CATA Announce New Staff, Resident Faculty Artists, Board Members

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GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Community Access to the Arts (CATA) announces the hiring of Chaya Schneider as its new Development Coordinator as well as new full time Resident Faculty Artists Adam Gudeon (Visual Arts), Caroline Calkins (Theater), and Katie Herbst (Music). 
 
CATA also announces the promotion of Courtney Maxwell to Program Coordinator, and welcomes Gary Schiff as a new board member.
 
CATA has expanded programs serving people with disabilities in recent years, with a community-based model rooted in partnerships with disability agencies, day-habilitation programs, residences, and schools. CATA currently provides more than 2,500 arts workshops annually for 1,250 children, teens, and adults with disabilities in painting, dance, acting, songwriting, drumming, creative writing, juggling, yoga, and more.
 
These new appointments will help CATA deepen community partnerships and expand financial support for the organization, giving people with disabilities across the Berkshires and Columbia County more opportunities to explore their talents and express themselves creatively.
 
Chaya Schneider (she/her) joins CATA with a diverse background in corporate IT, along with extensive volunteer experience with several non-profit organizations. She is excited to officially transition her career to the nonprofit sector and is passionate about CATA’s mission to promote accessibility to the arts. Chaya holds a master’s degree in music from Teachers College, Columbia University, and a bachelor’s degree in music from Barnard College.
 
Courtney Maxwell (she/her) has been promoted to Program Coordinator. She joined CATA in 2022 as Program Associate. Previously, Courtney worked at MASS MoCA as a gallery art teacher and at Brattleboro Memorial Hospital as an occupational therapist. She has a graduate degree in art education from Lesley University in Cambridge, MA and a graduate degree in occupational therapy from Kean University in Union, NJ. In her role at CATA, Courtney supports CATA's Program Director team, with a focus on programs taking place in CATA’s studios in Great Barrington, and helps coordinate CATA’s adaptive tools, resources, and art-making approaches.
 
Adam Gudeon (he/him) is a children’s book writer and illustrator, and arts educator, joining CATA in a new, full-time role as Resident Faculty Artist teaching comics, illustration, graphic art, painting, and more. His picture books and early readers have been published by HarperCollins, Holiday House Books for Young Readers, and Boys Mills Kane. Adam also creates limited edition and one of a kind books and zines. Previously, Adam served as Special Education Teacher at Berkshire Meadows School (Justice Resource Institute). He has a fine art degree from Pratt School of Art and Design.
 
Caroline Calkins (she/her) is an actor, theater-maker, and teaching artist, joining CATA in a new, full-time role as Resident Faculty Artist in Theater, teaching improv, acting, Shakespeare, and more. She has worked with hundreds of students in theater workshops and residencies across Berkshire and Columbia Counties, mainly through her work with the Education Program at Shakespeare & Company. She has performed on local stages for many years. Caroline has a BA from Brown University and an MA in Theater Education from Emerson College, and trained at the National Theater Institute.  
 
Katie Herbst (she/her) is a Berkshire-based performing artist with deep connections to our local community through her work as a farmer and musician, now joining CATA in a new, full-time role as Resident Faculty Artist in Music, teaching singing, songwriting, and more. Katie comes to CATA from Stanton Home, a residential and day program for adults with developmental and intellectual disabilities, where she worked as the Farm & Garden Program Coordinator. Katie also performs with the local folk/Americana band Rounders Revival. Katie received a degree in social work from the University of Vermont.
 
Gary Schiff (he/him) is a native of Adams, MA with a family history in the Berkshires dating back to 1896. A past member of the CATA Finance Committee, Gary now joins the CATA Board of Directors. From 2015-2024 Gary served as the managing director of October Mountain Financial Advisors, a newly formed division of Springfield-based St. Germain Investment Management and joint venture with Lee Bank. Previously, he had a 21-year career with TD Private Client Wealth LLC and TD Bank USA’s predecessor banks in New England, beginning in 1995 with Bank of Boston. Prior to TD he held various management positions with MASS MoCA, Heritage Development Group, and the SWA Group (Boston). An active member of the community since the 1980s, Gary is a member of the Berkshire Funders’ Roundtable, a corporator of the Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts Foundation, a member of the Berkshire County Estate Planning Council, a member of the Harvard University alumni interviewing committee, a director and chair of the Congregation Knesset Israel Investment Committee, and chair of the Jewish Federation of the Berkshires’ Investment Committee. He is a past director and president of the Berkshire Chamber of Commerce, past director of the Berkshire Economic Development Corporation and the Colonial Theatre, and a former member of the Town of Lenox Planning Board, Berkshire County Regional Employment Board, Berkshire Land Use Commission, and Berkshire Community College Business Advisory Committee. Gary is a graduate of Middlebury College and holds a Masters degree from Harvard University.

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Lee Celebrates Kickoff of New Public Safety Building with Demo

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The new complex to be built on this site will hold the Fire, Police and EMS. 

LEE, Mass. — Town officials celebrated the start of a new public safety building on Tuesday by demolishing the Airoldi building and former Department of Public Works building.

"We're starting to take down the Airoldi building, which served as a municipal office building for the last few decades, we've had Tri-Town Health here some of our state representatives had have offices here, the DPW, we've had elections in this building and also was a former ambulance garage," Town Administrator Christopher Brittain said. "So, it served a number of purposes over the years."

The nearby Quonset hut that used to house the DPW is also expected to be taken down, clearing the property for a 37,661-square-foot building that will house the Police and Fire departments, and emergency medical services.

Brittain said this is a historic event for the town.

"This will kind of mark the first real work being done," he said. "We've been in the planning stages for almost two years between town meetings and bonds and things that we had to do and votes and now we are actually starting to see some things happening."

In 2023, voters endorsed nearly $37 million in borrowing, which included the purchase of property and relocating the DPW, during a special town meeting. The facility's cost is estimated to fall below $35 million and back in October the town received $1 million in federal funding toward construction.

Brittain said many factors went into the decision for a public safety building as the fire station building is too small and not up to today's standards.

"We're working right now out of three buildings, we're going to reduce that to two. The two up here on Main Street, the first one we occupied in 1911, it was built for two horse-drawn pieces of apparatus, we currently have four motorized pieces of apparatus in it and we're crammed in there like sardines," Fire Chief Ryan Brown said.

"The efficiency of operation is definitely impacted negatively. Our offices are in the building next door so we're not in the same building as our equipment, but we make it work."

The fire station, built in 1912, was found to be structurally unsound and inadequate to support modern-day equipment and the 1,600 square-foot police station falls significantly short of the 10,960 square feet of space that is required to accommodate the force.

The police building is located at 32 Main St., the same building as Town Hall.

"We're working out of such an antiquated facility that's on multiple floors from a best practice standpoint. It's very difficult to serve our community and it's just not efficient and there's liability issues there's safety issues and that's what we currently have," said Police Chief Craig DeSantis.

"It's hopefully going to accommodate future growth for these departments for 20 or more years into the future which is exciting," said Select Board member Sean Regnier. "This is an area of town that something needed to happen to improve it. It's right on the river, sort of off Main Street … and it's something that's going to be front and center in town to show off our public safety."

Regnier said the board has identified that the facilities were lacking a lot when he was first elected in 2020.

"So this is really kind of a kickoff of the process," he said.

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