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PCTV and iBerkshires.com hosted three preliminary election debates on Tuesday at the Berkshire Athenaeum.

Pittsfield Ward Candidates Talk Police, Blight, Charter Objections

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Candidates for Ward 2 and 7 weighed in on topics ranging from policing to charter objections on Tuesday during a series of debates hosted by Pittsfield Community Television and iBerkshires.


Brittany Bandani and Alexander Blumin prepare to debate on Tuesday; a third Ward 2 candidate, Soncere Williams, was unable to attend.

The Ward 2 debate featured Brittany Bandani and Alexander Blumin and the Ward 7 debate incumbent Anthony Maffuccio and challenger Rhonda Serre. Soncere Williams is also running for Ward 2 and Jonathan Morey is running for Ward 7 but neither was able to attend Tuesday's debates at the Berkshire Athenaeum.

These races will be trimmed in the Sept. 19 preliminary in preparation for the general election on Nov. 7.

Bandani, an attorney who moved to the area in 2021, wants to help "reinvigorate and revitalize Pittsfield" and believes that having a fresh face on the council is essential.

Blumin, a landlord who came to the United States from Ukraine in 1994, wants to represent homeowners, business owners, and taxpayers in addressing "extreme" city taxes and budgets.

The police killing of Miguel Estrella in 2022 and the recent release of the Peace Officer Training Standards Commission's misconduct database that includes 17 Pittsfield Police Officers were among the questions posed by panelists Brittany Polito of iBerkshires, Shaw Israel Izikson of the Berkshire Edge and Josh Landes of WAMC Northeast Public Radio.

Bandani feels that the key to avoiding 911 calls for mental health crises becoming fatal is alternative emergency services. After an outcry from the public following Estrella's death, the police’s emergency co-responder program was expanded.

"I think that Pittsfield is wrought with mental health issues and substance use disorder and we can't rely only on the police to handle someone who is in a mental health crisis," she said.

"We are desperately in need of more social workers, people who have training and a background in social services and can provide alternate emergency services."

Blumin wants to ensure that state laws are followed and spoke against alternative emergency responses.

"I can tell everybody my opinion, however, my opinion is irrelevant. We must comply to Massachusetts General law completely without any feelings and we must comply to be up to Pittsfield Police rules and regulations," he said.

"This is very simple. We should not make excuses and on the top of that, health issues and mental health issues are regulated by the state of Massachusetts. We should not invent something separate. I'm against it."

In response to the misconduct database, he said the police in general work well but there is always a need for improvement and that more training is necessary.

Charter objections have delayed votes and created a stir in council chambers over the last term and Councilor at Large Peter White has submitted a petition to the Charter Review Committee that asks "Should the charter objection be eliminated or otherwise amended?"

"I think having procedural safeguards can be productive provided that they're used when necessary and not abused in the process of city council members," Bandani said.

Blumin feels that the issue should be brought to the public, adding that there is a "very serious issue" in the council chambers and councilors should not be fighting one another.

Blumin said he would speak for the voters against the city's high property taxes and would fight corruption and to change the mayor's term back to two years. Bandani said her focus was on reinvigorating North Street, making Pittsfield more business friendly and supporting affordable housing.


Ward 7 incumbent Anthony Maffuccio and challenger Rhonda Serre debate on Tuesday. A third candidate, Jonathan Morey, was unable to attend. 

Maffuccio has "spoken the voices of Ward 7" for a total of 10 years and said it has been an honor and a privilege that he would like to continue.

Serre has lived in the ward since 1991 and now, as an empty nester of two children who succeeded in the Pittsfield School system, wants the best for her city and Ward 7.

Both candidates support Mayor Linda Tyer’s At Home in Pittsfield exterior home renovation loan program and prioritize addressing blight.

Maffuccio pointed out that there are a lot of disrepair structures in Ward 7's Precinct A and called on the Health Department to enforce insufficient living conditions.


"Right now all these buildings are boarded up or people are living in them and are not living up to health standards," he said.

"I believe that lies with the Board of Health in trying to get it regulated and using our resources we have there."

Serre said 83 percent of the city's housing stock was built before 1983 and 43 percent before 1939.

"That leads us to very old, very dilapidated, and out-of-code housing stock which in turn leads to blight. Homeownership is the way out. I strongly, strongly believe that homeownership and generational wealth are what will pull people out of this cycle and allow them to take ownership in their place of Pittsfield and to take ownership in the direction that their lives and their neighborhoods are going," she said.

"We have some great landlords in the city we have some not-so-great landlords in the city but if we continue with programs like At Home Pittsfield, like the West Side Legends programs, like Berkshire Habitat for Humanity, we will get to a point where home ownership can become the solution."

The candidates agree that the City Council has the power to hold landlords accountable for properties that are not up to par.

"The city council writes the ordinances that guide how the inspectors and the commissioners enforce the rules," Serre said.

"If there is a loophole that is allowing irresponsible homeowners and landlords to circumvent the city and play games with the city inspectors then it is incumbent on the city council to stand up take the lead and fix those ordinances and give the city administration, whoever it may be, the power they need to make a difference."

Maffuccio pointed out that in the last budget cycle, the city added another building inspector to address the issue.

"We are behind years and years and years of inspections of properties because we have always been short-staffed," he said.

"We have finally just come up to that level so now we can start working through that process and identifying those properties that need to be addressed."

Both agreed that charter objections should not be eliminated but recognized the distress they can cause.

Maffuccio said the current body has been dysfunctional and that the motion has been abused several times.

"I am embarrassed that it has been used in the way that it has been used over this term in such a short period of time," he said, referencing the time that a charter objection was used to defer a vote to a special meeting.

Serre said it is "certainly not playing out the way it was designed."  She feels that it is an important procedural tool but is not to be used to end debate when a person doesn’t like where it is going.

"Certainly not in the budget area," she said.

"There should absolutely be legislation if we do keep the charter objection as a tool, which I do see how it could possibly be used responsibly. It should not be used during budget season. Absolutely should not."

The preliminary election is on Tuesday, Sept. 19, with voting from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Correction: the captions in this article have been corrected to list the wards in which the absent candidates were running in. These had been in error in the original posting. 


Tags: debate,   election 2023,   municipal election,   


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Shoes at Pittsfield City Hall Give Shocking Visual of Countywide Child Abuse

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Amy Hall, president and CEO of Child Care of the Berkshires, speaks at Friday's annual Step Up event at Pittsfield City Hall.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — One case of child abuse is too many, Berkshire leaders say.

The steps of City Hall were lined with 56 pairs of children's shoes on Friday, representing the average number of children with confirmed abuse and neglect cases each month in the county. The Children's Trust and Child Care of the Berkshires coordinate this shocking visual yearly.

"Let's just take a minute and realize how many kids that is. That's probably about the number right here that are all together," Jennifer Valenzuela, executive director of the Children's Trust said.

"Fifty-six is  too many children that are being entered into our system and that something is happening in their home. The last time we were all here it was 2019 and there were 58 pairs of shoes so we're doing better. We've gone down by two a month."

She said the goal is for more children to have access to great child care and strong adult support. How does this become a reality? Strong programming and a strong workforce.

"Our home visitors and our family support staff wake up every day and they give unselfishly to the families across Massachusetts. They're supporting our families day in and day out. They're helping them learn about parenting and child development and helping them get set up in the systems that are available and signing up for programming. They're listening to the highs of what it is to be a parent and the lows and for those of us who are parents here, we know that there are many highs and lows," Valenzuela said.

"Their stories of why they do this are heartfelt and I've been going around the state over the last year and a half since I started. What I hear over and over again is, 'I love what I do. I wake up every day and I'm so grateful for the engagement I have with these families and the partnerships that we create. I want to do this for as long as I possibly can.'

"The problem is, they can't afford to stay. We're not paying our workforce enough for them to be able to live and to sustain in this type of work."

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