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Members of Local Local 12325 are picketing outside Berkshire Gas over contract talks; their contract expires on Sunday.

Berkshire Gas Workers Picket to Over Contract Talks

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Unionized Berkshire Gas employees picketed outside of the facility on Thursday, saying they are asking for favorable work conditions, wages, and benefits.

"We are currently involved in contract negotiations with our union members and we are hopeful that an agreement beneficial to all parties will be reached soon," said Sarah Wall Fliotsos, a Berkshire Gas spokesperson.

Michael Ferriter, a retiree of the gas company and 20-year president of United Steelworkers Local 12325, spoke on behalf of the workers. The contract expires on March 31 and the union would like to get a new agreement ratified in a timely manner.

"We're just trying to get the company to move along and realize that a work stoppage is the worst thing that could happen to Berkshire County," he said.

The details of the asks are not being released but Ferriter said it is important to ratify a contract to keep the public safe. As with any contract, benefits, wages, and work conditions are items of negotiation.

"I worry more about public safety right now because if these guys don't get a contract, there is literally no one that is qualified to do their work. We have to go through an extensive amount of programs through Massachusetts to make sure these people can be on the street doing their job every day plus the fact that they are first responders," he said.

"I did it for 35 years, I was the president of the union for 20 years. Any given day, they could be called to a gas leak and not come home. It's very important that you have the right people out there doing the job and making sure the public is safe."

About 20 people stood on Cheshire Road around 3 p.m. holding signs with phrases such as "Fair Contract Now," "Fair Contract, Safety, Benefits, Wages," and "Your union wants to hear from you."  Ferriter noted that this wasn't even half of the picketers as many had not gotten out of work yet.



"All departments are going to be out of your picketing today from customer service to the street department who deal with everything underground, the service department who deals with everything above ground," he said.

"It's pretty much the whole facility."

He said union contracts had always a battle during his time there and that "they locked us out for nine months 20 years ago, I was the president then and that's nothing they're going to see again."

The United Steelworkers is North America's largest industrial union, made up of 1.2 million members and retirees in the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean. It represents workers in nearly every industry and has a presence in the United Kingdom, Ireland, England, Scotland, Mexico, and many other places around the world.


Tags: berkshire gas,   picketing,   union negotiations,   

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Pittsfield Community Development OKs Airport Project, Cannabis Amendment

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Community Development Board has supported plans for a new hangar at the airport and a change to the cannabis ordinance.

Lyon Aviation, located in the Pittsfield Municipal Airport, plans to remove an existing "T" style hangar and replace it with a new, 22,000-square-foot hangar.  The existing one is said to be small and in poor condition while the new build will accommodate a variety of plane sizes including a larger passenger jet.

"There's no traffic impacts, there's no utilities to speak of," Robert Fournier of SK Design Group explained.

"I'll say that we did review this at length with the airport commission in the city council and this is the way we were instructed to proceed was filing this site plan review and special permit application."

The application states that the need for additional hangar space is "well documented" by Lyon, Airport Manager Daniel Shearer, and the airport's 2020 master plan. The plan predicts that 15 additional hangar spaces will be needed by 2039 and this project can accommodate up to 10 smaller planes or a single large aircraft.

Lyon Aviation was founded in 1982 as a fuel-based operator that provided fuel, maintenance, hangar services, charter, and flight instruction.

This is not the only project at the Tamarack Road airport, as the City Council recently approved a $300,000 borrowing for the construction of a new taxi lane. This will cover the costs of an engineering phase and will be reduced by federal and state grant monies that have been awarded to the airport.

The local share required is $15,000, with 95 percent covered by the Federal Aviation Administration.

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