Adams Middle Schoolers Gather Items for Homeless

By Terry VivoriCommunity Submission
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Students at Adams Memorial Middle School prepare a presentation on homelessness.
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ADAMS — Sixth-graders at Adams Memorial Middle School have been learning about what it's like to be homeless.

The children, in Terry Vivori's life skills class, spent the past two months finding out not only how homelessness affects individuals, families and the area but in working on projects that will help local residents who are homeless. The efforts were part of a community service learning project called "Helping Hands for Our Homeless."

The students completed actitivies, interviewed the house coordinator of Louison House, the local shelter for women and families, and then planned and presented an assembly on Friday, April 18, designed to educate the entire school about the issue.

<L2>They also learned about homelessness through books purchased with a mini-grant from the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition's Youth Target-UNITY group.

During the assembly, the students presented skits about homelessness, read poems that they had written, showed a PowerPoint presentation they had put together with statistics about homelessness and chose appropriate songs to go with it.


At the end of the assembly, they asked their peers and staff to bring in donations for the Louison House, which resulted in an outpouring of items and money.

Throughout the process, the students became aware of who is homeless, how people become homeless and who can help. They also discovered how fortunate they are and the importance of helping others who are less so.<R3>

As the culmination of their project, the students were able to present the Louison House with 447 needed items and a cash donation of $200 for bus passes.

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Cheshire Town Meeting Oks Budgets, Debates Potential Prop 2 1/2 Override

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Moderator Carol Francesconi, left, and Anne Marie Furey were presented flowers in memory of the Rev. William Furey, their brother and husband, respectively. The town report was dedicated to him. 
CHESHIRE, Mass. — Town meeting on Monday approved all 35 articles on the annual meeting warrant, including a total spending for fiscal 2027 of more than $8.5 million. 
 
Some 77 of the town's more than 2,500 registered voters filled the Cheshire Community House meeting room, debating on a number of articles during the meeting that lasted nearly three hours
 
The town dedicated its annual report to the Rev. William David Furey, longtime pastor of First Baptist Church and more recently Berkshire Union Chapel in Lanesborough. Furey died last year at age 77.
 
His wife, Anne Marie Furey, and his sister, Town Moderator Carol Francesconi, were presented with a bouquet of flowers in tribute to him. 
 
He was an exemplary member of the community who left a lasting impression in each and every life that he touched, said Town Clerk Whitney Flynn. 
 
Voters approved several warrant articles that make up an operating budget of $3,840,314 for fiscal 2027. Of this amount, $1,642,481 is allocated for the general government budget, which was approved after clarification of a few questions.
 
One item was the administrative assistant's salary. Prior to the annual meeting, the town eliminated the executive assistant salary of $54,309 in favor of a part-time administrative assistant salary of $27,155, to reduce costs considering the financial constraint the town is in. 
 
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