Williams Students Reportedly Harassed on Main Street

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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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,   

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Williamstown Board Signs Off on Utility Infrastructure, Conservation Restriction

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday approved one request from Berkshire Gas to install equipment in the town's right-of-way and put off another request pending more information from the utility.
 
Berkshire Gas was before the board looking for an OK to install a telemetering station on Church Street near the elementary school and a regulator station on North Street (Route 7) near the Clark Art Institute's satellite parking lot.
 
A senior engineering technician from Berkshire Gas attended the meeting to speak on behalf of the former request, but no one from the utility attended to support the North Street proposal.
 
"There was supposed to be someone else to talk about the regulator station," Wes Scalise told the board.
 
Town Manager Robert Menicocci and Department of Public Works Director Craig Clough told the board that the proposed 5-foot tall structure generated some safety concerns on the part of Town Hall.
 
"As you come around what is a relatively blind corner, you have a parking lot there during peak time that has a lot of traffic going in and out," Menicocci told the board. "We wanted to get a sense of the size [of the proposed installation] and whether any work was done to analyze what sight lines are like when people are pulling out of that lot."
 
Clough told the board that when he met with Berkshire Gas on the application, he suggested that the regulator station should be installed as far from the curb as possible and, if the Clark was amenable, out of the town's right-of-way entirely if possible. 
 
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