Dalton Home Still Facing Condemnation

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — A residence located at 96 Anthony Road is still facing condemnation unless the residents can make strides in cleaning the property to meet safety standards. 
 
The Board of Health had agreed to give Gary Dill an additional four weeks to clean the property. 
 
Since then, some improvements have been made but there is still a lot of work that needs to be done to meet safety standards, Health Agent Agnes Witkowski. 
 
Dill expressed his gratitude for his neighbors and the community members who aided in their endeavor to meet the Board of Health expectation for the outside of the property. 
 
Despite having concerns, the Board of Health approved extending the deadline for residents Dill and Cheryl Goodkowsky to clean the property under the stipulation that they provide invoices and a plan from a cleaning and dumpster service to Health Agent Agnes Witkowski by Sept. 20. 
 
The board urged Dill to reach out for help during the previous meeting. Dill said he had spoken to a dumpster service the day before Wednesday's Board of Health meeting. 
 
"What I don't understand is, we've been in contact with you guys for months now and I just don't understand why the first time you're reaching out for help was yesterday," co-Chair Cindy Geyer said.
 
Dill said the project is experiencing delays because of his age and health of himself and his wife and that expecting this work to be completed within a couple of months is not reasonable. 
 
Multiple board members expressed that they are very concerned because the current state of the home is a fall risk. 
 
The couple needs to make a 3-by-3-foot path to the egresses in the kitchen, bathroom, hallway and primary bedroom in addition to cleaning the kitchen and bathroom to meet sanitary standards by Oct. 11. 
 
Witkowski has visited the house numerous times and will continue to make inspections. 
 
One committee member said she knows Dill is going through a lot and is tired but having a close timeline of when the work can be complete and proof that the residents are getting the help that they need is important. 
 
The town has been in communication with Dill for more than a year regarding the outside of the property.
 
The condition of the inside of the house was brought to the town's attention in June following an emergency call. The Fire Department determined that the state of the house was a safety concern for Dill and his wife. 

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Berkshire Veterans Mark 50 Years Since Vietnam War End

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — County veterans gathered over the weekend to mark the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War's conclusion, recognizing the horrors that soldiers endured long after returning home.

Master of ceremonies Lenwood "Woody" Vaspra said when most Vietnam veterans returned, there were no tributes, recognition, speeches, parades, or even handshakes.

"For many of them, it was a horrible return home from Vietnam in a very chaotic time," he said to a crowd in Park Square on Saturday, National Vietnam Veterans Day.

The Vietnam War officially ended 50 years ago in May 1975. Fifty-two years ago, the last American troops departed Vietnam. The Vietnam War Veterans Recognition Act of 2017 designated March 29 of each year as National Vietnam War Veterans Day.

"We're here to join together as a people, to honor the brave men and women who have stood in defense of our country and for all the countless men and women who are still serving in harm's way all around the world," Vaspra said.

He explained that this day provides the opportunity to pay special tribute to the many Americans who served in the war, the 58,281 names memorialized on the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., and to those who never received the recognition they deserve.

"It is time to say thank you and honor all Vietnam veterans," he said.

During his remarks, Vaspra explained that many veterans have been able to re-enter society, go to school, find a job, and raise a family, but their war experience never went away.

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