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A rendering from the presentation to the Community Development Board in 2022.

Permanent Supportive Housing Coming to Pittsfield Soon

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Housing Development Corp. has a few projects in the pipeline and hopes to start construction soon.

This includes 28 units of permanent and supportive housing on West Housatonic St., nine permanent supportive housing units on First St., and a housing resource center.  All are supported by $6.5 million of the city's American Rescue Plan Act funds.

President and CEO Eileen Peltier also reported that Berkshire Housing has been on a journey to change its culture over the last three years.

"When I started three years ago, we did resident services mainly at our senior properties. We today provide resident services at every single one of our close to 1,000 apartments," she told the Homelessness Advisory Committee on Wednesday.

"Because we believe it's not just about getting the individual four walls and a roof. It's much beyond that. It's helping them thrive and be successful. It's making sure that their housing stays stable. So we've been through a very significant sort of cultural change in how we do our work."

She feels this has positioned the nonprofit organization to move forward with permanent supportive housing projects, which are for individuals coming directly out of homelessness.

Berkshire Housing plans to build a three-story, 28-unit building at 111 West Housatonic St. for single occupancy and another nine units on the second floor of Zion Lutheran Church's hall. These will have common spaces that will function like living rooms and the West Housatonic location will include a community office and consulting space.

Peltier explained that the organization is near closing on the 28-unit build after some backlog at the state level and hope to have it under construction by the end of the summer.

"What's called the closing, when all of the funders come in and then we start construction, is very complex and complicated, lots of lawyers, lots of financial numbers, a variety of different funders," she said.

"But we are well on our way I would say we are probably 80 percent done."

She added that this is a "relatively straightforward" project because it is new construction on flat land and is moving along well.

The First Street units and the Housing Resource Center will both be in the Zion Church space, with the center on the ground floor. This "should move really quickly once we get going," Peltier said.

"We feel like we're in a good place with that one finally," she added. "It was caught up in some of the delays at the state level but we got a real commitment that that one should close."

The national housing model recognizes that individuals need more than four walls and a roof. Peltier emphasized that people are not required to use the services offered and that "we are trying to create a community and a culture that it's not judged, it's accepted. You're more than welcome to participate in the services and we believe it can help."



Several Berkshire Housing members are participating in a months-long training for permanent supportive housing that details operations, collaboration with other agencies and organizations, and more.

"It is an expansion of our services and our approach that my team feels really good about, is excited about, and it's really moving," Peltier said.

She said the organization is more than landlords and serves people with "complex life resumes." A team of community providers has been brought together and will make a game plan for partnership when the project closes.

It was clarified that residents can stay in — or leave — the units as long as they like.

"If you remember years ago, it was all about transitional housing. Get them stabilized and then move them to another place. That totally misses the fact that many individuals who are moving out of homelessness, it's about community. A smaller apartment and maybe exactly all they ever really need," Peltier explained, adding that the idea is to get to know the people well enough to make sure that they are addressing all of the needs that they have.

Entry is considered "low barrier" but does require a criminal background check that is said to be flexible.

"We haven't established exactly how we are going to do the permanent supportive housing but it's going to be at least as flexible as what we do at Berkshire Housing," Peltier reported.

"Because the goal of this is to be low barrier and accessible and open and to understand that we're giving people that next chance where they might not receive it somewhere else."

People will access the units through coordinated entry where they are referred by a provider and provider and have a small intake appointment. A group meets every other week to review open units and people on the waitlist so they can make a match for housing.

The Housing Resource Center will start construction at the same time as the First St. units and after closing, Berkshire Housing will put out a request for proposals for the operator of the center.

Peltier also threw out the idea of an awareness campaign for people who are experiencing homelessness to inform the public and lessen the stigma, which the committee was in favor of participating in.

"This is all very exciting and we've been looking forward to the permanent supportive housing programs for so long so thank you," Chair Kim Borden said. "I think I can speak to everyone when I say we are so appreciative that there are resources for these folks that have just been missing for so long."

Director of Community Development Justine Dodds spoke in favor of changing the narrative about homelessness and being proactive about corralling some of these conversations.


Tags: Housing program,   

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Pittsfield City Council Weighs in on 'Crisis' in Public Schools

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

A half-dozen people addressed the City Council from the floor of Monday's meeting, including Valerie Anderson, right.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — After expressing anger and outrage and making numerous calls for accountability and transparency, the 11 members of the City Council on Monday voted to support the School Committee in seeking an independent investigation into allegations of misconduct by staff members at Pittsfield High School that have come to light in recent weeks.
 
At the close of a month that has seen three PHS administrators put on administrative leave, including one who was arrested on drug trafficking charges, the revelation that the district is facing a civil lawsuit over inappropriate conduct by a former teacher and that a staff member who left earlier in the year is also under investigation at his current workplace, the majority of the council felt compelled to speak up about the situation.
 
"While the City Council does not have jurisdiction over the schools … we have a duty to raise our voices and amplify your concerns and ensure this crisis is met with the urgency it demands," Ward 5 Councilor Patrick Kavey said.
 
About two dozen community members attended the special meeting of the council, which had a single agenda item.
 
Four of the councilors precipitated the meeting with a motion that the council join the School Committee in its search for an investigation and that the council, "be included in the delivery of any disclosures, interim reports or findings submitted to the city."
 
Last week, the School Committee decided to launch that investigation. On Monday, City Council President Peter White said the School Committee has a meeting scheduled for Dec. 30 to authorize its chair to enter negotiations with the Springfield law firm of Bulkley, Richardson and Gelinas to conduct that probe.
 
Ward 7 Councilor Rhonda Serre, the principal author of the motion of support, was one of several members who noted that the investigation process will take time, and she, like Kavey, acknowledged that the council has no power over the public schools beyond its approval of the annual district budget.
 
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