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Hoosac Valley Regional School District Lifts Mask Requirements

By Brian RhodesiBerkshires Staff
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ADAMS, Mass. — Starting Friday, students in the Hoosac Valley Regional School District no longer had to wear masks in class. 

 

The district's School Committee voted 6-1 Thursday night to end masking requirements in the classroom. Nearly 60 people attended the meeting virtually to provide feedback to the committee and hear the decision. 

 

"The position we're in with the policy is it's not necessarily enforceable," said Superintendent Aaron Dean before the vote. "It is kind of the way things have gone with DESE ... We're going to be spending a lot of time trying to enforce something that I think we'll be spinning our wheels on if we keep the policy in place." 

 

Currently, 45.7 percent of the district's students are vaccinated, which committee member Erin Milne, the only dissenting voter, said is lower than other local school districts and communities. 

 

"We are at 45.7 percent fully-vaccinated, compared to 62 percent of Berkshire County children ages 5 through 19 and almost 60 percent of Massachusetts ages 5 through 19," she said. "So we are lower than the same age peers in different portions of our community."

 

Dean said even with the masking rules lifted, the district respects student choice, whether they decide to continue wearing masks or not. Students will only be required to wear masks if they are symptomatic or coming out of quarantine. 

 

"We won't tolerate harassment of others for not wearing a mask or for wearing a mask," he said. "And we will impose our handbook and our guidelines to make sure that doesn't happen." 

 

Additionally, Dean explained that vaccines are still readily available, and students have the option to do at-home testing for COVID-19 whenever they wish. 

 

"That's a family choice. Those are family options at this point in time," he said.

 

Committee Chair Michael Mucci said he thinks it is best from this point on to follow state guidelines regarding masks to avoid confusion. Gov. Charlie Baker's administration lifted state mask rules for schools on Feb. 28

 

Public health officials are still encouraging those who are unvaccinated or who have compromised immune systems to continue masking and social distancing indoors. 

 

"I can't tell you how many times I've overheard people say, 'Why does our school committee make us wear masks? Why don't they vote to let us take these masks off?'" he said. "Masks have been on this entire time because we follow DESE rules and regulations. We're a public school, and we've been bound to follow them. I think the timing that DESE did with this made it a little bit of a hiccup for schools to deal with."


Tags: COVID-19,   HVRSD,   masks,   


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Housing Secretary Makes Adams Housing Authority No. 40 on List of Visits

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Executive Director William Schrade invited Secretary Edward Augustus to the rededication of the Housing Authority's Community Room, providing a chance for the secretary to hear about the authority's successes and challenges. 
ADAMS, Mass. — The state's new secretary of housing got a bit of a rock-star welcome on Wednesday morning as Adams Housing Authority residents, board members and staff lined up to get their picture taken with him. 
 
Edward Augustus Jr. was invited to join the Adams Housing Authority in the rededication of its renovated community room, named for James P. McAndrews, the authority's first executive director. 
 
Executive Director William Schrade said he was surprised that the secretary had taken up the invitation but Augustus said he's on a mission — to visit every housing authority in the state. 
 
"The next logical question is how many housing authorities are there in Massachusetts? There's 242 of them so I get a lot of driving left to do," he laughed. "This is number 40. You're in the first tier I've been able to visit but to me, it's one way for me to understand what's actually going on."
 
The former state senator and Worcester city manager was appointed secretary of housing and livable communities — the first cabinet level housing chief in 30 years — by Gov. Maura Healey last year as part of her answer to the state's housing crisis. 
 
He's been leading the charge for the governor's $4 billion Affordable Homes Act that looks to invest $1.6 billion in repairing and modernizing the state's 43,000 public housing units that house some 70,000 low-income, disabled and senior residents, as well as families. 
 
Massachusetts has the most public housing units and is one of only a few states that support public housing. Numbers range from Boston's tens of thousands of units to Sutton's 40. Adams has 64 one-bedroom units in the Columbia Valley facility and 24 single and multiple-bedroom units scattered through the community.
 
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