BArT Announces Second Quarter Honor Roll

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ADAMS, Mass. — Berkshire Arts & Technology (BArT) Charter Public School has announced the students who made the honor roll for the  quarter of the 2025-2026 school year. 
 
Students who earned 80 percent or above in all of their classes received the distinction of "Honors." Students who earned 90 percent or above in all of their classes received the distinction of "High Honors."
 
Academic courses at BArT are aligned with the Massachusetts State Curriculum Frameworks for the appropriate grade level and include all standards deemed necessary for a complete, college-preparatory, middle and high school education.
 
Students in Grade 6 who earn Honors are Madilene Barrett, Vincent Belsky, Clara Cahoon, Elizabeth Corkins, Logan Ells, Trinity Groves, Sawyer Hamilton, Lucas Ireland, Julian Johns, Addisyn King, Charlotte Kotski, Hannah Nhim Ovitsky, Aerilynn Reynolds, Noah Rosa Pietri, Landen Sherman, Brayden Storm, Michael Strange, Noah Van Deusen, Lucian Yorke
 
Student in Grade 6 who earned High Honors are Benjamin Chagnon, Luca Ciepiela, Lana Darby, Logan Ely, McCullan Knox, Eric Leard, Madalynn Lescarbeau, Thomas Marko, Valentina Molina Diaz, Samson Nhim Ovitsky, Orlando Ramos, Sharon Shufelt, Ruby Smith
 
Students who in Grade 7 who earn Honors are Lexi Bentley, Jordan Braman, Silas Canfield, Addison Ely, Alexander Gendreau, Ariana Granda Lozano, Kira Hamilton, Henry Herzberg, Austin Lincoln, Gavin Marotta, Jonathan Martin, Nayomi Martin, Llewella Miller, Bethany Oberle, Marcos Palma-Marchiando, Scott Ray, Lillian Ryan, Scarlette Smith, Iyrielle Spratling-Keele, Andrew Williams
 
Students in Grade 7 who earned High Honors are Akua Acquah, Fernanda Chavez Quispe, Emma Danylieko, Elizabeth Isham-Morton, Gloria Nyamehen, Owen Rathbun
 
Students who in Grade 8 who earn Honors are Daniel Aguilar, Abigail Betti, Jaydn Bolus-Strawbridge, Liam Connors, Kason Corkins, Riley Hitchcock, Declan Janis, Sakora Knight, Tristan Larkin, Delroy Leard, James Lee, Ian Lloyd, Brayden Smith, Querdalyna Smith, Maxwell Stolzberg, Kevin Toomey
 
Students in Grade 8 who earned High Honors are Sadie Lavigne, Morgan Legrand, Dante McClerklin, Miewa N'goran, Joey Nocher, Stephen Nyamehen Jr., Gustavo Perez, Aiyanah Roy, Niyah Scipio, Isabella Silva, Paige Tetreault, Kailani Velez Aguto, Patrick Wells Vidal
 
Students who in Grade 9 who earn Honors are Paige Bartlett, Demitri Burnham, Kierra Dearstyne, Ava DeVylder, Emil Gehlot, Caroline Knox, Chris-Raphael Natama, Kennedy Revord, Hadley Richard, Jude Taber, Destiny Wilson
 
Students in Grade 9 who earned High Honors are McKenna Cramer, Maris Darby, Ashley Heck, Callie Meyette, Anthony Salta, Kie Sherman
 
Students who in Grade 10 who earn Honors are Parker Angley, Eli Bills, Anthony Corkins, Sora Knight, Amelia Lancto, Logan Marotta, Evan Miller, Amber Nivelo, Alonzo Petruzzelli, Gineska Vazquez-Melendez, Mackenzie Walker, Simon Wallis
 
Students in Grade 10 who earned High Honors are Molly Isham-Morton, Aiden Nicholas, Elrad Osei-Kuffour, Griffin Pillmore-Beaulieu, Miranda Tetreault
 
Students who in Grade 11 who earn Honors are Keira Cannava, Terence Carty, Sarah Fleury, Katie Higgins, Aiko Hosmer, Emily Rivenburg, Evan Swift, Sage Winkler
 
Students in Grade 11 who earned High Honors are Jayden Bruneau, Alana Olmedo, Mickeayla Rosa Pietri, Gabrielle Thomas
 
Students who in Grade 12 who earn Honors are Laila Brown, Nyx Hall, Audrey Larkin, Sadie Lovato, Raif Madole, Vincent Miksic, Leo Moorhead, Molly Richard, Kaden Toomey
 
Students in Grade 12 who earned High Honors are Lilianna Choque, Ashton Fierro, Dareen Hage, Emerson Maloney, Brooke McKeon, Kylah Rivard, Zachary Tetreault

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Cheshire Officials Question Structural Integrity of Fire Station

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

The cracks have appeared in the concrete block wall raising issues of movement. 
CHESHIRE, Mass. — The fire station's meeting/training room is closed off because of concerns of a potential structural collapse.
 
Over the years, the fire station has had one problem after another and now officials are concerned about the room's structural integrity, deciding to close it last Thursday until it can be evaluated by a structural engineer. 
 
The training space hadn't been painted in more than two decades so officials decided to give it a bit of a "facelift," Fire Chief Thomas Francesconi said. 
 
However, this small project exposed something much more critical — the north wall appeared to be shifting away from the large steel I-beam. 
 
Upon further examination of the area, several larger issues stood out — including a large crack running up the concrete block wall above the bay door, a roughly 2-inch dip in the floor, and a shift in the exterior wall that has left it uneven.
 
There were too many things happening to not err on the side of caution, said Francesconi. Now that the area is exposed, this is the time to get it assessed to ensure that the wall's not moving or buckling, said Corey McGrath, department of public works director.
 
Around 2010, a company dug up around the station's foundation and installed support for the building. During that time, the contractors observed the north side of the building, the area believed to be shifting, was sinking into the ground, Francesconi said. 
 
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