MOTT Awards Matching Destination Development Grant to Ventfort Hall

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LENOX, Mass. — Ventfort Hall Gilded Age Mansion & Museum has received a matching Destination Development grant from the Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism (MOTT) for $48,000.
 
These funds will be used for the restoration of the salon including the parquet floor with the Greek Key inlaid border, as well as restoring Sarah Morgan's 1895 Rosewood Steinway piano, and plaster restoration materials and training so our staff and volunteers can do the work in-house.
 
"In order to increase Ventfort Hall's program and event space to accommodate our expanding audience, we need to restore the floor of the Salon, a focal point of the main floor of the mansion, to return it to its historic beauty and enable us to use it for public programs," Executive Director for Ventfort Hall, Wendy Healey, said. "The Salon floor has deteriorated to the point that it can be safely open to the public on only a limited basis. Once restored to its original distinctive parquet design and reinforced, the Salon, together with the adjoining Library, will accommodate 150 to 200 people, becoming our largest event space."
 
The Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism (MOTT) is the state agency dedicated to promoting Massachusetts as a leisure-travel destination. The Destination Development Capital (DDC) Grant Program supports projects that strengthen regional economies and improve the visitor experience across the state.

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Letter: Real Issue in Hinsdale Is Leadership Failure

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor:

The Hinsdale Select Board recently claimed they are "flabbergasted" by the Dalton Police Department's decision to suspend mutual aid. This public display of confusion is staggering. It reveals a severe lack of leadership and a deep disconnect from the established facts.

Dalton did not make a rash or emotional choice. They made a strict, calculated decision to protect their own officers. Dalton leadership clearly stated their reasons. They cited deep concerns about officer safety, trust, training consistency, and post-incident accountability. These are massive red flags for any law enforcement agency.

These concerns stem directly from the fatal shooting of Biagio Kauvil. During this tragic event, Hinsdale command staff failed to follow their own policies. We saw poor judgment, tactical errors, and clear supervisory failures. When a police department breaks its own rules, it places both the public and responding officers at strict risk. No responsible outside agency will subject its own team to a command structure that lacks basic operational competence.

For elected officials to look at a preventable tragedy, clear policy violations, and the swift withdrawal of a neighboring agency, yet still claim confusion, shows willful blindness. If the Select Board cannot recognize the obvious institutional failures staring them in the face, they disqualify themselves from providing meaningful oversight.

We cannot accept leaders who dismiss documented failures and deflect blame. We must demand true accountability. The real problem is not that Dalton withdrew its support. The real problem is a Hinsdale leadership team that refuses to face its own failures.

Scott McGowan
Williamstown Mass.

 

 

 

 

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