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The fire broke out Tuesday evening.

Morningside Fire Displaces All Tenants

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A 2-alarm structure fire at a Woodlawn Avenue apartment building left the building uninhabitable.
 
The Pittsfield Fire Department was dispatched to a five-family at 181 Woodlawn Ave. around 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Upon arrival, they found heavy fire in the back of the downstairs apartment extending to the second floor.  The blaze was under control in about an hour.
 
Building Owner Jeremiah Ames, principal of Lenox Memorial High School, reported that all tenants described the fire as coming on "very, very fast."
 
"All of our tenants are safe. It sounds like one tenant lost a cat," he said. "The fire definitely started in one unit, but I don't know how it started at all."
 
Occupants are not able to re-enter the building and the Red Cross has been notified.
 
Deputy Fire Chief Ronald Clement said the department made an aggressive interior attack, and the fire went to a double alarm due to the amount of smoke it was pushing out.
 
"Every window had smoke coming out of it that we could see," he explained, adding that it left the department to believe there was possibly a lot more burning inside than what they could see. 
 
The handful of people in the home got out safely and there were primary and secondary searches to confirm that it was clear.  Clement reported that a cat was taken out of the home unconscious.
 
There were no reported firefighter or civilian injuries.  
 
Ames has owned the home for about 18 years and said this was the first fire event during that time.
 
"We’re trying to figure out what we’re doing next. They can’t go back in. No one will be able to get their things," he said, explaining that they want to keep the building safe and secure overnight hoping that tenants can retrieve some of their property later.
 
Clement reported that there was heavy damage to at least one apartment, smoke damage to all apartments, and water damage to a few of them.
 
Around 6:45 p.m., he estimated that some members of the department would be there another two hours.  The dead-end street was closed off during the response and was planned to open back up soon.
 
The fire is under investigation by the Pittsfield Fire Department Fire Investigation Unit.
 

Tags: structure fire,   

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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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