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Not surprisingly, prom slideshows tend to be the most popular on iBerkshires. Above, students head for the Taconic High prom, which was the most viewed this year.
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It was Hollywood glitz at the Wahconah High prom, at No. 2.
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The McCann Tech prom is always among the top photos views. This year it was at No. 3.
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The Drury High prom also drew tens of thousands of views at No. 4.
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If it's not proms, it's sports racking up views. In this case, Track & Field: Berkshire County Individuals at No. 5.
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The Hoosac Valley prom comes in at No. 6.
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The McCann graduation is usually among the top 10. This year it's No. 7.
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Not everything is about high schoolers; sometimes it's about BCYFL Youth Football: Lee vs North Adams.
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But mostly it's about proms. Here's the Mount Greylock prom at No. 9.
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And rounding out our top 10 viewed slideshows is the MCLA graduation.

iBerkshires' Top 10 Most-Viewed Stories for 2024

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Thousands of articles have been posted on iBerkshires over the last year and some drew more eyeballs than others. 
 
Normally our top 10 stories range across the year but the flood of breaking news in the last few weeks has pushed some of the most recent articles to the top. 
 
Our top story is the scamming of a North Adams man to the tune of $420,000. Posted in October, it has been viewed more than 115,000 times.
 
Based on a press release from the U.S. Attorney's Office, the article described how the older man was tricked into handing over wads of cash to a fake Treasury agent for "safekeeping." 
 
One of the couriers, Urvishkumar Patel, 21, of South Boston, was arrested and charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud. The fake T-man is still at large and the money is gone. 
 
The lesson: if someone posing as a government or company official calls, tells you you're in trouble and asks for cash or gift cards to fix it, hang up.
 
Our No. 2 story also involves government agents (real ones), a salon and the vice president — and it got more views than the presidential candidate's sold-out fundraising visit which didn't even crack the top 10.
 
Alicia Powers, owner of Four One Three Salon, located behind the Colonial Theatre in Pittsfield, was taking advantage of the high security around Kamala Harris' fundraising visit on July 27 to close up shop and leave town for a couple days. 
 
She was shocked to find that her locked business had been entered and the bathroom used during this time by public safety personnel.
 
After searching for answers, Powers said she received a call from a Secret Service representative in Boston who took responsibility for the incident even though he could not confirm that his agents were involved.
 
Our next story was tragic and occurred in November when Michael DeMarsico, 63, was struck and killed crossing four-lane Howland Avenue. DeMarsico was a Drury High School graduate and worked at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. 
 
He was crossing the road with other family members to attend a sports banquet at the Bounti-Fare, where he was to present a memorial award in honor of his son, Army Spec. Michael R. DeMarsico II, who was killed in Afghanistan in 2012. The younger DeMarsico was only 20 years old. 
 
An article about a shooting on Cole Avenue on Sunday morning garnered enough views in 24 hours to push it No. 4. The incident caused the Williams College campus to go into lockdown.
 
As of latest reports, the suspect(s) have not been apprehended but the victim, taken to Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield, was expected to survive. 
 
This is the first shooting in Williamstown in at least 60 years, outside of a 2007 hunting accident from which the victim survived. 
 
No. 5 was one of a series of articles over the last two years about fire chief woes in Dalton. Chief Christian Tobin, who had been sworn in with great ceremony in January was suspended later in the summer. This story from September was about the extension of his administrative leave. The Fire District currently has an interim chief. 
 
Another recent story came in at No. 6  views but we predict this Dec. 11 post will eventually move higher as it involved a Pittsfield High School dean being arrested on drug trafficking charges.
 
Lavante Wiggins and another man were arrested and arraigned in U.S. District Court in Springfield; Wiggins was also to be arraigned on Dec. 23 in Central Berkshire District Court.
 
Wiggins had worked for PHS for three years and was immediately put on administrative leave. His arrest was followed by two more administrators being placed on administrative leave on unrelated investigations by the Department of Children and Families; another former PHS staffer is also under investigation by DCF.  These leaves prompted comments at the School Committee meeting last week, which is our 14th most read story.
 
The investigations have sparked calls for an independent probe and the City Council plans to weigh in on the matter. This is likely to generate more articles before the year ends next week. 
 
Articles 7 and 8 both had close to the same number of views. The first was about the crash of a pickup truck on South Street in Pittsfield that injured three men; the second was the search for a missing person from Hanson believed to have been in Williamstown. Her car was found near a hiking area and her remains a month later in New York State.  
 
No. 9 was about the second sale of North Adams' Steeple City Plaza in less than a year but readers may have been more interested in its coverage of the abrupt closure of V&V Liquors
 
First Hartford Realty of Connecticut bought the downtown shopping center in 2005 and opened V&V in 2014 after Staples had moved out of that space. It continued to run the liquor store after the first sale but closed it with the second. The license was picked up a few months later and the store reopened under new management. 
 
And it wouldn't be a New England top 10 without at least one weather story. A February Nor'easter set to dump more than a foot of snow over the region took a southward turn that left no more than a couple of inches.
 
Honorable mentions include the approval of a Starbucks at the corner of Union and Eagle streets in North Adams and the emergency demolition of the collapsing Moderne Studio building in North Adams, both from earlier this year, and the recent wildfire in Great Barrington.
 
iBerkshires used a cumulative count of daily views from when an article was posted. 

Tags: top 10,   year in review,   

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2024 Year in Review: North Adams' Year of New Life to Old Institutions

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

President and CEO Darlene Rodowicz poses in one of the new patient rooms on 2 North at North Adams Regional Hospital.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — On March 28, 2014, the last of the 500 employees at North Adams Regional Hospital walked out the doors with little hope it would reopen. 
 
But in 2024, exactly 10 years to the day, North Adams Regional was revived through the efforts of local officials, BHS President and CEO Darlene Rodowicz, and U.S. Rep. Richard Neal, who was able to get the U.S. Health and Human Services to tweak regulations that had prevented NARH from gaining "rural critical access" status.
 
It was something of a miracle for North Adams and the North Berkshire region.
 
Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield, under the BHS umbrella, purchased the campus and affiliated systems when Northern Berkshire Healthcare declared bankruptcy and abruptly closed in 2014. NBH had been beset by falling admissions, reductions in Medicare and Medicaid payments, and investments that had gone sour leaving it more than $30 million in debt. 
 
BMC had renovated the building and added in other services, including an emergency satellite facility, over the decade. But it took one small revision to allow the hospital — and its name — to be restored: the federal government's new definition of a connecting highway made Route 7 a "secondary road" and dropped the distance maximum between hospitals for "mountainous" roads to 15 miles. 
 
"Today the historic opportunity to enhance the health and wellness of Northern Berkshire community is here. And we've been waiting for this moment for 10 years," Rodowicz said. "It is the key to keeping in line with our strategic plan which is to increase access and support coordinated countywide system of care." 
 
The public got to tour the fully refurbished 2 North, which had been sectioned off for nearly a decade in hopes of restoring patient beds; the official critical hospital designation came in August. 
 
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