image description
RSVP Director Lisa Torrey and board members Georgie Berry, and Thomas Hardy at Wednesday's celebration of RSVP's 50 years serving the community.
image description
City Council President Peter Marchetti delivers a proclamation from Mayor Linda Tyer to Director Lisa Torrey.
image description
About 30 organizations that participate in the RSVP program had tables at the celebration.

RSVP Celebrates 50 Years of Volunteer Service

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

The celebration was held Wednesday at the Berkshire Athenaeum.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — For a half-century, the Retired Senior Volunteer Program has connected people ages 55 and older with recruitment, training, and placement. For many, RSVP is also a social outlet and provides a sense of purpose in quiet years.

A 50-year anniversary celebration was held at the Berkshire Athenaeum on Wednesday, featuring tables with around 30 organizations that have partnered with the program as well as food and joyful spirits.

Director Lisa Torrey thanked the city for its continued support and commitment.

"They say many hands make light work, RSVP is the epitome of this," she said. "For the past 50 years, our retired senior volunteers have generously donated their time and talents to our community."

RSVP currently partners with around 50 volunteer sites and has 265 active members. They donated almost 33,000 hours of service to the community in 2022. It is a national program funded in part by AmeriCorps Seniors RSVP with 5,000 host sites in the United States and more than 400,000 volunteers.

Pittsfield has been a local sponsor of RSVP since 1973. The first office was located at the former senior center of Bradford Street and led by Courtney Flanders, the inaugural executive director.

Board member Sheila Marinaro has worked with the program for 20 years, serving as the director a decade ago, and is grateful for the lessons it has taught her about life. Whether it is making cookies or giving rides in the RSVP van, Marinaro has tried all of the volunteering opportunities and enjoys putting a smile on peoples' faces.

She began her work with RSVP immediately after losing her husband of 39 years.

"Volunteering can do so much for everybody," she said. "Anybody, whether you're 55 or not."



Normalyn Powers, who was director from the mid-1990s to 2012, traveled from the eastern side of the state for the celebration.

She said RSVP makes retirees feel indispensable and that doing things for others makes a difference.

Board member Tom Hardy retired in 2016 from a career with an unpredictable schedule that made it hard to do public service. Upon retirement, he sought volunteering opportunities and began driving the RSVP van.

"I thought it was worthwhile," he said. "There is a crying need for people to be transported, really, in Berkshire County and I think the program should be dramatically expanded."

RSVP offers van transportation services to people of all ages for access to medical appointments, social services, volunteer assignments, and more.

During the event, a proclamation was read from the commonwealth and from Mayor Linda Tyer.

"Every year when we sit at City Council budget hearing meetings, we hear the number of hours that RSVP provides the city of Pittsfield and without that, it would be a shame," City Council President Peter Marchetti said.

"So thank you for your hard work."


Tags: anniversary,   RSVP,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Pittsfield Council OKs $3M Borrowing for Failing PHS Boilers

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council has authorized the borrowing of $3 million for new boilers at Pittsfield High School — a project that was originally going to be funded by ARPA.

The nearly 100-year-old boilers are original to the building and have exceeded their useful life, officials say. They are converted locomotive engines that are extremely inefficient and expensive to maintain.

The replacement design was recently completed and a low bid was received. After looking at the numbers, it was clear that the allocated $1 million in American Rescue Plan Act funds would not be enough.

"$213,210 was spent on emergency repairs and the design work for the replacement project," Finance Director Matthew Kerwood confirmed in an email.
 
"The low and only bid for the replacement was $2,482,000, however given the complexity of this project I felt that a 20 percent contingency would be needed which gets to the $3,000,000 authorization. If the entire amount is not needed, the remaining unused balance will be rescinded at some point in the future."

The project is also time-sensitive, as one boiler is non-operational and another is severely compromised. If they fail during the heating season, the school will have to close.

"The contractor that was the low bid, in 30 days he can walk away from that bid if he wants to, and the other problem is I need to get this project underway to hopefully get them in and running by the time school reopens up for wintertime," Building Maintenance Director Brian Filiault explained.

"This is a major project, a major project. We're taking three locomotives out of that building and it's no easy thing. I mean, the building is built around it and we have a small portal that we actually will be able to get it out, we'll have to crane everything else. It's a very labor-intensive, very hard job, and I'm afraid of the timeframe because I can't run those boilers again. They've gone as far as they're going to go."

View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories