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Three Candidates Vying for Two Seats on the Mount Greylock School Committee

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Voters in the Mount Greylock Regional School District will be selecting their representatives for the next term at the general election on Tuesday, Nov. 8. 

Most are incumbents running unopposed but there is a three-way race for two four-year seats to represent Williamstown on the committee. 

Christine Enderle is challenging incumbents Carrie Greene and Steven Miller for the one of the two seats. 

Enderle is a kindergarten teacher in the North Adams Public Schools and has three children in the Mount Greylock district. In a statement on her Facebook Page, she said she understood how "so much lies on the shoulders of our teachers." She said her focus is finding and supporting highly qualified teachers and that it is a personal issue for her. You can complain about the reality, she said, or "offer your service as an agent of change in your community."
 
Greene is Williams College's director of commencement and academic events. A veteran School Committee member, she is a former chair and was a member of the School Building Committee and Berkshire County Education Task Force. She served between 2009 and 2018 and returned to the committee to fill an empty seat in 2020. 
 
Miller is a mathematics professor at Williams College and has two children in the school district. He is running for this third four-year term on the School Committee. He currently is the committee's secretary and also served on the School Building Committee and a chair of the Education subcommittee. He proposed new formulas on assessing capital costs during the school project and local budgeting between Williamstown and Lanesborough that were adopted by the committee. 
 
The candidates answered five questions we put to them that can be found here

Tags: election 2022,   


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Williams Grads Reminded of Community that Got Them to Graduation

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

The graduates heard from two speakers  Phi Betta Kappa speaker Milo Chang and class speaker Jahnavi Nayar Kirtane. The keynote speaker, Lonnie Bunch, the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, was unable to attend and recorded his speech for playback. See more photos here.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Williams College said goodbye Sunday to its graduating seniors.
 
And a representative of the class of 2024 took the time to say goodbye to everyone in the community who made students' journey possible.
 
Milo Chang, the Phi Beta Kappa speaker for the class and one of two students to speak at Sunday's 235th commencement exercises, explained that the term "Williams community" applies to more than those who get to list the school on their resumes.
 
"It includes everyone who has shaped our experiences here, from loved ones back home to the dedicated staff members who make campus their second home," Chang told his classmates. "During my time at Williams, we've seen this community step up in remarkable ways to support us."
 
Chang talked about the faculty and staff who gave their time to operate the COVID-19 testing centers and who greeted students before they could take their first classroom tests in the fall of 2020, and the dining services personnel who kept the students fed and somehow understood their orders through the masks everyone was wearing when this class arrived on campus.
 
And he shared a personal story that brought the message home.
 
"We often underestimate the power of community until we experience a taste of its absence," Chang said. "I remember staying on campus after our first Thanksgiving at Williams, after most students went home to finish the semester remotely. I remember the long hours sitting in empty common rooms. I remember the days you could walk through campus without seeing another student.
 
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