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Mike Miller, left, and Michael Sussman check out the Festivus pole outside Tunnel City Coffee in Williamstown on Friday afternoon.

In Feat of Strength, Williamstown Resident Braves Weather with Festivus Gathering

By Stephen DravisPrint Story | Email Story
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. – At about 2 p.m. Friday afternoon, Mike Miller was busy putting the finishing touches on his Festivus pole in preparation for the town’s inaugural celebration.
 
It was damp, gray and gloomy at the bottom of Spring Street.
 
Perfect weather for the “Seinfeld”-inspired anti-holiday, no?
 
“Yes,” Miller said. “But blowing wind and driving rain would not have been conducive with all this paper. Like I told people, though, it would just be one more thing to have a grievance about.”
 
By about the midway point of the planned two-hour festivities, the rain and wind had arrived.
 
By the time things wrapped up at 4 p.m., the rain had changed over to snow.
 
Unfortunately for Miller, the crowd never really materialized.
 
A handful of intrepid attendees did turn out to add their thoughts to the pole, a metal support for the patio roof outside Tunnel City Coffee that Miller had wrapped in white paper for the holiday.
 
And Miller did his best to extend Festivus wishes to the occasionally puzzled coffee shop patrons who passed through his event.
 
All in all, despite the weather, the local celebration of the holiday “for the rest of us” did accomplish its aim of redirecting Festivus’ energy away from grievance, per se, to more constructive thought.
 
Miller had promoted the event on flyers and in social media as encouraging less of the griping associated with the fictional Father Festivus, Frank Costanza, and more “promoting and sharing visions of what we’d like to see in the Northern Berkshires in 2023.”
 
The results of Miller’s informal “pole poll” ranged from the universal, like “more healthcare” and “less disinformation about …” to the hyper-local, like “more outside seating” in Williamstown and a return of the swim requirement at Williams College.
 
At least one attendee appeared to be more of a Festivus traditionalist and, perhaps inspired by the day’s weather, simply added a grievance: “winter rain.”
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Williamstown Select Board Has Three Applicants for Interim Appointment

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — A three-term member of the board, a teacher at Mount Greylock Regional School and a town native have stepped forward to fill an interim position on the Select Board.
 
The vacancy came up this summer when Andrew Hogeland announced that he and his wife are moving out of town. He was not specific about the exact date of his departure but encouraged his remaining four colleagues to find a replacement as soon as possible.
 
On Tuesday, Sept. 24, in a rescheduled bimonthly meeting, the board plans to interview and select from among three people who submitted paperwork to take Hogeland's place until the May town election.
 
Hugh Daley, Alexander Davis and Matt Neely each submitted a Government Engagement form to apply to serve for the next seven months.
 
Daley is no stranger to the board, having served for nine years from 2014 to 2023. After not seeking re-election last year, he found a different way to serve the town, as one of its representatives on the Hoosac Water Quality District.
 
His application emphasized the importance of service.
 
"Public service is a primary civic duty in our system of self governance," Daley wrote.
 
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