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Friday Front Porch Feature: A Move-in Ready House

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. —  Are you looking for a family home in a nice neighborhood? Then this might just be the home for you.

Our Friday Front Porch is a weekly feature spotlighting attractive homes for sale in Berkshire County. This week, we are showcasing 149 Kittredge Road.

This four-bedroom, 2 1/2-bath raised ranch was built in 1970 and is 2,140 square feet on a third of an acre.

It is listed for $465,000 with Lammachia Realty.

The main floor includes a kitchen, a living room and dining room, and three bedrooms, including the master. The fully furnished basement has the fourth bedroom, a half-bath, and another living room with a fireplace and a sliding glass door to the outside. A deck is off the kitchen.

Comes with range, double wall ovens, refrigerator, washer and dryer; heat and hot water are natural gas.

The two-car garage is under the main floor and accessed through the basement. 

The yard is spacious enough for events or family fun.

You can find out more on its listing here.

*Front Porch Feature brings you an exclusive to some of the houses listed on our real estate page every week. 

 





Tags: front porch,   Real Estate,   

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Pittsfield Council Backs Community Media Funding Legislation

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council is backing state legislation that updates the funding model for community media, including Pittsfield Community Television, to account for declining cable revenues. 

Last week, the City Council supported House Bill H.91 and Senate Bill S.2556, "An Act to Modernize Funding for Community Media Programming." The legislation aims to support public, educational, and governmental access to media centers as more people cut the cord from cable and switch to streaming services.

Councilor at Large Peter White, who petitioned for his fellow councilors' support of the bills, thought that was "pretty easy for us to look at." State Sen. Paul Mark is one of the sponsors of the Senate bill, and state Rep. Leigh Davis is a sponsor for the House bill. 

"The state Legislature will hopefully pass a model where streaming services that use our public infrastructure would be charged a similar fee to what our cable companies negotiate with communities, because having community access television is extremely important," he explained. 

"Anyone watching us at home is doing it through what was created through that cable access fee that was charged, that we used to pay on our cable bill, however, is no longer there for anyone who's cut the cord." 

The legislation would establish a PEG Access Facilities Revenue Advisory Board that recommends an annual assessment rate for streaming services to ensure PEG access facilities maintain revenue levels, and a Streaming Entertainment Fund to collect and distribute the funds. It would apply to services with annual statewide revenues over $250,000. 

Since 2019, Pittsfield Community Television has lost more than $969,000 in inflation-adjusted revenue and has been forced to reduce staff, Executive Director Shawn Serre said. He said these bills would help replace some of those losses by "bringing the funding model up to date with viewing habits of today." 

PCTV is funded by cable franchise revenues and its own fundraising as a nonprofit organization, he explained, and in the past 40 years, the city has not spent any taxpayer money to support PCTV or provide any of its services. 

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