BCC Welcomes Applicants to Culinary Apprenticeship Program

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Community College (BCC) is accepting applications to its culinary apprenticeship program. 
 
Successful program graduates are awarded the industry-recognized ServSafe Food Handler Certificate and are job-ready for a wide range of food service employment opportunities, from school cafeterias and hospital kitchens to restaurants and private households. 
 
Student apprentices are paid, and students of all ages may qualify for free tuition and fees. To apply to BCC, visit www.berkshirecc.edu/apply.  
 
The 15-week culinary arts apprenticeship program blends hands-on, practical training with systematic accompanying education, combining classroom and kitchen instruction with professional work in the field. After seven weeks of foundational coursework, students apply their knowledge and receive further practical training by working with a Berkshires-area restaurant or other food service organization. 
 
"The Culinary Arts certificate prepares our students for working in the thriving food culture of the Berkshires," said Matthew Kenny, Dean of Science and Business. "The program trains them to not only meet the standards of safe food handling required for the culinary industry, but also gives our students practical experiences with food preparation in a state-of-the-art learning environment." 
 
Upon successful completion of the program, students should be able to demonstrate professional knife skills, correctly choose and use kitchen equipment and hand tools, maintain food safety and kitchen sanitation requirements, understand basic preparation techniques for a variety of foods, manage production of simple baked goods and participate in a fast-paced professional kitchen environment, among other skills. 
 
"Our teaching kitchen is your classroom — a professional, supportive space where you learn by doing. It's a welcoming place where beginners and experienced cooks learn side by side," Alexia Trainor, Assistant Professor of Culinary Arts, said.
 
She noted that this semester, nearly all students have been offered a job in their host kitchen or hospitality department, and that most students are hired before they graduate. 
 
 For more information on the program, visit www.berkshirecc.edu/culinary

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Pittsfield Council to See Borrow Request for Water Treatment Upgrades

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city plans to complete upgrades to the Cleveland and Ashley Water Treatment Plants by 2033. 

On the agenda is a request to borrow up to $15 million for upgrades to the city's two water treatment plants, the Cleveland and Ashley Water Treatment Plants.  This would fund the final design and permitting for Phases 1-3, phase 1 of interim updates, allowances, and contingency. 

The total water treatment plant program is estimated to be $165 million over the next 8 years, with $150 million for long-term construction and $15 million for near-term needs "to keep the plants operational and
advance the program through design and permitting," the project's cover letter explains. 

The city does not anticipate water rate increases outside of the established new system based on the  Consumer Price Index Factor (CPIF) and the Operational Stability Factor (OSF). 

"This borrowing, and subsequent authorizations anticipated over the multi-year WTP program, has
been integrated into the Water Enterprise Fund's rate structure so that future debt service is absorbed
within the Council's established formula," the cover letter reads. 

The $15,000,000 borrowing would support:

  • Final Design & Permitting (Phases 1–3): $9.2M
  • Phase 1 Construction (incl. bidding & engineering during construction): $2.4M
  • Land Acquisition/Misc. Engineering/Legal/Contingency: $1.4M
  • WTP Equipment Replacement/Maintenance to Plant Operations: $2.0M

Starting this year, two finished water storage tanks would be designed and constructed, chemical improvements would be made at the Cleveland WTP, and the East New Lenox Road flow control station would receive a new pump station to allow the Ashley WTP to be offline during the third phase. 

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