Pope Names Administrator for Springfield Diocese

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Bishop Robert J. McManus
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. — The bishop of Worcester has been appointed apostolic administrator of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield.
 
Pope Francis on Monday named the Most Rev. Robert J. McManus administrator effective immediately, in addition to continuing as the bishop of Worcester.
 
An apostolic administrator oversees the continuing operation of the diocese in the absence of an ordinary or local diocesan bishop. The See or Diocese of Springfield became "vacant" with the naming of Bishop Mitchell Rozanski as the archbishop of St. Louis.
 
"I am humbled by the confidence which the Holy Father has placed in me," said Bishop McManus in a statement. "I look forward to working with the current administration in the Diocese of Springfield as well as meeting the faithful in the diocese from which the Diocese of Worcester was established 70 years ago.
 
"As apostolic administrator, it is my canonical responsibility to assure stability in the continuing operation of the Diocese of Springfield until the Holy Father appoints a new diocesan bishop."
 
McManus, 69, is a native of Rhode Island and attended parochial schools in Providence. He studied for the priesthood at Our Lady of Providence Seminary in Warwick and attended the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., where he earned bachelor and master of arts degrees. He received his master of divinity from the Toronto School of Theology. He has also earned licentiate and doctoral degrees in sacred theology from The Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.
 
He was ordained in 1978 and served in a number of parishes in Rhode Island before continuing his studies in Rome. He returned to St. Luke's Parish in Barrington in 1987, taking on the positions as diocesan vicar for education, director of the Office of Ministerial Formation and theological consultant and editorial writer for The Providence Visitor newspaper. He was appointed a Prelate of Honor to His Holiness with the title of monsignor in 1997 and named rector of Our Lady of Providence Seminary a year later. In 1999, he was ordained as titular bishop of Allegheny and auxiliary bishop of Providence and he continued to serve as secretary for Ministerial Formation and rector of the seminary.
 
Saint Pope John Paul II named McManus as the fifth bishop of Worcester and he was installed on May 14, 2004. He currently serves on the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' Doctrine Committee and on the Subcommittee for Healthcare Issues.

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BRPC Outlines Busy Year Addressing Region's Needs

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Executive Director Thomas Matuszko highlights the work the commission as done this past year at BRPC's annual meeting.

RICHMOND, Mass.— Berkshire Regional Planning Commission had a busy year addressing the region's needs through a dozen cross-cutting programs.

"We really are out of the COVID era and have gotten into a real routine working with our communities and other organizations," Executive Director Thomas Matuszko said.

Community members filled the barn at Balderdash Winery on Wednesday for BRPC's annual meeting.  The regional planning agency closed fiscal year 2024 with a revenue increase of nearly $858,000 over the previous year, and a total income of more than $6.9 million from grants, local organizations, and nonprofit agreements.

State Rep. William "Smitty" Pignatelli was given the Kusik Award for making outstanding contributions to planning in Berkshire County and Housing and Livable Communities Secretary Edward Augustus spoke about the Healey-Driscoll administration's $5.1 billion Affordable Homes Act.

Both commended BRPC on the dizzying amount of work it puts into the county.

"I'm exhausted just listening to all of the things that you're working on," Augustus said. "It's incredible, the breadth of topics and certainly the breadth of communities that you're working in."

Similarly, Pignatelli said, "You are the only countywide organization that has their fingerprints and footprints in every single community in Berkshire County."

The annual Kusik Award is named in honor of the late Charles Kusik, a Richmond resident who placed his expert imprint on the zoning bylaws of nearly every town in the Berkshires for over three decades.  

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