Workforce Board Hears Internship, Career Center Gains

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Berkshire Career Center's internship program prepares high school students for the workforce by introducing them to employers and enrichment opportunities. 
 
The North County Internship Program, in its 11th year, had seven participating youths. 
 
Youth Program Director Heather Shogry-Williams told the Berkshire Workforce Board at its meeting last week that the program recently received a donation of $5,000 from Crane & Co. to help two of the students to continue with their work experiences during the first part of their school years.
 
Youth program specialist Kathleen Toomey said the interns were happy with their work. Many worked at Porches Inn, Lickety-Split at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, Roots Teen Center, and Brayton Elementary School, all in North Adams. 
 
Toomey said the employers were happy with the youths' work and that the teens were very interested and connected with the other programs they were in.
 
"Just shows, really on both sides, how we're benefiting the youth and the employer. Here are a couple other just things I'll just quickly mention, is that in our interviews with the youth, they really stress the importance of the Career Center staff and their support. I didn't even ask, and they brought up other workshops that were outside of this program, that they got connected to through the program," Toomey said.
 
Williams texplained the career readiness enrichment that staff across the county worked on to expand on their career readiness models and systems.
 
"A lot of enrichment work has taken place, which helps to expand upon their career readiness models every year. We were very fortunate to be able to utilize some of our additional connecting activities funds this past year to support additional summer work for our career readiness coordinators and team members in our central and North County schools as well," she said. "Some of this work included developing career readiness lessons for middle school students, community-service learning projects and enhanced career readiness activities. 
 
"So a lot of this career readiness enrichment work continues to take place over the summer, and you know, as I mentioned, it's really helping to set the stage for school districts' continued expansion of our career readiness model."
 
The Pittsfield Public Schools interim Superintendent Latifah Phillips, who attended the meeting, said she was excited to collaborate with the team.
 
"I was encouraged to hear that collaboration is one of your priorities, because that's also one of my core values as I lead school district work, and I recognize the importance of the alignment of schools with workforce needs. So that is something I'm very committed to continuing, not only for our high schools, but also for our middle schools," Phillips said. "Right now we are going through a middle school restructuring, and we'll have a fifth, sixth grade campus and a seventh, eighth grade campus, and as we design the school program, the instructional program. 
 
"We're very much interested in providing early career exploration opportunities for our seventh and eighth graders and aligning that work with our high school Pathways."
 
Industry Relations Manager Bryana Malloy said training and partnerships have been working really well for postsecondary Career Technical Initiative training at McCann Technical School in North Adams and Taconic High in Pittsfield. 
 
"We have enrolled 328 trainings throughout nine training programs. So as you can see, certified nursing assistants. We have very high numbers. It's a very high need here in the region. So we've enrolled 148 and of that, 134 have completed," she said. "We also offer partnerships with Berkshire Health Systems and CHP for medical assistant training, where we have 69 enrolled, 32 are still in progress, with 25 completed."
 
Other good news was that Career Center had surpassed its goals supporting businesses and jobseekers in several ways during fiscal 2025.
 
Executive Director Pamela Wojtkowski told the board that the center had served 875 business, 200 more than its goal. It also exceeded its goals to serve 225 new businesses by 61 and 450 repeat businesses by 139.
 
The center held 117 recruitment activities during the year, and 799 marketing and outreach activities. The career center also served thousands of job seekers.
 
"Total job seekers served, our annual plan was to serve 3,250 and we actually did serve 4,194 total visits to the Career Center. We had 13,979 various visits to the Career Center. And total workshops that we did to prepare job seekers was 2,401," Wojtkowski said.
 
The center will hold an English for Employment Workshop will starting Tuesday, Sept. 16, and the veterans annual job and resource fair will take place Oct. 13. Forty translation devices were purchased after an employer requested them and they will be utilized at various sites to help with recruiting and onboarding.
 
In other business, the board welcomed six new members to the board; Betsy Andrus, executive director of the South Berkshire Chamber of Commerce; Kaylyn Kern, director of operations for Bosquest Sport; John Cadiz, director of human resources at 18 Degrees Inc.; Brenda Stokes, executive director of human resources for Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts; Makayla-Courtney McGeeney, marketing consultant for the North Adams Chamber of Commerce, and Libby Hernandez, migrant seasonal farm worker outreach specialist for the state Executive Office of Labor & Workforce Development.
 
Also highlighted was the summer 2025 Workforce Impact Awards, congratulating the winners again.

Tags: career center,   workforce training,   

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Dalton Planners Hold Public Hearing on Tiny Homes Bylaw

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

DALTON, Mass. — The Planning Board held a public hearing last week on a bylaw for mobile accessory dwelling units (ADU) that will be brought before a special town meeting.

For nearly two years, Amy Turnbull has been trying to amend the current ADU bylaws to allow mobile tiny homes.  

A movable tiny home is defined as a unit under 400 square feet that meets all of someone's daily needs, including sanitation, cooking, and other facilities, and which is also mobile. Most homes considered "tiny" are built on a trailer so they can be towed.

Her proposal defines a movable tiny house as a "residential property with an existing primary house, intended for year-round living," and outlines eight conditions for approval.

Among these conditions: the unit must adhere to accessory dwelling unit regulations, undergo site plan review, be licensed and registered with the state Registry of Motor Vehicles, have approved energy, water, and wastewater systems, and comply with American National Standards Institute 119.5 and National Fire Protection Association 1192 safety requirements.

Additionally, the unit must be certified for ANSI or NFPA compliance by a manufacturer or third-party inspector, including adherence to Appendix Q and the International Residential Code's structural guidelines and energy efficiency standards. The tiny house cannot move under its own power, and its undercarriage, wheels, axles, tongue, and hitch must be concealed from view. Wheels and leveling or support jacks are required to rest on a level gravel or paved surface.

Turnbull has gotten enough signatures for her petition to amend the current bylaws to add her definition of the mobile ADUs. Last Wednesday, the board held a public hearing on the petitions, which will be voted on at a special meeting.

Turnbull says she has two reasons for wanting to add this to the town's bylaws: aging in place and affordable housing.

"We need a variety of housing types in Dalton, and that we also need to address the idea that you know nearly 30 percent of our population by 2035 is going to be over 65 years old, and it's problematic because  ... there's not enough choice for these people to to age in place,"she said. "What movable tiny houses does, is it provides a less restrictive ADU. It's much cheaper to place, and it's easier to place, less time consuming. And what it offers to people is it offers people who are owners a place for their children to come and live, or a caregiver to come and live, or for the people who own their own house to come and live while they rent out their maybe their three bedroom home to a new family who wants to attend to Craneville simultaneously."

She said people need to move away from calling and treating the tiny homes as though they are trailers, as one former Planning Board member has voiced opinions on.

"That is an opinion, and I think we need to get over that, because I want to say that these are foundation homes, and that the chassis is a foundation, and it's a stick-built home on a chassis, and in very many ways it's like a modular house. I think we will not be surprised in the next 10 years if we see the market turn around and start to make smaller, tiny modular homes, but that is not the case right now, and we have a dire need for affordable housing," she said.

At a former Fire District meeting the Water Department drafted regulations for water hook-ups for these types of homes. The superintendent sent a letter to the Planning Board to be read at the meeting stating it will not be a hindrance for sewer system connection.

"The Department of Public Works does not feel that mobile ADUs will be an issue with the town sewer system. The homeowners will be responsible for any issues outside of the sewer main and connect and responsible for connecting in, so that would address any permits, fees, or anything like that would be added to that," the letter states. 

"The Water Department, as we've stated previous, and as you stated, the water department has come up with their own set of SOPs, standard operating procedures, for hooking up a an adu and a mobile adu, which will then have to meet winterization and all those, but they've laid out a plan for that, that they have, so I'd like to point that out," board Chair Robert Collins said.

One concern was raised that if someone can have a mobile ADU could they also have another tiny home on their property, including the main house. That situation is not likely, said Turnbull, as it would cost a considerable amount of money. Town Manager Eric Anderson also stated that in his former community when they adopted similar laws their first one wasn’t put in until a couple years later and then maybe one a year.

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