NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Greylock neighborhood has been alerted to the beginning of demolition at the old Greylock School.
Construction equipment is already at the site and the trees that lined Phelps Avenue in front of the school have been removed.
A superintendent at the site confirmed that some abatement was occurring in preparation for demolition of the 1951 elementary school to make way for a new building.
The $51 million project was awarded to Fontaine Bros. Inc. of Springfield last month. The entire project is estimated at $65 million though it is currently running $2 million under budget.
Mayor Jennifer Macksey, chair of the School Committee, wrote to residents in the area to inform them of the possibility of disruption from noise and construction equipment.
City Councilor Marie McCarron read the letter into the council's minutes on Tuesday night. The mayor was not present.
In the missive, the mayor noted the city has entered into the agreement with Fontaine as general contractor and that Collier's International, as the owner's project manager, will continue to guide the project.
"You may notice increased activity in the area surrounding the school, including construction vehicles, equipment and occasional noise during the week of March, 9, 2026," she wrote. "The general contractor is expected to mobilize equipment on site to begin demolition and abatement of the existing building. Around the same time, installation of the site fencing in the initial stages of the site work will begin."
The mayor said the project team will be on site daily and will work closely with the general contractor to make sure any activities are within the hours of 7 a.m. and 6 p.m.
"We are committed to maintaining clear and consistent communication with the neighborhood throughout this approximately 18-month project," Macksey wrote. "Updates will be shared through the school website and newsletters and will include information about major milestones, any changes to traffic patterns and activities that may temporarily affect the surrounding area."
Anyone wishing to receive periodic construction updates can provide their email address to Jeffrey Manley at Jeffrey.Manly@Collierseng.com or Todd Ashford at Todd.Ashford@Collierseng.com.
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Drury High Weighting Grades for Honor Society
By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Drury High School's honor societies will take into account access to early college when calculating grades.
The School Committee last Tuesday approved new language in the student handbook that reflect the changes.
"We were talking about how honor roll and Pro Merito and Nu Sigma is calculated, and we realized that even though we have weighted GPAs for taking more difficult courses for our students, we didn't actually factor that into who was eligible for honor roll or the Honor Society," Principal Stephanie Kopala explained to the committee last week.
The school's always used unweighted averages in determining honor roll status and who is inducted into the Honor Society, which predates the National Honor Society. On the other hand, class rank has used weighted grades.
Since Drury has become an early college high school and Kopala said the majority of students are now taking college classes as high school students "and we're not factoring in the fact that they're taking these challenging courses."
"They might not necessarily be getting that 3.5 or that 4.0 average that they would have gotten if they had taken honors or AP classes, which is why we put the weighting in to our factoring for valedictorian, salutatorian," she said. "We realized that this was actually very inequitable for a lot of our students."
Most high school use a weighted grade-point average and the Drury administration was requesting a policy change to reflect that.
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