Commission on Disabilities Helps Funds PCTV's Closed Captioning

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Pittsfield Community Television has received funding from the Pittsfield Commission on Disabilities to add closed captions to many local programs broadcast on PCTV's channels. 
 
The service will allow hearing-impaired viewers to follow along with the content of the programming by reading text on the screen.
 
On Jan. 12, the commission voted to allocate $1,850 to help the organization provide closed captioning for all city meetings for the year.  The captions can currently be viewed on certain programs on the PCTV website, www.pittsfieldtv.org, and the PCTV Select app.  Many more programs will be captioned in the coming weeks and months.
 
PCTV is hopeful that the captioning can extend to the public, education, and government channels on Spectrum in Pittsfield.  Viewers would normally be able to view the captions on the Citylink channel, 1303, simply by switching on the closed captions using their remote control.  Unfortunately, Spectrum is not currently allowing captions to appear on its channels 1301, 1302, and 1303.
 
"This is a critical accessibility issue for viewers and community members," said PCTV Executive Director Shawn Serre.  "We want people of all abilities to benefit from the important local programming provided by PCTV.  I thank the Commission for their initial investment in this service and implore Charter Spectrum to step up and do the right thing:  make the changes at your end to pass these closed captions along to your cable TV viewers."
 
Congress requires video programming distributors (VPDs) - cable operators, satellite distributors, and other multi-channel video programming distributors - to include closed captions provided from any of their source channels.
 
The money from the Pittsfield Commission on Disabilities comes from the city's parking violations fund.  While the cost of adding captions to video programming has been reduced in recent years, it remains a significant expense for local television organizations which choose to provide the service.  
 
PCTV is hoping to expand closed captioning to programming on the Access Pittsfield and ETV channels, but that will require funding for additional hardware.  The organization is seeking grants and other local funding to expand the captioning service to additional channels.

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Berkshire United Way to Massachusetts: Early-Learning Educators Need Better Wages

By Katherine von Haefen Guest Column
As reported in iBerkshires, state education officials met with Western Massachusetts childcare and early education advocates at Berkshire Community College recently. I had the opportunity to share the following testimony on behalf of Berkshire United Way and our community partners. 
 
Early childhood education provides tremendous benefits to our region. High-quality child care dramatically influences brain development and the future health and success for children in school and life, as well as provides a safe and secure space for our youngest community members so their parents or caregivers can work and provide for their families. 
 
Berkshire United Way has invested in improving early childhood development opportunities in the Berkshires for decades. We fund high-quality nonprofit child-care centers that provide slots for income-constrained families. We also support the sector by co-hosting monthly child-care director meetings to work on shared challenges and collectively propose solutions. We advocate for early childhood education and have a great partner in this work, state Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier. 
 
Staffing is a key component of high-quality care. The research shows that skilled and consistent educators in a classroom create long-lasting change for children. However, wages are stagnant and frequently do not provide educators with basic financial stability. We often hear that educators have left the field because they are unable to make their finances work. Wages need to improve to better reflect the expertise and indelible impact teachers have in the field. 
 
When we look specifically at our region, our data is concerning. 
 
As Berkshire County emerges from the pandemic, we are struggling with transportation, affordable housing and lack of mental health resources, much like the rest of the state. We are also seeing a rise in economically challenged households. 
 
After nearly 10 years of decline, Berkshire County has experienced a significant jump in income inequality, now exceeding the state and national trends and far above comparable counties, according to the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission. Over half of our population are "economically challenged," meaning they are working but struggling to make ends meet. A single parent with a school-aged child needs between $70,000 and $80,000 in income and public benefits just to meet their basic needs. 
 
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