PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A city native is hoping to help fill a need for certified public accountants in the county.
Kevin Garcia recently started his own accounting firm and is accepting new clients.
"It's just, it's like the American dream. Ever since college, I've always had that drive to try to start my own [company]," he said. "I just had an itch to just do it. I knew one day I was going to do it. And so I think at one point I was just like, 'I'm going to do it.'"
He said Berkshire County is short on CPAs and that fewer people are going into the accounting field. Another local CPA told him that he's having to turn away customers because the need is so high and there's not enough accountants.
"He says he gets, I don't know if these numbers are crazy, they're probably more tax season, about 50 to 100 calls a month about people needing CPA. Wanting to be clients," Garcia said. "And he pretty much turns them all away because he doesn't have the capacity."
That accountant thinks that younger people aren't going into accounting because they don't want to work crazy hours, Garcia said. "They want to do different things, and it's really a national shortage, like, there's a lot of people exiting this type of work. So it's kind of happening everywhere."
Garcia earned his bachelor's degree in accounting in 2014 from Northeastern State University in Oklahoma. After graduation, he stayed and worked at Briscoe, Burke & Grigsby LLP for more than eight years.
He moved back to the Berkshires in 2019 and was working for GHJ, a tax firm based in Los Angeles. Earlier this year, he decided he wanted to start his own firm to help clients in the Berkshires.
"I'm officially open for business now, accepting new clients. And I just want to say that I'm able to do this because God gave me the opportunity. So, just want to give Him all the glory here," Garcia said.
He said he loves this work and working with people and helping them.
"What I like about it is being able to work with somebody and have a relationship where you almost become like their friend, and you help them," Garcia said. "So I like helping people, and I like solving problems. So I work with them. I get to know them."
His new business, KG CPA Tax and Advisory, will offer tax planning and preparation services, accounting and payroll services, business advisory and structuring services, and high-net worth individual services.
He expects close on an office at 374 South St. on July 18. Contact him through the company website.
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Flooding Leads Pittsfield ConCom to Bel Air Dam Deconstruction Site
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Bel Air Dam project team toured the site on Monday with the Conservation Commission to review conditions following a flooding incident.
Work has been on hold for two weeks after melting snow and a release of water from Pontoosuc Lake led to water overtopping of the almost 200-year-old, abandoned dam. The project team says deconstruction is still on track to end in December.
"They have plenty of time to finish the work, so they don't expect that they're going to need extra time, but we're all waiting," reported Robert Lowell, the Department of Conservation and Recreation's deputy chief engineer.
"… it's unfortunate, but the high-water conditions in the spring, we did have in the contract that the site might flood, so there was supposed to be a contingency for it, and we're now dealing with the complications of that."
DCR's Office of Dam Safety is leading the $20 million removal of the classified "high hazard" dam, funded by American Rescue Plan Act dollars. It has been an area of concern for more than a decade.
The dam on Pontoosuc Brook dates to 1832 and was used for nearly a hundred years to power a long-gone woolen mill. It's being targeted for removal, using American Rescue Plan Act funds, because the stacked stone structure poses a significant danger to homes and businesses downstream. Excavation of sediment began last fall by contractor SumCo Eco-Contracting of Wakefield.
Earlier this month, community members noticed flooding at the site bordering Wahconah Street; water levels were down by the next week. Conservation commissioners called for the site visit with concerns about the effects of the water release and how it is being remedied.
The group got a look at the large project area near the dam and asked questions. Chair James Conant explained that community members wanted to know the cause of the flooding.
Jane Winn, former executive director of the Berkshire Environmental Action Team, said this was specifically brought up at the Conservation Commission hearing to ensure this sort of thing didn't happen.
The Bel Air Dam project team toured the site on Monday with the Conservation Commission to review conditions following a flooding incident. click for more
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