BCC Assistant Professor Awarded $5K Grant from Mass Cultural Council

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PITTSFIELD, Mass — Berkshire Community College (BCC) announced that Assistant Professor of English Liesl Schwabe has been awarded a Mass Cultural Council Grant for Creative Individuals for $5,000. 
 
The funding will support Schwabe as she works to complete a collection of essays, largely pulling from the research and reporting she conducted while serving as a Fulbright-Nehru Scholar in Kolkata, India, during the 2024-2025 academic year. Schwabe's previous writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Review of Books, World Literature Today, Words Without Borders and LitHub, among other publications. 
 
"While essential federal funding for the arts is cut or eliminated entirely, it is all the more important to recognize Massachusetts for its ongoing support of and advocacy for individual artists and our communities," Schwabe said. "I am tremendously honored to receive this Mass Cultural Council grant, which provides both material support and vital professional encouragement." 
 
Mass Cultural Council adopted a $34 million spending plan for the current fiscal year, allowing the agency to award at least 2,200 grants totaling approximately $26.2 million to the Commonwealth's creative and cultural sector. This funding derives primarily from public dollars, including the agency's $26.9 million state budget appropriation and support from the National Endowment for the Arts. The agency also runs the Mass Cultural Facilities Fund in partnership with MassDevelopment. 
 
Mass Cultural Council funds reach every community in the Commonwealth. Its mission is to advance the Commonwealth's creative and cultural sector by celebrating traditions and talents, championing its collective needs, and equitably investing public resources. 

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Radon Reading Closes Pittsfield's West Housatonic Fire Station

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The fire station on West Housatonic Street has been temporarily closed after radon levels were found to be more than twice the normal amount.
 
Personnel at the station were relocated to the department's headquarters, located at 74 Columbus Ave., on Sunday out of an abundance of caution, said Catherine VanBramer, director of administrative services/public information officer. 
 
The West Housatonic Street station, built in 1951, has an officer and two firefighters on each shift. The station's apparatus has also moved to reserve bay at the Columbus Avenue headquarters. 
 
All of the city's fire stations and City Hall were tested. Once test results indicated concentrations above the recommended action level, the city promptly closed the station and began assessment and mitigation efforts. 
 
Initial tests found radon levels three to four times higher than normal, and further testing is planned in the coming days, she said. 
 
The department's headquarters is about 1.2 miles away from the West Housatonic Street station. 
 
"There are instances where PFD personnel are on a call in one part of the city and must respond to another call in a different part of the city.  The team continues to be ready to respond to any calls that are within their service area," VanBramer said. 
 
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