Pittsfield City Council Accepts Airport Funds, Honors Late PHS Teacher

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council last Tuesday accepted a $2.4 million federal grant for a new taxiway at the Pittsfield Municipal Airport, a project that will only require 2.5 percent support from Pittsfield. 

"This is a great deal for the city of Pittsfield, and our airport has come a long way in a very short time," Ward 7 Councilor Katherine Moody said. 

Councilors accepted $2,394,570 from the Department of Transportation Federal Aviation Administration, and approved an order to borrow $2,520,600 for the construction of Taxiway A at the airport.

Moody was referring to the fact that 95 percent, or $2,394,570, is covered by the FAA.  The remaining costs are split between Massachusetts and Pittsfield; 2.5 percent each. 

That brings the city's contribution to a little more than $63,000. 

The project will reconstruct, mark, light, and sign the new taxiway, which will also require pavement removal, excavation, pavement construction, installation of electrical and drainage infrastructure, pavement markings, seeding, and more. 

Bidding was recently completed at $2,150,490.65 and, combined with engineering services and administrative costs, the project totaled $2,520,600. 


At the beginning of the meeting, Councilor at Large Kathy Amuso paid tribute to a longtime friend of hers and many others, Colleen Quinn, who died on May 20 at the age of 69 after a brief battle with cancer.

Amuso described the loss of the longtime Pittsfield High School art teacher as devastating to the community. 

"I felt it was important to let our community know who Colleen was and how important she was to our community," she said. 

"Colleen had a unique ability to connect with every student at Pittsfield High. She made each student feel special." 
  
Quinn's wake drew crowds around the block at St. Joseph's Church all evening as family, friends, colleagues, and students said goodbye. T-shirts have also been created in her honor, and a lantern lighting ceremony was held. 

Amuso read a couple of the many tributes made to Quinn on social media last week, including one from her own son. He wrote that he was so grateful to be able to call Quinn a role model and thanked her for all of the light she has brought into this world. 

"This community lost one of its best, and Colleen was always about being kind, so please go out and do something kind for somebody. The world would be a better place," she said. 

"And rest in peace, Colleen." 

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Pittsfield Raises Flag at City Hall for Pride Month

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Freeman Center Director Divya Chaturvedi accepts the Community Partner of the Year Award on behalf the organization.  

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Pride flag was raised at City Hall on Saturday in celebration of community members living as their authentic selves. 

This is Berkshire Pride's 10th anniversary, something that feels "a little bit surreal" for Michael Taylor, president of the Berkshire Pride board. 

"Because 10 years ago Berkshire Pride was really just an idea and a belief that our community deserved to be seen, to be celebrated, to be supported," he explained to dozens of people attending the flag-raising ceremony. 

"Right here in the Berkshires, there was no festival, there was no parade, there weren't thousands of people in The Common like there is now. There weren't people lining North Street waving rainbow flags. There was just a group of people who believed that visibility matters, and somehow that small grassroots energy became what we have today." 

He said this is also about celebrating a decade of building community trust, showing up for one another, and first showing up for ourselves, because "we're busy creating spaces where people can be exactly who they are."

At the first Berkshire Pride event, participants took a walk around The Common and at one point, had a small dance break. Taylor remembers how excited former Mayor Linda Tyer was, and how she said they needed a parade, which became a reality some years ago. 

Pride Month, which celebrates the LGBTQ-plus community, began on Monday. Berkshire Pride is hosting a whole month of events and activities, with the flagship parade and festival at The Common on June 20. 

Mayor Peter Marchetti delivered a proclamation affirming Pittsfield's "longstanding commitment to upholding the human rights of all people, and remains dedicated to supporting the visibility, dignity, and equality of the LGBTQ-plus residents and all the diverse individuals who strengthen our community." 

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