BArT Announces Second Quarter Honor Roll

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ADAMS, Mass.— Berkshire Arts & Technology (BArT) Charter Public School has announced the students who made the honor roll for the second quarter of the 2023-2024 school year. 
 
Students who earned 80 percent or above in all of their classes received the distinction of "Honors." Students who earned 90 percent or above in all of their classes received the distinction of "High Honors."
 
Academic courses at BArT are aligned with the Massachusetts State Curriculum Frameworks for the appropriate grade level and include all standards deemed necessary for a complete, college-preparatory, middle and high school education.
 
Students in Grade 6 who earned High Honors are Abigail Betti, Jaydn Bolus-Strawbridge, Majbrit Carpenter, Kason Corkins, Alex Demary, Norah Duffy, Noah Hall, Kourtney Hoang, Delroy Leard, Morgan Legrand, Dante McClerklin, Joey Nocher, Stephen Nyamehen, Cooper Olimpo, Gustavo Perez, Aiyanah Roy, Armani Roy, Niyah Scipio, Emma Sherman, Isabella Silva, Maxwell Stolzberg, Paige Tetreault, Kevin Toomey, and Patrick Wells Vidal.
 
Students in Grade 6 who earned Honors are Bailee Cimini, Christian Columna, Liam Connors, Harmony Greco-Melendez, Riley Hitchcock, Alexia Hunt, Sakora Knight, Tristan Larkin, Ian Lloyd, Allanah McCabe, Miah Morgan-Enos, Rufus Quirke de Jong, and Isabella Rosales.
 
Students in Grade 7 who earned High Honors are Mary Mame Akua Asare, Paige Bartlett, Madalyn Benson, Demitri Burnham, Anastasia Carty, Vincente Choque, McKenna Cramer, Deandra Hage, Callie Meyette, Quinlan Nesbit, Hadley Richard, Jayden Ruopp, Kie Sherman, Gabriel Thomas, Edrisa Touray, and Tyler Williams
 
Students in Grade 7 who earned Honors are Samuel Bellows, Mar Biagini, Joshua Codding, Addison Cooper, Kierra Dearstyne, Emil Gehlot, Ashley Heck, Sophia Lamke, Lucas Loynes, Hadley Madole, Leafy Murphy, Anthony Salta, Althea Schneider, Jude Taber, Jaden Wells-Vidal, Kyler Wick, and Mckenzie Witto.
 
Students in Grade 8 who earned High Honors are Lily Genton, Mary Harty, Zoe Hassan, Molly Isham-Morton, Stasiu Kozak, Amelia Lancto, Lucas Lapointe, Nova Leinbaugh-Chelukhova, Caleb Markham, Evan Miller, Griffin Pillmore-Beaulieu, Andrew Post, Liam Smith, Gineska Vazquez-Melendez, Mackenzie Walker, and JoJo Zheng. 
 
Students in Grade 8 who earned Honors are Parker Angley, Willow Barzottini, Mitchell Clark, Quentin Durand, Logan Marotta, Taylor McKeon, Ozryel Scipio, Miranda Tetreault, and Maria Valdivieso.
 
Students in Grade 9 who earned High Honors are Terence Carty, Levi Hall, Linnea Keiser-Clark, Aiko-Marie Kouame-Hosmer, Mila Mesquita, Mickeayla Rosa Pietri, Andrew Svrluga, Gabrielle Thomas, and Sukai Touray. 
 
Students in Grade 9 who earned Honors are Zaid Barnes, Keira Cannava, Jamari Carnute, Norrin Darby, Nathaniel Guerin, Katie Higgins, Grayson Hoyt, Clara Janis, Tony Mejias, Alana Olmedo, Alexander Post, Emily Rivenburg, Ella Smith, James Strange, and Sage Winkler.
 
Students in Grade 10 who earned High Honors are Kobby Asare, Lilianna Choque, Riley Columna, Dareen Hage, Audrey Larkin, Brooke McKeon, Zachary Tetreault, and Samseedy Touray.
 
Students in Grade 10 who earned Honors are Joy Bristol, Laila Brown, Aubree Bryant, Bishop Casey, Ashton Fierro, Dylan Harty, Sarah Leedham, Emerson Maloney, Vincent Miksic, Molly Richard, Kylah Rivard, and Sebastian Valdivieso.
 
Students in Grade 11 who earned High Honors are Persephone Clark, Micah Paul, JuneBug Roney, Jerry Zheng, and Adrian Zustra.
 
Students in Grade 11 who earned Honors are Ava Aubuchon, Jaycee Babbs, Dominic Campoli, Tucker Danylin, Layla Taber, and Ava Valois.
 
Students in Grade 12 who earned High Honors are Alexandra Bartlett, Limoges Dauray-Strange, Melana Nataro, Marissa Ostrowski, Evan Poplaski, Nathan Robinson, Grace Tower, and Jace Ziarnik. 
 
Students in Grade 12 who earned Honors are Gianna Fosty, Justina Lloyd, Cristian Melendez, Isaiah Oduro, M Schrade, and Omaree Scipio.
 
 

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Cheshire to Vote on School Funding and More at Town Meeting

By Daniel MatziBerkshires correspondent
CHESHIRE, Mass. — Voters will gather on Monday, June 10, to address the annual town budget and several key issues during the town meeting in the Cheshire Community House cafeteria (The former Cheshire Elementary School) at 7 p.m., with voter check-in starting at 6:30 p.m.
 
The warrant can be found here.
 
The proposed budget for fiscal 2025 includes various departmental funding requests, reflecting necessary increases due to inflation and rising costs of materials and services, according to the Cheshire Annual Town Meeting Voter Information Packet.
 
The town's operating budget highlights an allocation of $1,509,096 for general government operations, with a notable portion dedicated to legal services reflecting ongoing litigation. That amount would increase from $12,500 in FY24 to $20,000 in FY25.
 
Two articles in the warrant directly relate to funding for the Hoosac Valley Regional School District. Article 9 would pass the district's $3,098,996 budget as submitted. If that passes, Article 25 would determine if the town would pay for the budget by transferring funds from free cash and the general stabilization fund.
 
If the HVRSD budget does not pass, the town would move to vote on a Proposition 2.5 override, effectively raising the tax rate for the town. Adams town meeting approved the school budget last week. 
 
Voters will also decide on compensation for elected officials, disposal of surplus property, and authorization for balance agreements. Significant spending articles include:
 
Public Safety: $468,052 for police and fire services, with the introduction of a full-time School Resource Officer at Hoosac Valley Regional Middle and High School.
 
 Highway Operations and Tree Warden: $1,046,092, covering increased wages and increased rates and the usage of streetlights.
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