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Dalton Avenue bridge's concrete sides are eroding and exposing its metal supports. Its condition was in a petition from Councilors Kenneth Warren and Cameron Cunningham and referred to MassDOT

Pittsfield Council Sees Traffic Petitions

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Several traffic requests were made at the City Council's last meeting, including a query about the deteriorating Dalton Avenue overpass and an ask to fix the raised crosswalk on Holmes Road.  

On April 14, the City Council handled petitions from Ward 1 Councilor Kenneth Warren and Ward 2 Councilor Cameron Cunningham requesting an update on the current condition of the Dalton Avenue bridge overpass and rehabilitation plan, and a petition from Councilor at Large Kathy Amuso and Ward 3 Councilor Matthew Wrinn requesting the "timely removal" or reconfiguration of the speed bump on Holmes Road between Elm Street and William Street. 

Parts of the Dalton Avenue bridge's concrete sides appear to be crumbling, exposing rusted steel supports and requiring a barrier in the eastbound lane. Warren and Cunningham's petition was referred to the Massachusetts Department of Transportation, which is leading the replacement. 

According to the MassDOT's website, the bridge replacement over the Ashuwillticook bike trail is in the preliminary design phase and will cost more than $9 million. A couple of years ago, a raised crosswalk was installed on the corridor as part of road diet improvements to slow traffic and foster safety.  

The councilors said they are understanding and supportive of the bump's intentions, but the current design and condition "present more significant safety concerns rather than effectively addressing them."  The petition was referred to the commissioner of public works. 

Wrinn said they have spoken to "many, many" constituents about it, and they feel the speed bump is pretty egregious. 

"It's causing more problems than actually helping people, and we want to explore other options with something similar to Tyler Street, a brightly colored crosswalk, more signage," he explained. 

Amuso's goal is to do some kind of reconfiguration, because as she has been told, it is up to code, but "when you're going up that street, and your car is coming off the road, that's not safe either."

"The goal was safety for our children, and that's what I still want that to be," she said. 



Ward 7 Councilor Kathy Moody has very little patience for people who wreck their car by speeding through a speed bump. That being said, she finds the Holmes Road bump pretty aggressive and could be reconfigured. 

"Otherwise, slow down. There are little kids on the street," she said. 

In 2022, Melissa Rathbun's fourth-grade son was struck by a vehicle in the crosswalk coming home from school, and while he escaped serious injury, she said the situation was "nothing short of every parent's absolute worst nightmare." 

While she cannot support the complete removal of the crosswalk for the safety of pedestrians who use it daily, she believes it is necessary to reconfigure by reducing its size, increasing signage, and possibly relocating it to the southern corner of Cambridge Avenue to further increase visibility. 

"I was and still am hugely grateful to the many people involved, from the police department to the school superintendent, to the Commissioner of Public Works, who took my plea seriously and worked so hard to ensure the future safety of kids like my son," Rathbun said. 

"All that being said, whether it's due to a lack of appropriate signage, its location at the crest of a hill, its steep grade, or sheer size, it cannot be denied that the implementation of this raised crosswalk in its current form has created as many issues as I set out to mitigate." 

Ward 2 Councilor Cameron Cunningham's request to repaint Dalton Avenue's traffic lines between Harvard Street and Benedict Road, consistent with recommendations from the Pittsfield Community Design Center's Walking Audit, was referred to the commissioner of public service and utilities and the Traffic Commission, which is meeting next week. 

The walk audit performed last year resulted in a recommendation that Pittsfield formalize and enforce speed limits, mark all crosswalks, establish "daylighting" at corners with on-street parking regulations to improve visibility, establish right-sized travel lanes that discourage speeding, and improve the bus stop. 


Tags: bridge work,   traffic safety,   

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Shipping Business PostNet Opens on North Street

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

Look for the banner over the door, next to the A-Mart.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — You can now design, print, bind and ship all from the same location downtown — and pick up your mail while you're at it.

Siblings Bina and Gary Patel recently opened a PostNet location at 524 North St. The worldwide chain offers shipping, printing and mailbox services.

Gary Patel also owns the convenience store A-Mart right next door.

"PostNet is a one-stop destination for shipping and printing. You can ship your stuff with the multi-carrier, because we offer UPS, FedEx, DHL, and post office, also, and we have a printing press here," Bina Patel said. "So if you want to print something like a brochure, business cards, banners, you can print here, and we also provide the mailbox services here also, so we have a physical mailbox and virtual mailbox both here."

The printers can accommodate large banners and print logos on shirts. The store also has tape, envelopes, other stationery items, packing materials, and shredding services.

The Patels said they were looking into a shipping business and had a friend who used PostNet and liked it. They researched for two years about the business and signed a contract with PostNet in October. 

They said they wanted to their destination to provide customers everything they needed to do, noting shipping services are scarce after FedEx closed its Pittsfield location last year. They had been getting inquiries about FedEx options and UPS, which has a store in Pittsfield and one in Williamstown.

"We just went many times, around here, maybe one UPS Store, even in Berkshire County, we have the A-Mart, and we're trying to make it like one stop," Gary Patel said. "So whoever comes from the hospital, comes for lunch or whatever, and they want to make it one stop to drop a package or something, and that'll help out the community."

The store also provides competitor prices from other carriers for customers to compare.

The store is open from 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, with Sunday hours currently by appointment. 

 
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