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Despite a report stating North Street's new configuration is safer, there has been a push by some to put the question of bike lanes to a ballot vote.

Pittsfield Council to Tackle North Street Petitions on Tuesday

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — City councilors may put the North Street ballot question to rest this Tuesday.

After weeks of confusion, the council at its last meeting voted against sending the question to City Clerk Michele Benjamin and Councilor at Large Pete White motioned to table with the intent to rescind in two weeks.  

On Thursday, White confirmed that he still intends to motion to rescind this week.

Early this year, Councilor at Large Karen Kalinowsky put forward a petition to allow voters to decide if North Street should be two lanes with bike lanes or a four-lane way without. She has spoken against the bike lanes since being elected.

In January, the council voted in favor of Kalinowsky's petition to place a question on the general election ballot to return North Street to four lanes of traffic with turn lanes. In the draft question, a "yes" would require the city to remove the existing protected bike lanes from North Street and a "no" vote would allow the protected bike lanes to remain on North Street.

President Peter Marchetti said this was unclear because the question makes no reference to bike lanes, as the language was amended out the question for repetitiveness, but the summary refers to bike lanes.

There was a perceived understanding that it would be referred to the city solicitor for revisions and returned to the council at its next meeting. Two weeks ago, a charter objection hauled conversation on the petition because there was confusion on whether the former vote confirmed it on the ballot or not.

At the last meeting, confusion remained about whether or not the January vote did place the question on the ballot. The city clerk even weighed in, saying she was not comfortable with taking on this question given its shaky introduction.

"There is so much confusion here tonight I would never want to make the decision of this question on what to put on the ballot," Benjamin said.


"The question doesn't match the 'yes' and 'no' and everyone here is still completely confused.  Every resident in the city is probably confused but I can say that I would not want to make a decision on what the 'yes' or 'no' should stay on the ballot."

The conversation also brought forward many bike lane supporters who said that the lanes are a means of safety. Disability Commissioner Patricia Sheely said she is against putting a safety issue up for a vote.

"In this case, we are setting our voters up for failure," Ward 6 Councilor Dina Guiel Lampiasi said at the last meeting.

"There is a possibility of returning to a situation of death for some people. Somebody just died on West Street and we're actually debating whether or not to have more people die on North Street. This is ridiculous."

Also on Tuesday's agenda is a petition for diagonal parking from Downtown Pittsfield Inc. that had been sidelined because of the ballot question confusion.

DPI is petitioning for North Street to have diagonal head-in parking after a survey found that 60 percent of downtown residents support the reconfiguration.
 
“We believe the increased number of parking spaces would help business and make parking easier, while
simultaneously helping to maintain reduced speeds on North Street,” the organization wrote.

Earlier this year, the Traffic Commission referred the petition to Commissioner of Public Services and Utilities Ricardo Morales and City Engineer Tyler Shedd.


Tags: North Street,   

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Adams Man Convicted in Murder of Stephanie Olivieri

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — An Adams man was found guilty in the 2019 murder of 32-year-old Stephanie Olivieri, a Pittsfield native and mother of two.
 
A jury found Tyler Sumner, 30, guilty on Friday of murder in the first degree and possession of ammunition without a Firearm Identification Card.
 
The trial was held in Berkshire Superior Court. Judge Francis Flannery will schedule sentencing.
 
"Today justice was served in the tragic death of an innocent bystander, Stephanie Olivieri; however, this guilty verdict will do nothing to bring her back," said Berkshire District Attorney Timothy Shugrue. "Tyler Sumner murdered Ms. Olivieri while she sat in a car filled with gifts and decorations for her child's birthday. She was preparing to celebrate a wonderful event when her life was ruthlessly cut short."
 
Olivieri, who had been living in Yonkers, N.Y., was found sitting in her running car on Columbus Avenue when police responded to reports of masked men near South John Street and heard gunshots on the way.
 
The officers found Olivieri gasping for breath and blood running down the right side of her head. She was treated by emergency medical services and then transported to Berkshire Medical Center, where she was later pronounced dead. The Chief Medical Examiner found the cause of her death to be a homicide caused by wounds sustained from a bullet to her head.
 
Multiple individuals testified that they believed Sumner was targeting an individual living in the area of the shooting and that Olivieri was not the intended target.
 
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