is here, and the explanation sheet is here

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Pittsfield Families Frustrated Over Unreleased PHS Report, Herberg Slur Incident

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Parents are expressing their frustration with hate speech, bullying, and staff misconduct, which they said happens in Pittsfield schools. 

Community members and some elected officials have consistently advocated for the release of the redacted Pittsfield High School investigation report, and a teacher being placed on leave for allegedly repeating racist and homophobic slurs sparked a community conversation about how Pittsfield Public Schools can address injustices. 

The district's human resources director detailed the investigation processes during last week's School Committee meeting.

"People are angry. They feel like when they spoke up about Morningside School, it was closed anyway. They feel like they speak up about the PHS report, and that's just kind of getting shoved under the rug," resident Brenda Coddington said during public comment.

"I mean, when do people who actually voted for all of you, by the way, when does their voice and opinion count and matter? Because you can sit up here all day long and say that it does, but your actions, or rather lack of action, speak volumes."

Last month, School Committee member Ciara Batory demanded a date for the 2025 report's release to the public.

Three administrators and two teachers, past and present, were investigated by Bulkley Richardson and Gelinas LLP for a range of allegations that surfaced or re-surfaced at the end of 2024 after Pittsfield High's former dean of students was arrested and charged by the U.S. Attorney's Office for allegedly conspiring to traffic large quantities of cocaine in Western Massachusetts.

Executive summaries were released that concluded the claims of inappropriate conduct between teachers and students were "unsupported." Ward 7 Councilor Katherine Moody countered one of the unsupported determinations, writing on Facebook last week that she knows one person can conclude with confidence and a court case that pictures of the staff member's genitalia was sent to minors. 

"During this investigation, we sought to determine the validity of allegations about PHS Administrator #2 sharing a photograph of female genitalia with PHS students on her Snapchat account," the final executive summary reads. 

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