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Mayor Peter Marchetti presented firefighters Matthew Mazzeo and Clarence Gunn with certificates of achievement at Tuesday's City Council meeting. At right is Fire Chief Thomas Sammons.
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Council Vice President Earl Persip III, left, President Peter White and Mayor Marchetti present outgoing Councilors Brittany Noto and Rhonda Serre plaques in recognition of their service. The two women did not run for re-election.

Pittsfield Recognizes Firefighters of the Year, Outgoing Councilors

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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Pittsfield firefighters Matthew Mazzeo and Clarence Gunn with Gov. Maura Healey and state Fire Marshal Jon Davine at the annual Firefighter of the Year Awards in Worcester last month. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Two members of the Pittsfield Fire Department were recognized as Firefighters of the Year for rescuing a man from the ice in early 2025

At the end of November, Matthew Mazzeo and Clarence Gunn traveled to Worcester for the 36th annual Firefighter of the Year Awards held by the state Department of Fire Services. The two were honored for their Jan. 21 response to a fisherman who had fallen into the icy waters of Onota Lake. 

The Fire Department responded to the report of a fisherman falling through the ice about 7:45 a.m.  The person had gotten out of the water but had fallen back in, and the ice broke again while Mazzeo and Gunn were making the rescue. 

Mayor Peter Marchetti presented the two with certificates of recognition at the beginning of Tuesday's City Council meeting. 

Fire Chief Thomas Sammons explained that the two firefighters had to be tethered in cold water suits, and Gunn's suit failed, filling with freezing water. He and the fisherman were transported to Berkshire Medical Center for hypothermia and made a full recovery. 

"They were 300 feet offshore, so it was really hard to have communications, and everything happened all at once. They did a great job," he said. 

"We started pulling them in, and there was a layer of slush on top. It was really slow. Pittsfield Police responded. They donned life preservers and jumped right in. Everybody worked together for a very positive outcome." 


Sammons explained that the ice sled used for rescues also plunged into the water, and the two firefighters had to untangle the tethers to get the man and themselves to safety.  

"It was absolutely crazy, absolutely worthwhile of Firefighter of the Year," he said. 

Being the last council meeting of the year before the new term, outgoing Ward 2 Councilor Brittany Noto and former Ward 7 Councilor Rhonda Serre were given plaques in recognition and appreciation of their leadership in the 2024-2025 term. 

Noto did not seek a second term, and Cameron Cunningham will fill the seat after his victory in the Nov. 4 municipal election

Serre stepped down in October when she began teaching for the Pittsfield Public Schools. Katherine Nagy Moody will represent Ward 7 in the next term after she secured the seat over former councilor Anthony Maffuccio. 

Pittsfield's inauguration ceremony will be held at 10 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 5, at City Hall. City Clerk Michele Benjamin, ward and at-large councilors, and the School Committee will be sworn into two-year terms, and the council president and vice president will be elected. 

All four at-large councilors will return, and there will be new representation in Wards 2 and 7.  The School Committee is largely newcomers, with one incumbent, Daniel Elias, and former chair Katherine Yon. 

Kathleen Amuso, Alisa Costa, Earl Persip, III, and Peter White will be sworn in as at-large councilors; Kenneth Warren, Jr., Cameron Cunningham, Matthew Wrinn, James Conant, Patrick Kavey, Dina Lampiasi, and Katherine Moody will be sworn in as ward councilors; and Carolyn Barry, Ciara Batory, Daniel Elias, Heather McNeice, Sarah Muil, and Katherine Yon will be sworn into School Committee. 


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Dalton Resident Ranks Third in National Snocross Race

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Sal LeBeau on his machine with his sister, Kenna, in the black hat, and friend Brandon and his sister Alea.
DALTON, Mass. — At just 16 years old, Salvatore LaBeau is already making avalanches in the national snocross racing scene.
 
Last weekend, LaBeau raced in the Mount Zion Snocross National race in Ironwood, Mich., the first of eight races in the national circuit series. 
 
Competitions take place across national circuits, attracting racers from various regions and even internationally. 
 
Labeau rides for CT Motorsports, a team based in Upstate New York, on a 2025 Polaris 600R. 
 
This is LaBeau's first time competing on the CT Motorsports team. Years prior, he raced for a team owned by Bruce Gaspardi, owner of South Side Sales and Service in North Adams.  
 
Despite a bad first day on Friday when he fell off his snowmobile and didn't make the final, LaBeau carried on with confidence and on Saturday obtained his first national podium, placing in third for the Sport Lite class. 
 
"I'm feeling good. I'm gonna start training more when I come home, and go to the gym more. And I am really excited, because I'm in 11th right now," the Wahconah High student said. 
 
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