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SteepleCats Fall to Vermont on Hometown Heroes Night

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. – The Vermont Mountaineers Saturday beat the North Adams SteepleCats, 10-1, on Hometown Heroes Night at Joe Wolfe Field.
 
Prior to the game, first responders from throughout North County plus the Massachusetts Forest Fire Control and the Massachusetts Department of Transportation were recognized in pregame ceremonies.
 
Many of the emergency services brought their cruisers, firetrucks, ambulances and even a snowplow for families to check out before the game.
 
Representatives from more than a dozen agencies ringed the infield for the pregame ceremony, which included a performance of the Star-Spangled Banner by North Adams Police Officer Christopher Voss.
 
Voss, who earned a master’s degree in vocal performance in opera from the University of Georgia in 2014, is a Lexington native who moved to the area during the COVID-19 pandemic and recently joined the NAPD.
 
The ceremonial first pitch was thrown out by NAPD Lt. Anthony Beverly, a 1999 graduate of Drury High School who served in the U.S. Marine Corps prior to joining the city’s police force in 2006.
 
Once the game got underway, Vermont built an 8-0 lead in the first five innings.
 
Michael Toth drove in a run for North Adams in the bottom of the sixth, but Vermont’s Oliver Ellison and Logan Ozias combined to scatter 11 hits in the victory.
 
 
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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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