Pittsfield's Tavern at The A Facing License Revocation

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Licensing Board has started a six-month timer before revoking the Tavern At The A's liquor license.

Operators of the General Electric Athletic Golf Course have a new tenant and liquor license lined up to reopen the tavern, but must settle the existing one first. The restaurant has been shuttered since last summer, and the former operator has not surrendered the seven-day restaurant license.

The licensee, Hailey Satrape, was on the agenda but did not appear.

"We've had absolutely no luck trying to transfer the Satrape license. We've since found out that it appears that she has not filed any of the required tax returns, nor does she have, apparently, any of the information necessary to file any of the tax returns," attorney Bill Martin said.

"So we have effectively exhausted all possible avenues of accomplishing what we would need to accomplish with the (Alcoholic Beverages Control Commission) to transfer that license."

The GEAA has negotiated a liquor license transfer with the former House of Seasoning for the Crane Avenue restaurant and a lease with the former operator of the Skyline Country Club.

"The only caveat there would be that the existing license, unfortunately, would have to be revoked and effectively surrendered," Martin said.



"Which puts us in the situation where, because of Pittsfield quotas, that's obviously been problematic, but we're in a situation where that license is, for all practical purposes, dead. It can never be revived."

Chairman Thomas Campoli pointed out that licensees are given six months before being revoked, and it would be a much faster process if it were surrendered. He was told that Satrape went from being cooperative to non-responsive but has not been overtly hostile.

Campoli said if the physical liquor license with a notarized memo is turned in, the city will be down one, but the GEAA could get a license transfer.

A.H. Satrape Inc. received a notice to appear before the Licensing Board by certified mail.

"So that notice has gone out and at the time we scheduled this, it was to see what she had in mind in terms of operation of the business, because she hasn't been operating since August, and all of this came out at that November meeting that we had with GEAA," Campoli explained.

The board voted to notify the licensee that if she doesn't operate the restaurant or cancel the license in six months, it will be revoked.


Tags: license board,   alcohol license,   

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Community Hero: Retired Senior Volunteer Program

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Administrative assistant Sherry Reardon, Director Lisa Torrey and volunteer coordinator Diane Monterosso.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — For more than 50 years, generations of seniors have donated their time to community organizations in the Berkshires through the Retired Senior Volunteer Program. 
 
In 2024, its 305 volunteers committed 40,699 hours across 44 stations. It is this commitment to the community that has earned the organization and its volunteers the title of April's Community Hero of the month. 
 
The Community Hero of the Month is a 12-month series that honors individuals and organizations that have made a significant impact on their community. This year's sponsor is Window World of Western Massachusetts. Nominate a hero here
 
RSVP is a national organization, funded in part by AmeriCorps Seniors, and sponsored locally by the city of Pittsfield. 
 
The Berkshire County program provides recruitment, training, and placement of seniors ages 55 and over as volunteers. There is a wide range of opportunities to suit anyone's strengths and interests, volunteers said. 
 
The program connects seniors to to more than 40 businesses, organizations, and nonprofits throughout the county, including Hancock Shaker Village, American Red Cross, Berkshire  Athenaeum, Berkshire Scenic Railway, Berkshire Veterans Outreach Center, Greylock Glen Outdoor Center
Central Berkshire Habitat for Humanity, and more. 
 
State Rep. Tricia Farley-Bouvier demonstrated that the total value of the work contributed by these volunteers is at least $800,000 per year,  if they were to calculate the 40,000 hours of service at $20 per hour, which for many is less than what the seniors made in their careers. 
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