Williams Students Reportedly Harassed on Main Street

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Williamstown Police and Williams College security are investigating two reports of students being harassed on Main Street over the weekend.
 
In a letter to the campus community on Tuesday morning, Campus Safety Services Director Jeff Palmer detailed separate incidents where students were harassed on Route 2.
 
In one case, "a white 4-door pickup truck towing a motorcycle trailer that shouted and made gestures of a derogatory and explicit nature and shouted racial slurs at students who were waiting at the bus stop," Palmer wrote.
 
Another time students reported to CSS that, "a black truck … accelerated through the crosswalk while students were beginning to cross."
 
Palmer characterized the latter incident as "intimidation."
 
Palmer encouraged anyone with information about either incident to report it either to his office at 413-597-4444 or the WPD at 413-458-5733.
 
"While it may be difficult to do in the moment, if you witness, or are the target of one of these incidents, please try to identify the vehicle (make, model, color, license plate, license plate state, etc.) and provide that information to CSS," Palmer wrote.
 
Police Chief Michael Ziemba said Tuesday morning that there is no closed-circuit television footage available for the areas where the incidents occurred.
 
Palmer's email directed members of the community to support services available from the Williams Chaplains’ Office, Davis Center and dean of the college’s Integrative Wellbeing Services.
 
"We want to thank the students who contacted us about the incident[s] and to remind everyone that actions like these have no place here," Palmer wrote. "Please take care of yourselves and each other."

Tags: harassment,   Williams College,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

School Budget, Environment, Recreation Highlight Williamstown Town Meeting

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — This month's annual town meeting returns to a familiar venue.
 
What goes on in that building the rest of the year could be a major topic of discussion at the Tuesday, May 19, gathering.
 
After two years (2020 and '21) on Williams College's football field and four years ('22 through '25) at Mount Greylock Regional School, the town's legislative body will be back at Williamstown Elementary School for a 7 p.m. meeting to decide on municipal spending and other town business.
 
The largest segment of the municipal budget goes to the public schools, and the spending plan for PreK-12 education likely will see a floor amendment intended to add an additional $120,000 to fund a math interventionist at Williamstown Elementary School.
 
The elected seven-member School Committee that governs the Mount Greylock Regional School District has proposed a $30.9 million operating budget for the fiscal year that begins on July 1. The local share of that budget is meted out in assessments to the member towns of Lanesborough and Williamstown, which each vote whether to approve its assessment at town meeting.
 
Williamstown's share of the operating and capital expenditures for the regional school district is $16.8 million under the budget approved by the School Committee, an increase of a little more than $2 million, or 13.65 percent, from the budget for the current fiscal/school year.
 
A group of WES parents concerned about the mathematics instruction at the Grade prekindergarten-6 school plans to bring an amendment to town meeting to add the additional $120,000 — about 0.7 percent of the proposed assessment — to fund the interventionist position.
 
View Full Story

More Williamstown Stories