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By BEN GROSSCUP
By CARL DOERNER
By JON HUER
Let’s imagine that you are about to eat a cookie that has been touched and handled by over a thousand (yes, a thousand) different hands. Or, you just found out that the hotel where you stayed last night used the same sheets for over 100 guests.
By ELLEN VILLANI
It’s not a department that the federal government is in control of. It’s a way of life, a philosophy ingrained into our actions, behaviors and everyday lives. We practice DEI with no need of governance or directive. It is us and we are it.
Deerfield is in the position where we have two candidates running for a seat on the Selectboard that have both held the position. The decision of who to vote for is very easy for me.
A recent letter writer made a valid complaint about the Greenfield Senior Center. A couple of years ago the only class, Seated Chair Dance, that I could fully participate in was suddenly ceased. I won't go into that fiasco. Immediately we were welcomed at South County. Shortly after we were invited to Erving and Turners Falls. Everyone is invited to attend any one of these facilities. They all have many activities, both regular and special. If you want a pleasant experience, check them out. You won't be disappointed.
God Bless all who attend church services 52 weeks a year. Those who attend occasionally, or have stopped visiting God, please think about going to Easter service. Remember St. Dismas, the good thief hanging on the cross next to God on Calvary. The thief told Jesus he was sorry for his sins and asked Jesus to forgive him. At the last minute, St. Dismas stole heaven.
By JOHANNA NEUMANN
Humans are great at building things, but it’s also beginning to dawn on us that these impressive and sometimes magnificent structures also impact the other creatures that we share this earth with.
By WILLIAM LAMBERS
The joy of finding an Easter basket filled with food and gifts is something you never forget. Even greater is the feeling of giving an Easter basket of food to someone in need. This has been a great tradition for many years.
There’s no shortage of urgent issues demanding our attention. In moments like these, we each have to choose something local and worth fighting for. For me, that’s our library.
With all the belly-aching, temper tantrums, hysteria and foot stomping like petulant children, the liberals writing into this newspaper since Donald Trump was re-elected have taken all the space on the opinion page. I tried to wait it out, but they are the gift that keeps on giving.
By ALAN HARRIS
I had written an essay back on April 2 which seemed apropos then but as yet unpublished, I’ve replaced it with what I think has perspective on our current moment. There is no one vantage point from which humanity can digest and assimilate the vagaries and constant movements that engulf it, that it creates. That cannot be, however, an excuse for how we indulge our fancies, ignore truths, and delude ourselves at the hands of incipient, or not, tyrants, sycophants, and opportunists. We live in a circus: evolutionary, theatrical, spiritual — fill in the blanks.
By ANDREW VARNON
You might say Greenfield had a “Cinderella run” in the Strongest Town competition. Out of 16 municipalities across North America, we made it to the Final Four, and we didn’t have the Strong Towns pedigree. Who would have picked us?
My family moved to Greenfield in 2017 and bought our first home near the Newton School last year. We would like our son to start kindergarten there in fall 2026.
This letter is a response to the recent piece regarding the Greenfield Senior Center with a very different view. I have found that many people use this beautiful space for regular ongoing activities and connections with others. Kathy Dunn, the activity director, works very creatively to schedule diverse activities and classes. Exercise classes every day that meet all skill levels, craft classes, weekly game groups, entertainment, writing classes, support groups, tech help are simply a few. If you have ideas, I have found Kathy very open to suggestions and discussion. Thank you, Kathy. Please continue your wonderful work at our Senior Center.
A letter published April 11 had many criticisms of public libraries. I am saddened that the writer has not experienced the generosity, civic mindedness, joy, and the sense of connection that I experience at the Greenfield Public Library every week.
By AL NORMAN
Citizens in a democracy should expect full transparency from government. “It is our goal to provide as much information to our citizens,” the city of Greenfield says on its website, “to promote a transparent government for our citizens.” The opposite of transparency is opacity.
By TOM WASKIEWICZ
Small family farms are more than businesses; they are a way of life, shaped by generations of experience, sacrifice, and resilience. Every field plowed, every seed planted, every harvest gathered carries with it the wisdom of those who came before. But there’s no handbook for passing down this knowledge. Instead, it happens in the quiet moments — side by side in the fields, in conversations at the kitchen table, in the habits formed over years of hard work.
April 13- 19, 2025, is National Public Safety Telecommunicators Week. The week is set aside to recognize the public safety 911 professionals who answer the phone when someone is having their worst day or the worst time of their life. I was fortunate to work with the State Police Regional Dispatchers at Shelburne Falls. Their skill, tenacity, persistence, and calmness were nothing less than impressive daily. They are calm in the storm. They remain unflappable while answering screams for help, and while being provided poor, misinformation, or malicious information, they ascertain information needed to send the correct level of response. They may be unseen, but their contributions to public safety are immeasurable. They continually seek new ways to improve service to the agencies they serve and the public.
On March 13, Red Fire Farms joined a federal lawsuit with seven other farms, contesting the federal government’s freeze of grants and reimbursements affecting farms. Seven days later, on March 20, ICE arrested four Red Fire Farm workers at their homes in Springfield. ICE surrounded one home with 20 law enforcement vehicles. Two of the workers were arrested in front of their children after ICE agents reportedly broke through their front doors. Other family members present at the raid were threatened. The ICE personnel had no arrest warrants, although, by law, warrants are required for such forced entry.
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