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The Wagon Wheel on Route 7 went up in flames Friday morning.

Multiple Fire Companies Battling Motel Blaze on Route 7

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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An image posted to the Pittsfield Fire page early Thursday morning.
LENOX, Mass. — Multiple fire companies are battling a structure fire at the Wagon Wheel Inn on Route 7.
 
Motorists are asked to avoid Holmes Road, Pomeroy Avenue and surrounding areas near Route 7. The highway between Holmes Road and the Lenox shopping plaza has been closed since about 6:30.
 
Pittsfield Police say traffic is being rerouted off Route 7 and into neighborhood streets. 
 
Lenox Deputy Fire Chief William Colvin said the call was received at about 6:15 a.m. by the regional dispatch center. 
 
 "At this point, the biggest thing now we're battling besides, a fire is just ice issues, with freezing ice," Colvin said. "Our local highway department, the Lenox Highway Department have been here sanding and MassDOT is also helping with traffic and with salting of the road."
 
The departments from the city of Pittsfield, north, all the way down from Sheffield, were on the scene.
 
The state fire marshal and representatives from the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency were also at the scene.
 
The fire is under investigation.
 
A Lenox resident on a BRTA bus saw the fire coming up through the middle of the building; a CVS employee in the plaza across the street saw flames and called it in. 
 
The front of the one-story motel was fully engulfed with a "yellow glow," one said. 
 
Colvin said Chief Robert Casucci was among the first on the scene and had told him it appeared the fire was in the central portion of the building.
 
An occupant of the motel said they thought it started in the laundry room and said no fire alarm went off until after everyone was out. 
 
Another person, Ed, reportedly knocked on doors to wake everyone and his neighbors credited him with saving their lives. Lenox Police also reportedly aided in the evacuation.
 
Several of the residents were at Market 32 trying to keep warm in the frigid temperatures. They said they were long-term tennants of the motel and now they had lost everything. 
 
They were taken to the Hinsdale rehab bus to keep warm. Red Cross was at the scene and was working on accommodations for them.
 
Numerous fire companies were at the scene, including fire engines from Great Barrington, Lee, Lenox, and Stockbridge.
 
Images from the Pittsfield Fire Department show the building in flames that spread through the north side of the structure. Smoke could be seen billowing over Route 7. 
 
"Fortunately, at this point, as far as I know, no one's been injured," Colvin said at the scene. "All residents have been accounted for. I believe there was 13 people staying at the hotel at the time, they've all been accounted for."
 
He said it took firefighters at least 90 minutes to to two hours to bring the blaze under control. 
 
"But there's a lot of hidden voids, a lot of attic areas and stuff that we can't get to, so we're just chasing it right now, from, you know, hot spot to hot spot, trying to put out all the different areas," he said. "There's some small areas where there's still fire burning, but nothing major at this time."
 
Fire engines were using the parking lot of the adjacent Mazzeo's Italian Deli to attack blaze. Colvin said the deli owners opened early so motel residents and firefighters could warm up
 
The Mazda dealership [on the other side of the motel] opened their doors to us right away this morning to let both residents and firefighters come in to warm up," he said. "Unfortunately, we're going to be occupying the area most of the day so, but we'll hopefully, you know, get out here soon again so they can open."
 
Write-thru at 9:48 a.m. 

Tags: structure fire,   

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WWII Veteran Reflects on D-Day at VFW Post Induction

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The members in the picture are Bret Miller, Coast Guard, Desert Storm; Hank Morris, Army, Vietnam; Brad Havill, Navy, Global War on Terror; VFW Post 448 Vice Cmdr. Mark Pompi, Army, Global War on Terrorism, Afghanistan; Post Cmdr. Arnold Perras, Korea; Joe Difillipo, Army, Vietnam; Teri Billington, Navy, Desert Storm; and Carmen Ostrander, Air Force, Afghanistan.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Anthony Salatino Jr. says his memory is getting a little foggy about his time in the Army. 

But he remembers how terrible D-Day was, and feeling lucky he wasn't among those in the initial invasion force 82 years ago. 
 
"One of the most horrible things was in Normandy. We went shortly after D-Day. I got lucky, very lucky on D-Day. We went to a staging area the night before … and at the very end, somebody called, I was in headquarters, they called all the headquarters personnel at the center," the 103-year-old said. "We did not go. There's about 30 of us. The rest of the battalion was gone, and the reason for that was because there was another battalion coming from the States, and they had no headquarters. 
 
"We stayed back, but we did go to Normandy shortly after that, and when we went to Normandy, it was all over."
 
Salatino was attending an induction ceremony on Thursday at the Lt. John N. Truden VFW Post 448. Joseph Texidor, who served in the Army for 17 years with tours in Iraq and Afghanistan, was sworn in as the post's newest member. 
 
Salatino served in the Medical Corps and wanted to follow in the footsteps of his father, a World War I veteran wounded at Verdun. Salatino was in the Army for about three years.
 
"The whole memory is what I just told you, very, very alive to me," he said. "That is, I can never forget, never forget that."
 
D-Day on June 6, 1944, was the start of Operation Overlord, and the largest invading force to cross the English Channel since 1066. Their goal: to liberate Europe from Nazi Germany. 
 
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