BRTA Joins, Launches Link413 Collaboration

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Berkshire Regionial Transit Authority (BRTA) have joined the Link413 collaboration that offers customers three new longer-distance, weekday bus routes providing direct service across four counties and enabling out-of-state connections.
 
The pilot initiative is a partnership of the Berkshire Regional Transit Authority (BRTA), Franklin Regional Transit Authority (FRTA), and Pioneer Valley Transit Authority (PVTA). It was created in response to feedback from customers surveyed in recent years who noted connectivity as a key area for improvement.
 
"Link413 will fulfill those regional service needs, so now you finally can get there from here," said BRTA Administrator Robert Malnati.
 
The three transit authorities received grant funding for multiple years from the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) through the Regional Connectivity and Innovations grant programs.
 
These Link413 buses offer amenities such as high-back seats, free WiFi and accessibility for customers traveling with the help of mobility devices. The coaches are branded with the Link413 name and images of Western Mass such as the Connecticut River and surrounding farmland, rolling hills and popular destinations like the Poet's Seat Tower, Bridge of Flowers and Mount Greylock.
 
The buses will provide service on three new commuter routes: route 901 will travel one way in approximately 45 minutes between Pittsfield and North Adams; route 903 will travel one way in approximately 90 minutes between North Adams and Greenfield via the communities of Adams, Savoy, Plainfield, Ashfield and Charlemont; and route 904 will travel one way in approximately 90 minutes to connect customers between Pittsfield and Northampton along the Route 9 corridor with intermediate stops in the communities of Dalton, Windsor, Cummington, Goshen and Williamsburg.
 
Connections to Boston, Connecticut, New York, and Vermont are also possible with Amtrak's Valley Flyer, Vermonter, Lake Shore Limited, and Berkshire Flyer train services.
 
Link413 service will also offer multiple roundtrips on weekdays between the cities of North Adams, Greenfield, Pittsfield and Northampton. Each route will provide intermediate stops in communities along each corridor.
 
A one-way Link413 ticket will cost $10 per trip, or $5 per trip for qualifying customers. Riders can buy tickets through MassDOT's BusPlus+ mobile phone app.

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Pittsfield Schools See 'Very Modest' Chapter 70 Increase

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

The School Committee is expected to vote on a budget in April. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Pittsfield Public Schools will see a "very modest" increase in Chapter 70 funding for fiscal year 2027, and administrators are working to calculate exactly what that will mean. 

Gov. Maura Healey filed a nearly $63 billion budget on Wednesday that increases the city's school funding by $404,000. The Pittsfield schools dropped into a lower Chapter 70 funding category because it has fewer students considered low income. 

This year's expected Chapter 70 aid is just over $68.8 million. In FY26, the district received $68,450,361.

"While the FY27 budget reflects a modest increase over last year's budget, anticipated rising costs such as any current and potential contractual obligations, insurance increases, fuel increases, etc., will result in a budgetary shortfall," Assistant Superintendent for Business and Finance Bonnie Howland reported on Wednesday. 

"The foundation budget also reflects that decrease in overall student enrollment, and this shapes the critical next phase of our work." 

In 2024, the discovery of 11 students meeting those income guidelines put the district in the higher funding category and added $2.4 million in Chapter 70 funds to the school budget. 

The district will review prior year spending trends and confirm district priorities before drafting the budget, which is about 80 percent contractual obligations for teachers, aides, administrators, and support staff. Embedded into the process is engagement with staff, the community, and the City Council. 

Interim Superintendent Latifah Phillips said that in some cases, the district may be able to reduce a current vacancy, but in other cases, there will be a significant effort to hire. 

"For example, for core subject classrooms, we have to fill those positions, and so we are taking a look at every position, every role, how it's being utilized to make recommendations for how we will balance this budget," she explained. 

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