Seeing Rainbows Awarded Outdoor Recreation Grant

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Seeing Rainbows, founded just before the beginning of Pride Month 2024, has been awarded a $10,000 grant, from the Massachusetts Office of Outdoor Recreation.
 
The grant is in response to the agency's call for grant applications to support Inclusive and Accessible events. 
 
"With this grant, we're able to retain and grow our team of trans and nonbinary hiking facilitators to sustainably hold space for trans community in our outdoor spaces. By compensating trans facilitators for their time, we are signaling the inherent value of this labor in defending our community, during a particularly challenging time," said co-founder and executive director, maayan nuri héd.
 
Seeing Rainbows, a trans-led and operated organization whose mission is to build a sustainable and supportive trans community through the presentation and production of liberating art and experiences by and for trans and other marginalized peoples, has been facilitating weekly hikes as a core activity of the organization since before its founding in May of this year. 
 
"We are excited about the potential for these grants to help create belonging and inclusion in outdoor spaces for those who have not always felt welcome," said Paul Jahnige, director of the Massachusetts Office of Outdoor Recreation (MOOR). "We are thrilled to support organizations like Seeing Rainbows in their efforts to expand what it means to be a "Massachusetts' Outside."
 
This grant was sought in collaboration with Berkshire Natural Resources Council (BNRC).
 
"BNRC is thrilled to celebrate Seeing Rainbows' well-deserved grant award. This funding will empower our ongoing collaboration to create outdoor spaces and experiences that are safer, more inclusive, and welcoming--fostering community, healing, and deeper connections to place," said Volunteer and Outreach Manager Charlotte Hood. 
 
This award is the largest in Seeing Rainbow's less-than-six month history, and provides funding to support the Berkshire Trans Hike program well into 2025. This is only the third institutional grant received by Seeing Rainbows, following an initial grant of $1,000 in July of this year from the New England Grassroots Environmental Fund, also in support of the hike program, and an additional $500 from Greylock Federal Credit Union issued September 30 in support of the Trans Mutual Aid Fund.
 
Seeing Rainbows has hosted a range of events for trans community as well as opportunities for cis allies to join, support, and be in community with local trans folx. In addition to weekly hikes, Seeing Rainbows hosts a monthly art workshop in partnership with Berkshire Art Center at their downtown Pittsfield studios, a monthly co-creation "salon," open to all with varying themes and venues, a monthly dance class in partnership with Berkshire Pulse, as well as events such as the Nov. 20, Trans Day of Remembrance "Existence is Resistance" Celebration at the newly opened, trans-owned WANDER Berkshires, where the next salon — a two-session narrative workshop beginning on Dec. 8 — will be hosted as well.
 
All of Seeing Rainbows' programming is offered on a pay-what-you-can / no-one-turned-away-for-lack-of-funds (PWYC/NOTAFLOF) basis. 
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Dalton and Fire District Set Tax Rates for FY25

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The Select Board voted to maintain a single tax rate, as it has done historically, during its meeting on Monday night. 
 
This means all types of properties within the town, whether residential, commercial, or industrial, will be taxed at the same rate.
 
The town's tax rate for fiscal year 2025 is projected to be $16.47 per $1,000 property value, which is a decrease of 54 cents from last year's rate of $17.01. 
 
The average tax bill for a single-family residence in Dalton would be about $5,561.06 for an average value of $337,648.
 
Residential properties continue to represent most of the total value in town, at approximately 86 percent, with commercial, industrial, and personal property only making up about 14 percent, Assessor's Clerk Lee Nunez said.  
 
The town's excess levy capacity for FY25 is approximately $777,158, which is down from FY24's figure of $864,386.07. The town takes this figure into consideration when developing the budget. 
 
The total assessed value of taxable properties in town for FY25 is $959,176,725, an increase of $63,853,860, or 7.13 percent over last year. 
 
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