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Nikki Varriale has brought her mobile Curbside Pet Spa to parts of South Berkshire and Pittsfield.

New Mobile Groomer Servicing Parts of Berkshire County

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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The conversion van is fully kitted out with everything a dog needs to be clean and trimmed. 
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Nichole "Nikki" Varriale will bring her pet-grooming spa right to your doorstep.
 
Curbside Pet Spa is a luxury one-on-one dog grooming experience that Varriale started in 2012 in Connecticut. Now that she's just over the border in New York State, she's brought the business to parts of the Berkshires.
 
"My goal would be to build up my client base to what it was in Connecticut," she said.
 
She had a little more than 200 customers before moving to Columbia County last year.
 
"I basically travel to the dog owners' houses or workplaces and groom the dogs right inside the van," said Varriale.
 
The van is equipped with a hydro massaging bath, adjustable grooming table, water, electricity, storage and heating and air conditioning. The service offers bathing, brushing, hand drying, cuts, ear cleaning and trimming and filing nails.
 
Varriale has been grooming for about 15 years but started her love for dog grooming in eighth grade when she had to do volunteer work for her school.
 
"I was able to go volunteer at a local doggie training, boarding, grooming facility, day-care place, too, and then after eighth grade, they hired me part time to work there and I kind of did everything in all the departments," she said.
 
Varriale grew up with a love for dogs and knew she wanted to work with them. She attended the former Becker College in Worcester and earned a degree in animal care. 
 
After college, she went back to the dog training and grooming facility she volunteered for and worked full time. After a while there she realized she wanted to move on to somewhere new.
 
"I would go to grooming expos where you take classes and everything to keep your education up and when I was there I discovered mobile grooming units and I had decided, let's see if I could  take the jump and do this on my own," said Varriale.
 
After gathering support from her family and friends she started mobile grooming and now has a van that can go anywhere.
 
"The benefit of mobile grooming is that I do go to the customer's house or workplace and its the one-on-one experience for the dog so that they don't have to go to the salon, where there's probably a bunch of other dogs that are barking," she said. 
 
"I know when I used to work in a salon, it was kind of more like an assembly line, so we would start with one dog — we would bathe them, put them in a cage to dry — and then we would keep doing that with all the other dogs that we had.  Then once we were done bathing everyone, you would go back to the first dog and give that dog a haircut."
 
Varrialle requires your pet to have a rabies vaccine and needs a flat, fairly level place to park. She also explains it's important to know about the dog's dislikes before grooming.
 
"It's nice to have the owners communicate with me if there's anything that I should know about the dogs prior to getting groomed just cause I don't know them and they don't know me," she explained. "The dog and I are just getting to know each other so if they have any history of being super anxious or not liking certain things done."
 
She also offers a latchkey service where if the owner is comfortable, they could give her a key or code to their home if they cannot be there. She just requires a couple visits beforehand to make sure the dog is comfortable with her.
 
Varriale currently services Lee, Lenox, Pittsfield, Richmond and West Stockbridge in the Berkshires and Austerlitz, Canaan, Chatham, Ghent, Kinderhook, Nassau and New Lebanon in New York. 
 
She is currently taking dogs up to 40 pounds.
 
You can make an appointment by calling or texting to 860-970-2300 or nikki@curbsidepetspallc.com.

Tags: dogs,   

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State Launches Workforce Innovation Tour at Interprint

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Secretary of Labor Lauren Jones starts her statewide jobs tour at Interprint in Pittsfield on Monday. The colors in the signage were inspired by the Eras Tour. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development kicked off its "revolutionary" workforce tour at Interprint and learned some about decor printing.

On Monday, the Healey-Driscoll administration launched the "MassHire 250 Workforce Innovation Tour" to celebrate local and regional workforce innovations across the state. From now until July, Secretary of Labor and Workforce Development Lauren Jones will visit each of the state's 16 MassHire regional workforce boards to hear about partnerships that fuel and sustain sectors.

"Berkshire companies are innovative in creating new possibilities," said David Moresi, chair of the Berkshire Workforce Board. "Technology and innovation are part of the Berkshires' industrious past, thriving present, and limitless potential."

In celebration of Interprint's 40th year in the city, state and local officials toured the surface design and printing facility and even participated in an ink matching exercise. With around 200 employees, the company sells its decorative papers and films worldwide and has seen several expansions.

"As I often say, workforce development takes collaboration and the network of organizations, community leaders, and workforce partners represented here demonstrates the partnerships that drive outcomes from career coaching and job training to employment," Jones said.

"That was demonstrated certainly by hearing some of the highlights shared during our tour of the partnership with MassHire and the employment and professional development outcomes that we see at a company like Interprint."

In a week, Massachusetts will join five other states in celebrating Patriots Day, commemorating the inaugural battles of the American Revolutionary War: Lexington, Concord, and Menotomy (Arlington). The workforce tour builds on the launch of Massachusetts 250, a statewide initiative to celebrate 250 years of America's independence and Massachusetts' revolutionary legacy.

Jones noted the Taylor Swift's Eras Tour inspired the signage.

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