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The team presented their league championship banner to Mayor Richard Alcombright.
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State Rep. Gailanne Cariddi and Mayor Richard Alcombright both spoke at the rally.

North Adams Sends Youth Hockey Team To State Tournament With Pep Rally

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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The Squirt team is off to the state tournament after winning the league championship.

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — For the first time in more than 10 years, the Northern Berkshire Youth Hockey League is sending a team to the state championship tournament.

On Thursday, supporters held a pep rally to kick off the Squirt level team as it heads to Quincy this weekend for the tournament. According to coach Guy Cariddi, in the league's 46 years of existence, only a few Northern Berkshire teams have won the state tournament.

"The kids worked really hard to get there," Cariddi said.

The U10 team went undefeated in league play, finishing at 15-0. They then went onto the playoffs, going 2-0 to win the championship in Troy, N.Y. Now they face Nantucket on Friday and Winchester and Stoneham on Saturday before the semifinals and finals on Sunday,

Mayor Richard Alcombright told the young players not to worry about going undefeated, but rather just winning the next game. Cariddi said the players need to "play our game" and to "shoot, shoot, shoot some more." But, more importantly, they should have fun.


"You didn't go 15-0 on accident,"  Alcombright said.

To help them along, the coaching staff presented the team with a good luck charm. When the Boston Bruins were in the Stanley Cup Finals, Forward Nathan Horton took some of the melted down ice from the T.D. Garden and sprayed it on the ice in Vancouver as a good luck charm. The Bruins won the game and the championship.

Following that, the Bruins bottled up the rest of the water from that Boston ice and delivered bottles to every youth hockey rink in the state — including the Peter W. Foote Vietnam Veterans Memorial Rink.

"We're going to pour it out on the rink in Chelsea," Cariddi said.

State Rep. Gailanne Cariddi also helped rally the players, telling them that she is confident that they will win the championship.


Tags: championship,   youth hockey,   

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Williamstown Board Talks Tax Relief Implementation

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday discussed how to implement a targeted property tax relief measure that town meeting approved last May.
 
The initiative, which started with the board, allows the town to give means-tested property tax exemptions to residents 65 and older who meet the commonwealth's requirement for a refundable credit on their state income tax.
 
In May, town meeting members overwhelmingly decided to send a home-rule petition to Boston to allow the local tax relief program. The Legislature approved the request just before the end of its 2024 session, and Gov. Maura Healey recently signed it into law.
 
Now, it is up to the Select Board to decide what parameters to put in place for the program.
 
Specifically, the town can match up to 150 percent of the exemption granted by the state, and it must determine an overall cap for the program as applied in Williamstown.
 
The cap will determine how much of the tax levy, potentially, is shifted to property tax owners who do not qualify for the income-restricted state program, sometimes referred to as the "circuit breaker" tax credit.
 
Former Select Board member Andrew Hogeland, who now lives in Connecticut, drafted the local provision that town meeting and the Legislature approved. On Monday, he participated in the Select Board meeting via Zoom to advise his former colleagues about their options.
 
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