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The EV charging stations were installed at the Stanley and Susan B. Anthony Annexes in August of 2025, and are meant to power BCC maintenance and state-owned vehicles.

BCC Gets EV Chargers Through State Grant

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — With a state grant, Berkshire Community College has installed eight chargers for electric maintenance vehicles. 

On Tuesday, the college highlighted this "step towards technological modernization" that was made possible by a $133,000 grant from the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources. 

The EV charging stations were installed at the Stanley and Susan B. Anthony Annexes in August of 2025, and are meant to power BCC maintenance and state-owned vehicles.  Installation was funded by a $133,161 Fleet EV Charging Deployment Grant Program award provided by the Mass DOER's Leading By Example grant program.

Director of Facilities Jason Dion reported that the EV stations are restricted to maintenance vehicles because there is no purchasing option for the electrical use.  The project essentially created a grid of charging stations across the Commonwealth for any state-owned vehicle to charge while traveling outside its respective county, he explained.   


"The grant covered costs associated with fleet electric vehicle charging deployment at BCC, including procurement, installation and maintenance of eight single-port charging stations and preparatory work to enable future installation of two additional charging ports," a press release from BCC reads. 
 
"In October 2024, Guardian Energy was awarded the contract to install the EV charging stations at the Stanley and Susan B." 



 


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Pittsfield School Committee Votes to Close Morningside

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — There were tears as the School Committee on Wednesday voted to close Morningside Community School at the end of the school year. 

Interim Superintendent Latifah Phillips said the purpose of considering the closure is to fulfill the district's obligation to ensure every student has access to a learning environment that best supports academic growth and achievement, school climate, equitable access to resources, and long-term success. 

"While fiscal implications are included, the7 closure of the school is fundamentally driven by the student performance, their learning conditions, the building inadequacy, and equitable student access, rather than the district's budget," she said. 

"…The goal is not to save money. The goal is to reinvest that money to make change, specifically for our Morningside students, and then for the whole school building, as a whole." 

Over the last month or so, the district has considered whether to retire the open concept, community school at the end of the school year. 

Morningside, built in the 1970s, currently serves 374 students in grades prekindergarten through Grade 5, including a student population with 88.2 percent high-needs, 80.5 percent low-income, and 24.3 percent English learners.  Its students will be reassigned to Allendale, Capeless, Egremont, and Williams elementary schools.

The school is designated as "Requiring Assistance or Intervention," with a 2025 accountability percentile of seventh, despite moderate progress over the past three years, and benchmark data continues to show urgent literacy concerns in several grades. 

School Committee member and former Morningside student Sarah Muil, through tears, made the motion to approve the school's retirement at the end of this school year.  

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