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Children try out the new ADA-compliant picnic table installed at the Dalton Public Library. There is no fourth seat to allow for people using mobility devices.

Dalton Installs Seven Accessible Picnic Tables

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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Six of the seven tables have been installed; the seventh is planned for the Pine Grove Park pavilion. The tables were purchased through a grant.
DALTON, Mass. — The Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant picnic tables have been installed at Greenridge, Pinegrove and Chamberland parks and at the library. 
 
During the ADA Committee meeting last week, ADA coordinator Alyssa Maschino informed the committee that the seven ADA picnic tables from Massachusetts Correctional Industries had been installed. 
 
They were purchased using a $6,414.31 Municipal ADA Improvement Grant. 
 
The round metal tables have three seats with one open spot for wheelchair and mobility device users. There are two at Greenridge Park, two at Chamberland Park and one at the library. 
 
One table has been installed at Pine Grove in the play area. After anti-theft measures have been implemented, another one will be installed under the pavilion.
 
The application for the fiscal 2025 Municipal ADA Improvement Grant has been submitted so the town can invest in ADA-accessible counters for the assessors, clerk, and tax collectors' offices in Town Hall. 
 
The committee will know if it has been approved for the grant in September or October. If the grant is approved the deadline to complete the project is close to the Massachusetts Correctional Industries program's 35-week queue. 
 
Committee members agreed to reserve a spot in the queue before being approved for the grant to ensure the counters arrive before the deadline. 
 
The cost of the counters does not include the installation. However, committee Chair Patrick Pettit said he and committee member John Curro know a local carpenter who may be able to install them. 
 
To cover the cost of the installation, the committee would have to utilize some funds from the building and grounds budget. Building Grounds Superintendent Jeff Burch is aware of this, Maschino said. 
 
Massachusetts Correctional Industries sent plans for the counters, which were slightly off but could be resolved by moving the counter back. Pettit said this won't affect the price. 
 
The committee originally proposed including ADA buttons for the assessors, clerk, and tax collectors' offices in the grant application, but the town did not receive a quote in time. 

Tags: accessibility,   ADA,   picnic,   

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May Day Protests Planned in Berkshires

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Residents in Berkshire and Bennington County, Vt., are planning to join thousands of others in May Day protests across the nation.
 
More than 1,000 rallies have registered with the platform Mobilize but more are expected to pop up this weekend. 
 
The Berkshires has seen a number of protests over the past several weeks, including the "Hands Off" rallies of April 5 when hundreds stood in the rain with signs and others traveled to Boston where more than 50,000 people turned out to criticize the administration's actions.
 
May Day is International Workers Day and is celebrated as a holiday to celebrate the labor movement in many countries.
 
The "May Day Strong" rallies are to protest what grassroots organizers call the "billionaire agenda" — tax cuts for the rich while cutting funding to Social Security, education and other services. The rallies are also focusing attention on the civil rights of marginalized communities such as immigrants, people of color and the transgender community.
 
"Now more than ever the labor movement and the voices of working people everywhere need to be united and speaking up against attacks on the rights of workers and those struggling to get out of poverty and find a better future for themselves and their families," said state Sen. Paul Mark in a statement. 
 
"I've been a union member since I was 16 years old, and as union members, my co-workers and I fought for the benefits that gave me a path towards opportunity. I am so grateful to stand in solidarity with our community in the Berkshires and throughout Western Massachusetts to make sure that door to opportunity remains open and strong in our nation."
 
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