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A fire at a single-family home on Tyler Street on Sunday morning is believed to have started on the porch.
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Family Forced to Flee House Fire in North Adams

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Firefighters were mopping up the area around 5:30 a.m. See more photos on North Adams 911.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Officials are investigating a Sunday morning fire that forced a family to flee their home..
 
The blaze at 76 Tyler was called into the Fire Department line at about 4 a.m. by a neighbor. 
 
"Lt. [John] Paciorek arrived on scene, he had fire on the porch" prompting him call everyone in, said Fire Chief Brent Levebfre. "The father was outside asking about his wife and kids, who were still inside, and they made entry through the rear door and kitchen to try and push the fire back on itself."
 
The family was evacuated from the building and take to Berkshire Medical Center's satellite emergency facility mostly as a precaution. Levebfre said he believed there was some smoke inhalation and a cut hand.
 
The fire progressed quickly through the windows on the porch — opening the rear door to get to the family created a chimney effect pulling the fire up and through the house, said the chief.
 
The building suffered fire and water damage but Lefebvre thought it largely superficial and that the structure — except the porch — appeared to have escaped severe damage. It would be a gut job to repair, he said.
 
The chief said firefighters had done a good job in getting the fire swiftly under control within about 20-30 minutes. Northern Berkshire EMS, North Adams Police and Wire & Alarm and Clarksburg also responded. A downed wire on a fire truck disrupted operations for a short period.
 
Lefebvre said it looks like the fire started on the porch but couldn't speak to the cause at this point. The state fire marshal had been called to assist with the investigation. The home is listed as being owned by Brittney Flynn and Arthur Schmidt.
 
Lefebvre has been in the top job for two months now after a dozen years on the department. 
 
"We're adjusting, we're doing good and I got a really great group of guys underneath me," he said. "My predecessor left me in a great spot." 

Tags: structure fire,   

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Airport Commission Drama Surfaces at North Adams Council Meeting

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff

Ashley Shade takes the president's seat after being sworn in again as vice president. Bryan Sapienza, who was attending remotely, was re-elected president. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The controversies stewing at the Airport Commission bubbled over to City Council on Tuesday night with a councilor demanding an investigation and the subject of a failed lease agreement claiming conflicts of interest and mayoral tampering.
 
The spark was an agenda item appointing Doug Herrick of Williamstown to fill the term of one of two commissioners who resigned after a vote to enter into a lease agreement with airport user Michael Milazzo and Brian Doyle for the Northeast Hangar back in October. That vote was rescinded in December after a letter from Mayor Jennifer Macksey called the process into question, particularly noting the recommendation by a subcommittee to reject Milazzo's proposal and concerns from the inspector general's office.  
 
Milazzo and Doyle are involved in civil lawsuits around the hangar going back to 2019 as both a plaintiffs and defendents with former hangar owners and Milazzo is accused of damaging the structure, to the point it was taken over by the city and restored at a cost of more than $750,000. 
 
City Councilor Peter Breen repeatedly called for an investigation into the commissioners' resignations, pointing to the reasons given by Michael McCarron in his email in November. Herrick would fill his term. 
 
"It says that it is the unexpired term of Mike McCarron, my understanding, after reading his email, that he said that he's resigning because the city official is telling him how to vote," he said. "I think we should send this to committee to investigate why we would have a commissioner be forced to make a vote."
 
Breen, the council's liaison to the commission, also referred to an email by Airport Manager Bruce Goff describing the situation and raised concerns about federal and state laws being broken. 
 
"There are two investigations going on now. And then there is a third one, because it's $750,000 worth of grant money from the federal government," he said. 
 
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