BIC Appoints New Director

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Board and staff of the Berkshire Immigrant Center (BIC) welcomed Melissa Canavan as our new Executive Director. 
 
Canavan joins BIC on May 16.
 
"I'm incredibly excited for this opportunity and I look forward to shepherding BIC through its next phase in serving the immigrant community in the Berkshires," said Canavan.
 
According to a press release:
 
Growing up in southern California as the child of immigrants from Mexico, she has firsthand experience of the challenges faced by newcomers to the US. She pursued her love of dance as an undergraduate at California State University, Long Beach and first came to the Berkshires in 2015 to intern at Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival.
 
After staying on to work at the Pillow, Canavan earned her Masters of Science in Arts Administration from Boston University. Since 2020 she has worked at the Mahaiwe Performing Arts Center in Great Barrington, most recently as the Advancement Manager and manager of the Spanish-language Community Advisory Network (SCAN), which has broadened the diversity of the theater's cultural offerings and
audiences.
 
Canavan supports the immigrant community as an active volunteer with Latinas413, a group committed to empowering and helping develop the growth of Latina women in Berkshire County. She has maintained her connections to her love of dance as founder and artistic director of her own project-based dance company, the Melissa Martinez Project.
 
Canavan replaces Michelle Lopez, who left after helming the Center for more than three years to move to her hometown in upstate New York. BIC Board Member Dariana Castro, who chaired the Search Committee, said: "We sought out to find someone with deep commitment to the immigrant community, who is also a masterful storyteller." 
 
 

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Pittsfield Talks Hazard Mitigation

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city's updated Hazard Mitigation Plan is headed towards final review.

On Monday, community members and public officials mulled disaster preparedness at the Ralph J. Froio Senior Center.  Pittsfield's 2019 plan is due for an update so the city stays eligible for grant funding and, of course, prepared.

"Mitigation planning is the foundation for establishing where the city would like to direct its risk reduction efforts, how it would like to build community resilience through the whole breadth of natural hazard events that it is at risk to. It brings people together and organizations to develop strategies, to build ideas for projects, to do things through, say, plans or regulations, outreach activities, and so on," said Darrin Punchard of Jamie Caplan Consulting.

"These hazard mitigation plans, 25 years ago, became a requirement for cities and towns across the United States in order to be eligible for certain grant programs."

Pittsfield recently partnered with Berkshire Medical Center for a nearly $2 million Hazard Mitigation Grant toward backup generators at the hospital.  

"These are key grant funding programs that have come through the federal government, but in order to access and be eligible for that type of funding, you have to prepare these plans and update them every five years," Punchard explained.

"So that's the purpose of this plan document is really to build community resilience, but also, very importantly, maintain grant funding eligibility for the city."

The Hazard Mitigation Plan, last updated in 2019, focuses the city's limited resources on areas of greatest risk, helps build partnerships with organizations outside of the city, and increases public awareness. Punchard added that the plan can also align with other city objectives, but "saving lives and money, that's the main focus, of course, of hazard mitigation."

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