Letter: Working for You, Keeping Promises

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To the Editor:

Hello everyone, the last couple months have certainly flown by quickly. So, once again another campaign is upon us. I am looking forward to again getting your valued support for a three-year term so I can continue serving the people of Dalton. I am very pleased with what has been started in my brief time in office. Each item that was started was a promise made during my campaign, and I would really like to make sure these things happen. And best of all, together I know we can make sure they do.

Over the last couple months I have been busy keeping my campaign promises:

I promised to listen. I have continued my weekly office hours at the Town Hall and also meet with people stopping by my campaign headquarters. I return phone calls in a timely manner and I answer emails. I feel I have been very effective and transparent in educating and being knowledgeable for the public. And what I don't know, I have tried to go out, learn and bring back to people to answer their questions.

I promised to be supportive. I have been working with town employees and residents trying to equitably resolve the dust issue residents of Pleasant Street and Raymond Drive have been dealing with for a long time. I, along with the other members of the Planning Committee, have also been trying to resolve the issues related to Robert's gravel processing operation.

I promised to help improve the town's infrastructure. I am pleased to note that I encouraged the reactivation of the stormwater commission and that we now have a full committee with a great group of capable people. One of the Commission's goals is to map the existing stormwater piping, identify areas in greatest need of repair, and create a repair schedule for the next 20 years that fits within the town's budget. I hope that when stormwater is well underway, we can then look at the sanitary sewer system.



I promised to be prudent with spending. I have continued to promote and campaign for the new police station to be a regionalized police station to hopefully gain substantial financial support from the state and limit the local burden.

I promised to work on improving future planning in Dalton. I have proposed a bylaw to create a Capital Planning Committee that will annually update the town's five-year financial spending plan based on the town's recognized needs and its 20-year master plan.

What I would like to request from everybody is to understand that not only are we again in a four-way election, but this time the challenge is even greater so we need to generate even more support from our friends, neighbors and colleagues to help assure I remain on the Select Board to support a forward thinking future and to continue the progress that Dalton needs.

 

Robert E.W. Collins
Dalton, Mass. 

Collins won election to complete a term on the Dalton Select Board in a special election in February and is running for a full three-year term in May.

 

 


Tags: election 2025,   town elections,   

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Pittsfield Extends Interim School Superintendent Contract

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Interim Superintendent Latifah Phillips' employment has been extended to 2027

Last week, the School Committee approved an employment contract that runs through June 30, 2027.  Phillips was originally appointed to a one-year position that began on July 1 and runs through the end of the fiscal year in June 2026. 

"You didn't ask me simply to endure challenges or struggle to prove myself. Instead, you believe in me, you've given me the space to grow, the encouragement to stretch, and the expectation that I can truly soar," she said earlier in last Wednesday's meeting when addressing outgoing School Committee members. 

"You question, you poke, you prod, but not to tear anything down, but to make our work stronger, grounded in honesty, integrity, and hope. You've entrusted me with meaningful responsibility and welcomed me into the heart of this community. Serving you and leading our public schools has been, thus far, a joyful, renewing chapter in my life, and I want to thank you for this opportunity." 

Chair William Cameron reported that the extended contract includes a 3 percent cost-of-living increase in the second year and more specific guidelines for dismissal or disciplinary action. 

Phillips was selected out of two other applicants for the position in May. Former Superintendent Joseph Curtis retired at the end of the school year after more than 30 years with the district. 

The committee also approved an employment contract with Assistant Superintendent for CTE and Student Support Tammy Gage that runs through June 30, 2031. Cameron reported that there is an adjustment to the contract's first-year salary to account for new "substantive" responsibilities, and the last three years of the contract's pay are open to negotiation. 

The middle school restructuring, which was given the green light later that night, and the proposal to rebuild and consolidate Crosby Elementary School and Conte Community School on West Street, have been immediate action items in Phillips' tenure. 

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