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BCC President Ellen Kennedy in the college's Nursing Simulation Lab for the announcement of the state Community College Nursing Scholarship Program.

Ellen Kennedy Reflects on Past, Future of BCC Before Retirement

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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President Ellen Kennedy last year at a certification ceremony.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — President Ellen Kennedy feels Berkshire Community College is in a good place to welcome new leadership. 

She will retire at the end of the school year after more than 17 years with the college, 14 as president, and looks back on the students, faculty, and campus as a whole with pride. 

"Our faculty is extraordinary. Our administrators and staff are just exceptional. Our students are so special, so committed to their own learning and their own growth as people and in pursuit of their own goals, it's just really exciting," she said recently.

"We have an excellent board of trustees. We have an excellent foundation. I mean, we're just in such a good place right now, and I feel like it's the right moment." 

Kennedy praised the climate and culture BCC has worked to create, explaining, "I think I love the way we are able to empower people to bring their good ideas forward and then to see them be put in place." 

Earlier this year, BCC was designated as a Leader College by Achieving the Dream, a national non-profit focused on student success and community economic mobility.

The college's enrollment is up 20 percent this year, and Kennedy said the state's tuition coverage for all 15 community colleges has been a game-changer for Berkshire County.  BCC's nursing program has also doubled in size. 

"And that took everyone's commitment. It's not just me," she said about the nursing program's expansion over the years, underscoring the work of department leaders. 



"It was the ability of people to take risks and do things that they weren't quite sure might work out and we would just learn. When it didn't work out, we learned." 

Kennedy pointed out that the college will start working on its next strategic plan for 2027 and will soon write its 10-year self-study for the New England Commission of Higher Education. As a former six-year member of the commission, she recalled when new presidents would have to defend the work of a previous president. 

"I just felt like it would be important, and it was an excellent opportunity for the next president to really dive deeply into those processes and to work with the campus and partner and collaborate and dream about what comes next," she said. 

"And those will both be very critical, but I know there will be fruitful conversations, and will just continue the growth of the college and move it to its next place. Move it forward." 

Kennedy is the college's second-longest serving president. She was tapped to lead the state's first community college on the departure of Paul Raverta, who was interim and president for seven years. She was the school's vice president of administration and finance and chief financial officer prior to being picked as interim president, then was selected by the trustees from 38 applicants to continue in the role. 

The board of trustees will lead a search for the new president. 

"I just know this place, this college, will attract really excellent candidates, because it's just a really special place, frankly," Kennedy said. 

"So I'm not at all worried about what comes next." 


Tags: BCC,   retirement,   

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Pittsfield Tax Rate Drops, But Bills May Rise

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The administration has presented a split rate that would increase the average single-family home's annual bill by about $220. 

On the agenda for Thursday's City Council meeting is a hearing for the fiscal 2026 tax rate: $17.50 per $1,000 of valuation for residential property and $36.90 for commercial, industrial, and personal property.  This rate uses a residential factor of 0.8299 at a shift of 1.75. 

While the rate is 44 cents cheaper than the year before for residential properties and more than a dollar cheaper for commercial properties, bills will rise. 

The FY26 levy limit of $119.5 million includes more than $2 million in new growth, and there is about $389,000 in excess level capacity. Pittsfield's real and personal property valuation is $5,650,879,534, more than $380 million higher than the previous year. 

The average single-family home has increased by more than $20,000 from $295,291 last fiscal year to $315,335 in FY26, and with the proposed tax rate, would pay $5,518.36 in taxes per year. This represents a $220.84 increase. 

The median home price increased at a similar rate, from $256,500 in FY25 to $275,150 in FY26.  Commercial property increased by more than $15,000, the median property valued at $224,250 in FY25 and $239,500 in FY26. The median commercial property would see a $327.42 annual increase in its tax bill. 

According to the Massachusetts Department of Revenue, there are 11,330 single-family homes in Pittsfield this fiscal year, four new parcels added from the previous year, and the assessed value of this property type rose by $226,274,900, totaling $3,572,750,000. There are 1,733 two-family homes, four fewer than the previous fiscal year, and that property type is assessed at $387,638,100. 

There are 712 commercial properties with a total value of $428,856,000, 242 industrial properties with a total value of $139,218,000, and 15 industrial power plants.  

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