Dalton Select Board Proclaims National Police Week

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Select Board proclaimed the week of May 15 as National Police Week during its meeting last week.
 
Congress and the president have designated May 15 as Peace Officers' Memorial Day and the week in which May 15 falls as National Police Week. 
 
Law enforcement members play a vital public service, the proclamation said. To recognize this, the town hall flag will be flown at half-staff on May 15 in remembrance of officers who have died while serving.
 
The initiative attempts to demonstrate the importance of knowing the "duties, responsibilities, responsibilities, hazards, and sacrifices of the law enforcement agencies," the proclamation said. 
 
The Select Board calls upon the Dalton citizens and "patriotic, civic, and educational organizations" to observe the week "with appropriate ceremonies and observances in which people may join in commemorating law enforcement officers, past and present," the proclamation said.  
 
The declaration also attempts to demonstrate the importance of  law enforcement recognizing their duty to serve people by "safeguarding life and property," "protecting them against violence and disorder," and "protecting the innocent against deception and the weak against oppression," the proclamation said.  
 
The Select Board calls upon citizens to honor the law enforcement officers who died "through their courageous deeds" or have become disabled while performing their duty.  
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CBRSD Mulls Vocational Transport in Regional Agreement

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The Central Berkshire Regional School District is considering adding vocational transportation to the draft regional agreement. 
 
School Committee Chair Richard Peters said at last month's meeting that the district received an email from Cummington inquiring if it could add vocational transportation to its regional agreement, similar to what is happening in the Mohawk Trail Hawlemont Regional School District. 
 
"[The Mohawk District] actually documented in the regional agreement that the school district arranges the transportation for the students going to vocation for the towns. And then we bill the towns for that transportation," Peters said. 
 
The committee approved holding a special public hearing for all towns on Nov. 21 at 7 p.m. to review the required language regarding the voting method and discuss the amendment that would add vocational transportation to the agreement. The location of the meeting has yet to be determined. 
 
The district wants to bring in authorities, such as representatives from the Massachusetts Association of Regional Schools, legal, and possibly the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education to inform town officials what changes can be made to the agreement. 
 
Peters emphasized that the district is not opening up the regional agreement for debate on every point because towns have already agreed on everything but the voting method.
 
The meeting's purpose is to educate the towns that voted against the agreement and discuss the vocational amendment, which would have to be approved at town meetings for all seven towns. 
 
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