Sweet Brook to hold Fall Bazaar

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WILLIAMSTOWN - Sweet Brook Transitional Care and Living Centers Resident Council will hold its Annual Fall Bazaar and Fundraiser on Saturday, October 25, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Sweet Brook, 1561 Cold Spring Road (Route 7), Williamstown, Ma.

The fall bazaar will offer a Chinese auction, straw raffle, baked goods table, craft items made by residents, staff, family members and friends, a white elephant table, Christmas table and money tree, lottery tickets raffle and specialty baskets made by staff. Refreshments will also be for sale during the bazaar.

The Resident Council uses proceeds from this annual event to support Sweet Brook’s efforts to involve residents in community-based activities and events, by providing them with cabulance rides to concerts at Windsor Lake, SteepleCats games, lunch at local restaurants, fall foliage trips, and shopping during the holiday seasons. Funds generated from the bazaar are also used to help less fortunate residents with specific needs.

For more information call Director of Activities and Volunteer Services Meg Greenawalt at Sweet Brook Transitional Care and Living Centers at (413) 458-8127.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Letter: Is the Select Board Listening to Dalton Voters?

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor:

A reasonable expectation by the people of a community is that their Select Board rises above personal preference and represents the collective interests of the community. On Tuesday night [Nov. 12], what occurred is reason for concern that might not be true in Dalton.

This all began when a Select Board member submitted his resignation effective Oct. 1 to the Town Clerk. Wishing to fill the vacated Select Board seat, in good faith I followed the state law, prepared a petition, and collected the required 200-plus signatures of which the Town Clerk certified 223. The Town Manager, who already had a copy of the Select Board member's resignation, was notified of the certified petitions the following day. All required steps had been completed.

Or had they? At the Oct. 9 Select Board meeting when Board members discussed the submitted petition, there was no mention about how they were informed of the petition or that they had not seen the resignation letter. Then a month later at the Nov. 12 Select Board meeting we learn that providing the resignation letter and certified petitions to the Town Manager was insufficient. However, by informing the Town Manager back in October the Select Board had been informed. Thus, the contentions raised at the Nov. 12 meeting by John Boyle seem like a thinly veiled attempt to delay a decision until the end of January deadline to have a special election has passed.

If this is happening with the Special Election, can we realistically hope that the present Board will listen to the call by residents to halt the rapid increases in spending and our taxes that have been occurring the last few years and pass a level-funded budget for next year, or to not harness the taxpayers in town with the majority of the cost for a new police station? I am sure these issues are of concern to many in town. However, to make a change many people need to speak up.

Please reach out to a Select Board member and let them know you are concerned and want the Special Election issue addressed and finalized at their Nov. 25 meeting.

Robert E.W. Collins
Dalton, Mass.

 

 

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