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A petition is asking the Traffic Commission to limit large truck traffic from using Appleton Avenue to turn onto East Housatonic Street in Pittsfield.

Pittsfield Considers Heavy Vehicle Exclusion on Appleton Ave.

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Heavy commercial vehicles might be banned from driving on Appleton Avenue from East Street to East Housatonic Street in the future. 

On Thursday, the Traffic Commission fielded a petition from Ward 4 Councilor James Conant requesting an exclusion for large commercial trucks on the route, which runs next to Pittsfield High School and through a residential neighborhood. 

City Engineer Tyler Shedd explained that the city would have to conduct a traffic study first. He agreed to have that data collected by summertime, and the petition was referred to his office. The exclusion would also have be OKed by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation. 

"I think it's something where maybe we can discuss it here, because trucks are trying to avoid the corner of South and West Housatonic Street, which had barriers for years, and then we put a bump out there," Shedd said. 

"There's a designated truck route that just doesn't get followed, and there's been attempts at improving signage." 

He said the concern is trucks turning from Appleton Avenue to East Housatonic Street without enough room. This often means cars have to get out of the way or run a red light. 

In 2022, the commission approved a petition to exclude heavy commercial vehicles on Deming and East Housatonic Streets. Ward 5 Councilor Patrick Kavey pointed to previous years' efforts to exclude heavy commercial trucks from the area. 

"I don't disagree with [Conant] at all," he said. 

"I think that we should have done it on East Housatonic, too, but we just haven't, and I assume the reason was something either with state law or with you, because other councils have requested it." 



The requirements for an exclusion, Shedd explained, are that there is a significant number of trucks, at least 5 percent, and that the detour is not a burden. 

Kavey reported speaking to a truck driver who said they look at the GPS instead of the signs on routes. He reached out to two GPS companies on the issue, and only heard back from one. 

Appleton Avenue has also been the focus of safety concerns for students leaving PHS.

At the first meeting of the new School Committee early this year, resident Brenda Coddington raised concerns about traffic on Appleton Avenue when students are released from PHS. She has consistently returned to the open microphone stand, most recently asking for an update on crossing guards. 

Coddington said she was hit by another vehicle while waiting to pick up her granddaughter on the street just before Christmas, and that if it had been two minutes later, her granddaughter would have gotten hit while getting in the car. 

The commission also heard an update on efforts to make the intersection of Linden and Onota Streets more comfortable for drivers. A petition from Joseph Cimini to redesign the intersection of Linden Street at Onota Street was filed because the city is already working on it. 

Shedd reported that Pittsfield is working on softening the northeast corner of the intersection, reducing it by two feet. 

"Right now it's just not comfortable to drive through, like it can be done, but we should make it a little bit more comfortable, basically," he said. 

"The idea is that we're going to take at least two feet from where the curb is now on the Onota side." 


Tags: intersection,   traffic commission,   

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Show-Cause Hearing for Pittsfield Bar Continued Again

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Bei Tempi will have a show-cause hearing for its liquor license in May after police brought forward pictures that appear to show underage patrons drinking.  

On Monday, the Licensing Board continued a hearing for Zuke's Soups and Variety LLC, doing business as Bei Tempi, to May 18. This is the second month it was continued. In the last year, the bar has been accused of underage service by two different parents.  

Earlier this year, Police Capt. Matthew Hill received a call from an upset parent about her 19-year-old daughter patronizing Iztac Mexican Restaurant at night and being served. 

Those photos resulted in a two-week liquor license suspension for Iztac, and the same mother submitted an almost identical complaint about Bei Tempi with photos, one of them with the owner "clearly visible" in the background, Hill said. 

The owners, Richard and Elizabeth Zucco, did not show up in March, and the hearing was continued again this month. 

"This show-cause hearing was scheduled for March 23 of 2026 and the licensee did not appear at that hearing, although I understand that notice went out by way of email," Chair Thomas Campoli reported after the bar's second no-show, adding that the Zuccos' lawyer communicated they had a "planned prepaid trip" that conflicted with the meeting. 

Last year, a different mother approached the Licensing Board asking for accountability after her underage child was allegedly served at Bei Tempi. After drinking at a graduation party, she said her 18-year-old son became further intoxicated at the establishment before returning home late and becoming combative, resulting in an arrest by police. 

In March, the pictures of alleged underage drinking at Iztac were printed and presented to the Licensing Board with faces blurred; the reporting party wished to remain anonymous along with her daughter and friend, and she was unable to attend the hearing. 

Hill ran the patrons' names through police records to confirm they were not 21. This is the same underage daughter who is said to have drunk at Bei Tempi, and her mother has provided photos. 

The Health Department ordered Iztac to close on March 13 after finding "pests" in the establishment.  On Monday, a notice stating that it was closed to the public to protect public health and safety was no longer on the door but the Health Department confirmed that the closure was still in effect. 

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