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Dalton Town Hall Lift Out of Order Until Fate of Police Station Determined

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Americans with Disabilities Act Committee has agreed to delay deciding on the Town Hall lift until more information is available about the future of the police station. 
 
 
The Town Hall has two chairlifts, one in the police station and one in the public library.
 
The library chairlift does not have access to the town planner, health agent, and building inspector offices. If assistance is needed, call Town Hall for accommodations, such as drive-up services. 
 
The drive-up services may be easier for those with mobility issues because they do not have to leave their vehicle, ADA coordinator Alyssa Maschino said in a follow-up. 
 
The Public Safety Facility Advisory Committee, which is in charge of examining all the options for a new police station, determined that the current police facility, located in the basement of Town Hall, is inadequate. 
 
 
With uncertainty surrounding the proposed police station's relocation, it is unclear where a new elevator should be placed, if a lift will be needed to access the basement or how Town Hall will be reorganized if voters approve the move.
 
Since being deemed out of order, the committee has been looking for solutions to repair or replace the lift but has run into roadblocks, including high costs, new weight requirements, and struggles to find a location because of space limitations. 
 
The lift replacement had been initially delayed because Garaventa Lift informed the town that the new weight limit went from 400 pounds to 650 pounds. 
 
There have been discussions about installing a lift or elevator outside Town Hall near the entrance, but this would incur high costs for asbestos abatement, ADA Chair Patrick Pettit said. 
 
In the meantime, the committee will be exploring other ADA upgrades within town, Maschino said. 
 
The committee has applied for the Municipal ADA Improvement Grant to fund accessible counters for the assessors, clerks, and tax collectors' offices. It is still waiting to hear back on whether they have been approved. 
 
The assessor's office has a setup that could work because the current table flips out and is wheelchair accessible, but measurements would need to be made to see if the counters in the room have clearance, Pettit said during a previous meeting
  
In addition, the assessor's office doesn’t get as much traffic as the tax collector and clerk's offices.
 
The tables in the tax collector and clerk offices would need to be completely redesigned. If approved for the grant, the committee could use the funds to purchase the tables from Massachusetts Correctional Industries at no cost to the towns. 
 
Maschino is also in the process of getting quotes for push buttons for those offices.
 
It was previously noted that the doors for these offices are heavy, and it is a struggle for someone in a wheelchair to get in. 
 
Another ADA upgrade that can be considered in the meantime is new matting for the playgrounds would replace the wood chips, Maschino said in a follow-up. 

Tags: ADA,   police station,   

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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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