Berkshire Community Land Trust Name Executive Director

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Berkshire Community Land Trust (BCLT) announced the promotion of Operations Director Beth Carlson to a newly created Executive Director position. 
 
Carlson, a partner in Silo Media, initially got involved with BCLT and the Farmsteads for Farmers initiative through events, video, and graphics projects. She became the Campaign Manager for Farmsteads for Farmers in 2023 and became Director of Operations in 2024. On November 1,2025 she began full-time in the new Executive Director role.
 
"We are thrilled that Beth has stepped into the role as our first executive director,"Board member Sarah Downie said. "She brings experience, enthusiasm, great communication skills, and optimism to our organization. We feel very lucky that she moved into this new role and look forward to a successful and invigorating future with her at the helm."
 
Carlson served as president of the Dewey Memorial Hall Board until recently and is credited with leading the team that brought the organization through COVID and a revival. She is a founding board member of the W. E. B. Du Bois Center for Freedom and Democracy. Her Silo Media projects were mostly for nonprofits and involved fundraising campaigns, social media, and consulting. 
 
Carlson began full-time in November. Expressing her passion for the mission of the CLT, she stated:
 
"Affordable access to land is critical to the health of our local communities.  Land speculation had concentrated ownership in fewer and fewer hands. Placing land into a community land trust and making it available in perpetuity for workforce housing, farming, local retail, and light manufacturing can revitalize the local economy."
 
Executive Director of the Schumacher Center for New Economics and founder and Board Member Emeritus of Berkshire Community Land Trust, Susan Witt, worked closely with Carlson and encouraged her continued involvement and role expansion with BCLT.
 
"Thanks to the commitment of a volunteer board and the help of great part-time assistants, BCLT and its sister organization CLTSB has achieved much in its 46-year history.  But it is now time for a full-time executive director to build the organizations to their full potential. Grounded in the Berkshires with skills honed in the non-profit community, Beth Carlson is the right person at the right time for this task," Witt said.
 
A reception celebrating the recent acquisition of River Run Farm and welcoming Carlson to the new role will be held in the spring of 2026. The event will also honor David Fix, Schumacher Center Director of Operations, for his years of work assisting the board of directors and maintaining governance and supporting operations for both organizations.
 
The Community Land Trust movement was founded in 1969 by Civil Rights Activists Bob Swann, Slater King, and others to return land and prosperity to Black communities in the South. 
 
In 1980, Susan Witt and Bob Swann moved to the Berkshires to found what is now the Schumacher Center for New Economics. They simultaneously established the Community Land Trust in the Southern Berkshires (CLTSB). In 2015, CLTSB founded the sister organization, Berkshire Community Land Trust (BCLT), to expand its capacity to hold multiple types of land.  
 
Today, CLTSB/BCLT holds over 130 acres in community trust, providing homeownership opportunities to 23 families and two local nonprofits with residential and office facilities. Nearly 100 acres of that land are productive farmland supporting two thriving agricultural businesses that strengthen our local food system and economy.  
 
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Connecticut Man Killed in Otis Tractor-Trailer Crash

OTIS, Mass. — Thursday's collision between two tractor-trailers on Route 8 killed one of the drivers. 
 
Antonio Luis Marcucci, 32 of Waterbury, Conn., was northbound at about 9 a.m. Thursday when he apparently lost control of the truck and veered into the southbound lanes, colliding head-on with a southbound tractor trailer, according to police. 
 
According to the Berkshire District Attorney's Office, police dispatched to 1322 South Main Road found the truck with Connecticut plates in the northbound lane and a truck bearing Oklahoma plates lodged in a snowback on south side. 
 
The officer began rendering aid to the northbound driver, identified as Marcucci. He was pinned inside the cab of his truck. He was extracated and transported to Baystate Medical Center in Springfield by Otis EMS, where he was pronounced dead.
 
The driver of the Oklahoma tractor trailer in the southbound lane did not receive serious injuries.
 
Early investigation, including dash camera footage captured by one of the tractor trailers, shows the Oklahoma tractor trailer was traveling in the southbound lane and the Connecticut tractor trailer was traveling in the northbound lane, according to the DA's Office. The Connecticut tractor trailer lost control veering off the other side of the road ultimately ending on the southbound lane. Shortly after the two tractor trailers collided in a head on collision.
 
The investigation remains ongoing.
 
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