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Questions Needed for Dalton Select Board Candidate Forum

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — Attention Dalton voters, iBerkshires is asking the public to submit questions for the upcoming Select Board Candidate Forum at the Senior Center on Jan. 15 at 6 p.m. 
 
During the event, Pittsfield Bureau Chief Brittany Polito will ask the four Select Board candidates questions curated from voter submissions. 
 
Submit a question by emailing our Dalton reporter, Sabrina Damms, at sdamms@iberkshires.com
 
The number of questions will be limited to the 90-minute time limit. 
 
In this forum, each candidate will begin with a two-minute opening statement. Following this, Polito will ask questions. 
 
For every question, the candidates will each have up to 1 1/2 minutes to answer, followed by 30 seconds each to rebut or follow up. The moderator can allow for further debate on a particular question if needed. 
 
At the conclusion of the event, we will allow each candidate up to 90 seconds to deliver a closing statement.  
 
The candidates will not been given the topics or questions in advance. We will rotate which candidate is the first to answer each of the questions. 
 
The special election will be held on Monday, Feb. 3, to decide who will fill the vacant seat left open in October when Joseph Diver stepped down. 
 
The Select Board voted in December to have mail-in ballots available for the special election to fill its vacant seat if more than one candidate is on the ballot. 
 
The mail-in applications are currently available in various town buildings, including the Senior Center, library, and the Town Clerk's office in Town Hall. 
 
The town has four candidates on the ballot: Robert Collins, Rich Haley, Levi Renderer, and Patrick Carsell. 
 
Candidates' Background
 
Robert Collins 
 
Collins has been making waves within the town, spearheading the citizen's petition for a special election alongside Thomas Irwin and several other supporting town members. 
 
"If elected, my vision for our community is to foster an environment of accountability with easy accessibility to me as a Select Board member," he said. 
 
Collins said he has a "sense of commitment"  to the town and a strong desire to contribute to making its future as strong as possible. 
 
He currently serves on the Planning Board after a failed run for Select Board during the elections last May, where he ran against incumbent Robert Bishop under a campaign focused on the need for a new voice on the board and the need for more discussion.
 
He also currently serves as the town's delegate for the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission. 
 
Additionally, he has been a member of the Massachusetts Association of Professional Foresters since 2001 and served as its president from 2006 to 2013. 
 
He also highlighted how he has run his environmental and landscape construction company, REWC Land Management, Inc., for the past 24 years. 
 
Collins said running his "successful business" has taught him how to budget, plan for projects, negotiate with state entities and those in the private sector, and given him knowledge of state ethics in procurement. 
 
If elected, his priorities will include ensuring governance that is easily accessible, responsive, and transparent. He aims to improve financial stability through long-range planning in an effort to slow the rate of tax increases.
 
Additionally, he will focus on increasing community engagement and advocating for an expanded green energy footprint in Dalton. 
 
Rich Haley
 
Haley was inspired to run because of his love for the town. 
 
"I want to give back to the town and its great residents. I want to make sure the great things we do in this town we are able to keep doing them for generations to come," he said. 
 
Haley said he does not have any experience in government but, for the last 8 years, has been volunteering in running the youth football program in town and is the president of the non-profit 12th-Man program. 
 
The nonprofit oversees all the fundraising efforts for Dalton's grades K through 12 football program. 
 
"This program has really taught me how, when a group of people work together as one, they can achieve great things," he said. 
 
If elected, his main goal is to ensure town residents have their voices heard. 
 
"We need to make sure we are doing things in the best interests of all our residents, young and old. I want to ensure Dalton stays one of the best and safest communities in Berkshire County," he said. 
 
"Also, we need to make sure the youth in our town have the necessary resources to be successful. And lastly, we need to make sure we maintain communication and transparency within our town."
 
Levi Renderer 
 
Renderer highlighted his experience in leadership, which he wanted to share with the town he grew up in and loves. 
 
"My goal is to inspire the future generations to get involved in the decisions that will shape their futures," he said. 
 
"I believe Dalton and all the communities in Berkshire County have a huge untapped potential. The people here are unlike any other people I have met living across this country."
 
Renderer graduated from the Pittsfield Citizens Academy in 2023, during which he had the opportunity to work as an election official for Pittsfield, first as an inspector, then as a clerk, and as the warden at Columbia Arms. 
 
While working the elections, he saw who participated and emphasized his desire to get total involvement from the community in the elections at local, state, and federal levels. 
 
Renderer said he has experience in production, quality assurance, safety, and process improvement and showcased his time on the Dalton Fire Department. 
 
Additionally, Renderer has volunteered as a Restorative Navigator with the Center for Restorative Justice in Bennington, Vt., during which time he visited the unhoused population living in emergency shelters.
 
"If elected, I will work for the people of Dalton to best communicate their needs to the town. I will ask people to step up and get involved in helping me make Dalton a town our kids don't want to move away from. But rather stay and be a part of a great community with everything to offer for their families for the next 100 years," he said. 
 
Patrick Carsell
 
Carsell is a longtime resident of the Dalton community, where he has built friendships, gotten to know the residents, and raised his kids. 
 
He has been interested in participating in town government for many years but refrained from doing so to avoid any potential conflicts of interest that may have arisen from owning a dental practice in town.
 
Carsell was encouraged to run by his longtime friend and current board member, John Boyle. 
 
One of Carsell's main priorities, if elected, would include maintaining the town's "excellent school system."
 
"My wife Laurel and I bought a home in Dalton in 1992, where we raised two children Emilie and Blake. The children attended our public schools in town, a primary reason for living in Dalton," he said. 
 
He also expressed his support for a new police station and keeping the town's emergency and first response employees and volunteers updated with current standards. 
 
"Roads and sidewalks must be properly maintained to keep our town a safe place to live. I realize that there are many other issues that a Select Board member would need to be concerned with, and I would look forward to serving the residents of Dalton," Carsell said. 
 
In 2022, Carsell retired after operating his dental practice, which he established in 1989. Throughout his career, he was actively involved in several committees within his field. 
 
He served on the Massachusetts Dental Society for ten years, participating in the Membership and Manpower Committees. 
 
Additionally, he held various leadership roles in the Berkshire District Dental Society, including executive board member, vice chairman, chairman-elect, and two terms as chairman.
 
"The skills I have developed as an Executive Board member are the ability to listen to the concerns of members, the ability to lead discussions as an involved group member, and the ability to use parliamentary procedure to handle motions on important issues facing the group," he said. 
 
Carsell also served on the continuing education committee and was its chairman for several years. 
 
Beyond his profession, he was on the Stewardship Committee for a year and the Pastoral Search Committee as a member of First Congregational Church of Dalton for a year. 

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Pittsfield 2024 Business Wrap-Up: New Life and Closures

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Mayor Peter Marchetti gets ice cream cones from the reopened King Cone on Fenn Street. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — In 2024, the city's business landscape saw some shakeups, with restaurant openings and closures and some new ventures.

King Kone, a soft-serve staple, was purchased by the nonprofit Roots & Dreams and Mustard Seeds to be run as a workers' co-op. At the end of the 2023 season, the Barbarotta family closed the shop's order and pickup windows for the last time as they prepared to sell.  

The ice cream shop had a soft opening in August, offering frozen treats on a "pay what you will" basis while employees perfected the craft.

In 2023, Roots and Dreams was allocated $179,000 to purchase the soft-serve ice cream shop at 133 Fenn St. and convert it into a worker cooperative. It owns a series of storefronts ranging from 117 to 129 Fenn St.

This model provides workers with a flat wage, revenue shares, and the opportunity to buy into the business.

The same month, Chili's Bar and Grill closed abruptly in Berkshire Crossing after six years in business.

There were moving trucks outside the location instead of preparations for the lunch rush. It was first reported by PCTV on its Facebook page and a call to the restaurant was answered by an employee who said the eatery had no plans to reopen.

In September, Director of Northeast Operations Allen Anderson told the licensing board that a new business is being sought to carry out its lease that extends to 2029.  

The former Crossroads Cafe saw new life in 2024 as Bei Tempi, which is Italian for "good times."  Owners Elizabeth and Richard Zucco wanted to bring back food while preserving the establishment's long-held popularity for live music.

In 2023, the Licensing Board approved a change of stock interest for Crossroads Cafe and an application from Zuke's Soups and Variety LLC, doing business as Bei Tempi, for the transfer of license, pledge of inventory, and pledge of license from C.T. Colvin Inc. doing business as Crossroads Cafe.

Bei Tempi was granted an entertainment license in June.

North Street saw a new breakfast and lunch spot when Marie's North Street Eatery and Gallery opened in the former Maria's European Delights.

Maria's European Delights closed at the end of 2022 after 15 years in business. Maria Sekowski's late husband Krzysztof "Kris" opened the store in Great Barrington in 2007, and, in 2013, it was moved to Pittsfield. The Eastern European deli was known for the smell of homemade soup, stuffed cabbage, kielbasa, and impromptu musical numbers.

New owner Neil Davis, a veteran entrepreneur, has kept an office in the historic Shipton building for about 10 years and Marie was a formal administrative assistant before they went into business together. He also owns a shredding business in California and has other startup ventures.

When Maria's closed, he saw an opportunity in the space and a way to connect with the community and purchased the business in February of 2023.

The restaurant space within Hotel on North also saw new life when the owners of RJ's Restaurant on First Street opened Rare 297 Steakhouse in the spot.

The space had been formerly occupied by Berkshire Palate, a farm-to-table eatery, which opened its second location in the Hotel on North in 2021. Around the same time, its owners opened 413 Bistro in the previously shuttered restaurant attached to the Holiday Inn on Main Street in North Adams.

Unfortunately, not all city eateries made it to 2025.

In December, President of the General Electric Athletic Golf Course Board of Directors Steve Cobb reported that the Tavern at The A is again looking for a new operator with a hopeful opening in the spring.

Attorney Bill Martin said there is a "really bad relationship" with the holder of The A's liquor license — with owners struggling to even get in contact. A few years ago, the former tenants went out of business and now, he said the GEAA is facing a worse situation with the latest tenants.

He said there are unpaid vendors, amounting to "tens of thousands of dollars worth of obligations that we're probably going to have to clear in connection with an application" for a liquor license transfer.

According to The A's Facebook, the restaurant appears to have been closed since late summer.

Pittsfield also saw a new plant shop and liquor store/Latin market.

Early in 2024, the Plant Connector of North Adams announced it would open a second location next to Thistle and Mirth following a pop-up on North Street over the holiday season.

Owners Emilee Yawn and Bonnie Marks opened the original location on historic Eagle Street in North Adams in 2020. Within two years, the shop outgrew the Eagle Street storefront and moved to a larger location on Main Street.

They offer classes and workshops, residential and commercial plant care, and sell various plants and related merchandise. They also offer personal and cleaning products that are green, sustainable, and refillable.

In June, Franky's Liquor Store Latin Market & More, located at 1220 North St., opened in the former K & K Discount Liquors & Variety.  The building had been vacant for four years.

It features authentic Latin food from several countries, including Colombia, Brazil, Ecuador, and Peru.?

The owner Frank Goncalves would drive by the building every day and see the rough condition it was in. He made it into an opportunity to make the area look better and more welcoming.
 
Prior to the opening of the market, the Hispanic, South American, and Central American communities had to drive an hour or longer to get authentic Latin food, Goncalves said.

Independent Connections officially unveiled its Massachusetts branch on Fenn Street in March with a ribbon cutting. The IT solutions company's specializations include consulting, cloud computing, and cybersecurity.

"We're focused on serving local businesses with state-of-the-art technology while providing superior customer service," CEO Christa Proper said. "And Indy's presence in Pittsfield will help keep jobs here, and continue to attract talent to this area."

The building, formerly occupied by Alliance Appliance for more than 40 years, underwent a makeover after it was purchased by the company last year. Proper explained that it was an "employee collaboration," with staff members assisting in ripping out carpet, cutting bushes, cleaning windows, and painting.


U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren meets with local entrepreneurs Destiny Saunders, Jocelyn Guelce, Desean Scales and Ludwig Jean-Louis, who all received support through the Berkshire Black Economic Council.
U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren was in the city in July to talk small business opportunities and met with four local entrepreneurs who have received assistance, advice and promotion through the council's programs.
 
The Berkshire Black Economic Council's work to support and attract new small businesses to the gateway city got boost with $455,000 secured by Warren in 2023's appropriations package.
 
"I'm here to celebrate partnership because I really do believe that we have the pieces right, every part of it then starts to work better," Warren said. "And of course, I'm also here to celebrate being able to put nearly half a million dollars into funding this effort, and the work that is being done here to make sure that small businesses, that Black-owned small businesses, are not at a competitive disadvantage."
 
Nissan of Pittsfield saw a change of ownership at the end of 2024 as "Bella Nissan of Pittsfield" after a problematic past. New owners Javier Columbie and Benjamin Farber want to turn the dealership around after it was investigated for failing to pay off the loans on trade-ins, among other complaints.
 
Jonathan Butler was recognized for a decade of leadership at 1Berkshire's annual meeting, held at Barrington Stage.
 
When Butler joined the organization in 2014, he was executive director of the Berkshire Chamber of Commerce. He then navigated the 2016 merging of the chamber, Berkshire Economic Development Corp., Berkshire Business Bureau, and Berkshire Creative into the 1Berkshire that is known today.
 
While serving the entire county, 1Berkshire has had its strongest impact in Pittsfield, where it is headquartered. The organization has sold its property at 66 Allen St. after 12 years and will move to the second floor of Crawford Square on North Street.

A few businesses with locations in Pittsfield announced closures in 2024.

In September, Annie Selke on Peck's Road announced that it would close its doors and lay off 47 people before the end of the year.
 
Designer and entrepreneur Annie Selke started with a bedding and sleep items business in 1994 as Pine Cone Hill. The largely wholesale home decor operation added Potluck Studios dinnerware in 2002 and Dash & Albert Rugs in 2003.
 
She invested nearly $4 million into the former Interprint mill on Peck's Road that dates to the 1860s and moved in 2007. The company was purchased by Rugs USA in 2023.

In the fall, signs appeared on Staples' front window in Berkshire Crossing indicating that it would close on Dec. 13. Then Big Lots announced in December that it would liquidate its assets after a purchase agreement with a competitor fell through.
 
"We all have worked extremely hard and have taken every step to complete a going concern sale," Bruce Thorn, Big Lots' president and CEO, said in the announcement.

"While we remain hopeful that we can close an alternative going concern transaction, in order to protect the value of the Big Lots estate, we have made the difficult decision to begin the GOB process."
 
The closeout retailer moved into the former Price Rite Marketplace on Dalton Avenue in 2021. The grocery had been in what was originally the Big N for 14 years before closing eight months after a million-dollar remodel. Big Lots had previously been in the Allendale Shopping Center.
 
Big Lots filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in September. It operated nearly 1,400 stores nationwide but began closing more than 300 by August with plans for another 250 by January. The Pittsfield location had not been among the early closures.
 
Advanced Auto Parts, with three locations in the Berkshires, is also closing 500 stores and 200 independently owned locations by about June. The North Adams store has had a "going out of business" for weeks and one of the Pittsfield stores is also slated for closure.

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