Music school director Luis Granda cuts the ribbon with state Rep. John Barrett III and theater owner Yina Moore. Interim Town Administrator Holli Jayko and Selectwoman Anne Bartlett hold the ribbon; also present are guitarist and instructor Jim Wojtaszek and Selectman Christine Hoyt and Joseph Nowak.
Berkshire Music School Brings Satellite Location to Adams
ADAMS, Mass. — Berkshire Music School cut the ribbon at Adams Theater on Thursday to celebrate its new instruction space.
The school will offer voice, violin, viola, cello, guitar, bass and piano lessons on Wednesday afternoons and evenings in four-week sessions.
Executive Director Luis Granda said it has always been the Pittsfield school's goal to reach the entire Berkshire County community and that this partnership with the Adams Theater helps make that happen.
"This whole idea came about because I was starting to think about how we could get into North County, how we could have a location here," Granda said. "And Jim Wojtaszek, who is on our staff, he's on our faculty, and he's also on our board, had a long-standing relationship not only with Yina, but also with this space in general."
Yina Moore purchased the 90-year-old movie theater in 2021; the following four years has seen substantial progress in fundraising and in renovating the long-vacant structure, as well as a strong schedule of performances and events as the theater transitions to a year-round facility.
The music school has done collaborations with after-school programs and organizations to reach more of areas of the county. Granda is excited to see how being in the Adams Theater helps to establish the school in the North County.
"I am very interested to see how this expansion goes and how it will inform what our other strategic choices are in the future. I could see a future where there are other kind of options in maybe South County or other areas," he said.
Woljtaszek, a guitarist, had been on the board of Topia Arts, the theater's former incarnation, and facilitated the connection to Moore.
He, Moore and Granda discussed how to bring the school in to teach lessons. Wojtaszek said this was a great place because North County students have been asking about taking in-person lessons closer to home. This combined a long-thought project at the same as promoting school outreach, he said.
"And, you know, all the kids or even adults who just don't have the time to make that drive [to Pittsfield] and come back on a selectmen's meeting night or something, we're here, and we're here for anybody," he said.
Moore was excited to collaborate with the music school and thinks it helps uplift downtown Adams.
"This partnership perfectly demonstrates what Adams Theater wants to do. We always have a dual mission. One of them is to revitalize the arts and culture in Adams and its vicinity, and the other is to activate downtown," Moore said. "So having a downtown presence on weekdays is a dream come true, because so far, our programming has already been happening during the weekend. We do have rehearsals and residency during the week, but not a street-facing kind of presence.
"So having this collaboration on Wednesdays I hope to kick off the presence that Adams Theaters door is always open."
The private lessons will take place every Wednesday from 3 to 8 p.m. starting Sept. 10 and will go through May. Instruments are available for rental and classes run from 30 to 60 minutes; tuition rates for the four-week sessions range from $168 to $336. Financial aid may be available.
"If they're interested in coming here and they are concerned about the finances, of the cost of that, we have a financial aid application online that is incredibly simple to fill out," Granda said. "And again, I have yet to have to turn anybody away that is interested in taking lessons no matter what age."
For more information or to sign up, go the website or call 413-442-1411.
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Cheshire Seeks Options West Mountain Runoff
By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
CHESHIRE, Mass. — The recent increase in rain has exacerbated an ongoing issue of flooding in the neighbors of West Mountain and Curren Roads.
A few months back, a resident of West Mountain Road, Michael Lemanski, adjacent to Curren Road, complained about the runoff from Curren coming down the hill and into his yard.
Over the years, the area's drainage system has changed. Initially, runoff would flow into the woods through a pipe on the right side of Curren Road, which then connected to a pipe on the left side, channeling water across the road and into the woods, said Corey McGrath, Department of Public Works director.
Then a garage was built and a pool was put in, so this system changed to a "strict 90" and ran it along the edge of the road, underneath the driveway, another 60 feet, then daylighted the runoff into a privately owned field.
"It's never worked. It's always been a problem. It overflows. It's not big enough. It goes down the driveway, and it cuts across his lawn, and washes out everything," McGrath said during the Select Board meeting on Tuesday.
Now, McGrath is proposing installing a storm basin on the right side of Curren Road, pipe it farther down the road on the town's right of way, totally surpassing Lemanski's property, directing the water across the road, and then daylight it into that field.
"Now, I don't know if we're removing one headache and getting another one, dumping it into that property," he said.
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