Friday, March 30, 2018

Samuel Minot Jones Awards for Literary Achievement Honors ARHS Theater Program



The Jones Library is proud to announce that the Fifth Annual Samuel Minot Jones Awards for Literary Achievement will honor the Amherst Regional High School Theater Program, led by John Bechtold and Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and author Madeleine Blais. The gala event, the “Sammys”, will take place on Thursday, April 26, 2018, at 6:00 pm at the Mead Art Museum at Amherst College.

The Sammys is Amherst’s signature event honoring the community’s remarkable and vibrant literary heritage. The evening will begin in the beautiful Mead galleries with delicious, abundant hors d’oeuvres, beer and wine from local breweries/vineyards, a signature cocktail, and live music. The awards ceremony will be held next door in comfortable Stirn Auditorium, where the evening will end with coffee and a take-away chocolate confection.

All proceeds from the Sammys will be used to support Library collections, purchasing materials in all formats and for all ages. For more info and tickets visit the Jones Library online at www.joneslibrary.org/sammys.



Monday, March 26, 2018

Town Election on Tuesday, March 27


Tuesday, March 27 is a local election day for Amherst. 

Fort River Elementary School is the polling location for Precinct 6. Turnout is anticipated to be higher than normal for local town elections. Expect additional traffic on North East Street and in the parking lot through out the day. Drop-off and pick-up are typically high volume times for precincts.

Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. You can find your polling place here: http://www.sec.state.ma.us/wheredoivotema//bal/myelectioninfo.aspx

Additional Amherst voter information is here: https://www.amherstma.gov/81/Voter-Information

You can view the two sided sample ballots here (varies by precinct):

Not registered? Be sure to do so by November: https://www.amherstma.gov/154/Voter-Registration

Election Day Food Drive on Tuesday, March 27


ELECTION DAY FOOD DRIVE IN AMHERST
7am to 7pm at your polling place

Food Drive Barrels will be located at polling places for your donations of canned goods and personal care items

Most Wanted Items in the Food Pantry: https://amherstsurvival.org/mostwanted/

Thank You!

Gospel Choir Concert to benefit Amherst A Better Chance (ABC) on April 10 at 7:30 PM


Come to a Gospel Choir Concert to benefit Amherst A Better Chance (ABC) on Tuesday, April 10th, at Grace Episcopal Church, Amherst.

The concert starts at 7:30 PM and features the Amherst Area Gospel Choir, the Amherst Regional High School Chorale, the Hampshire Young People’s Chorus, and the Resurrect Gospel Choir at Amherst College.

Concert-goers are also invited to a welcome reception with light refreshments from 6:30 to 7:15 p.m. in the room adjacent to the Sanctuary at Grace Church. The reception will include the opportunity to meet the Amherst A Better Chance Scholars and the Resident Directors. A Donation of $20 (or more!) from each concert-goer will be gratefully accepted, but all who wish to celebrate the ABC Program through gospel music are most welcome!

PGO Meeting on April 2 at 9 AM




General PGO Meeting
Monday, April 2
9 - 10 am

Please join the PGO Board for our monthly meeting. All current Fort River parents and guardians are welcome! Budget, fundraising plans, and volunteer needs will be discussed. Sign in at the Main Office to get directions to our meeting location.

Small children are always welcome! We need more volunteers and help! Several Board members have 6th grade students and will not be here next year. Thanks for considering! 

Local Vocal Chord Bowl on April 7 at 7 PM



Mark your calendars for some incredible acapella!

Saturday, April 7
7 PM
Amherst Regional High School

The Local Vocal Chord Bowl takes place at ARHS and features adult, college, and high school acapella groups. It is a joyous intergenerational celebration of making music AND it is a FUNDRAISER for music and arts programs at ARHS and at Northampton High School. In the last three years, the event has raised over $12,000 for the schools.


Early Release on April 4


Wednesday, April 4, is an Early Release Day for all ARPS students. Faculty and staff will spend the time in professional development activities. 

Elementary students will be dismissed at 1:20pm. 

Please disregard previous messages about an early release on March 28, which is a full day. This was an error. We apologize for the confusion.

No School on March 30

Mark your calendar:

No School on Friday, March 30.
Enjoy the long weekend!


Save the Date! Art Night for Families on April 26

Art Night for Families! A very special evening for families on April 26th!

Art teacher Nicole Singer and Sara Perez Battles, her fantastic student-teacher intern, team up to lead a bilingual (Spanish/English) workshop for families to help adults provide their children with awesome art making opportunities and support at home and beyond.

Funded by a grant from the Crayola company, the evening will include:
  • pizza
  • childcare
  • an introduction from Museums 10 representatives on what they offer (especially family programming)
  • affordable ideas to encourage art making in the home
  • resources for children with special needs
  • an art making activity

Help us figure out how much pizza to buy. Please sign up using this form: https://goo.gl/forms/zLR3XZTr0v2kwodA2

Autism Awareness Night on April 12




In honor of Autism Awareness Month, SEPAC (Special Education Parent Advisory Committee)  and the Amherst-Pelham Regional Schools have teamed up to host an Autism Awareness Night.

Thursday, April 12
5:45 PM - 7:30 PM
Amherst Regional High School

Current high school and post-graduate panelists will be in small groups, talking about their experience with Autism, its strengths and challenges, what helps/what doesn’t, and other interesting discussion topics, such as Autism as a disability versus difference. 

We will also feature an art exhibit showcasing artists with Autism, a display of Autism Awareness posters, and a literature table. 

*Please RSVP by April 9th to Nancy Stewart at sepac@arps.org or 413-687-4255.  Event is free and open to the public.

Monday, March 19, 2018

Sing This Summer! Summer Camp at Amherst College

Sing This Summer offers exceptional week-long programs for young singers in grades 2-12 on the beautiful Amherst College campus, in Amherst, MA. This summer we’ll be welcoming returning and new campers to our programs from June 24-29. The same program is also offered at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, ME from July 22-27. We would love to have your students join us! Students can now register online at www.singthissummer.com/register-now.

SING! (grades 7-12) offers daily classes in musical theater, choir, individual and group voice lessons, musicianship, movement and collegiate-style a cappella with recreational activities interspersed throughout the day for a balance of intensive music and fun.

SING! Jr. (grades 2-6) features all of the same classes and recreational activities as SING! while focusing on helping younger students explore their vocal skills and build musicianship skills.

2018 Talent Showcase THIS Friday, March 23 at 6:30 PM



The 2018 Talent Showcase will take place Friday, March 23, at 6:30 PM in the Fort River gymnasium. 

Proceeds benefit the 5th and 6th Grade Classes. All money raised will stay at Fort River. Donations for adult admission to the show will be accepted at the door and all kids will attend for free! No one will be turned away. 

There is a MANDATORY Dress Rehearsal immediately after school on Thursday, March 22. A few parent volunteers are needed to assist with acts and help keep students focused. Contact Shilpa if you are able to help: shilparph@mac.com.


ATTENTION 5th AND 6th GRADE PARENTS! Click here to donate baked goods or volunteer during the show on Friday. 

Multi-Arts: Time Traveling Stories on March 24



Join Multi-Arts on a time traveling theatrical adventure!

This latest installment of Time Traveling Stories takes us on a journey to the 1840’s! When young Justine is sent back in time, she meets Angeline Palmer, a brave African American girl who was saved from slavery with the help of the town. Learn the true story of Angeline and discover the roots of what makes Amherst such a unique place: our avant-garde spirit, celebration of differences, and ability to come together as a community to stand up for human rights.

The new play is written by Maia Kinney-Petrucha, an Amherst High School and Hampshire College Alum, and features fellow Amherst High alum Haley Parker, and Wildwood Elementary students Violent and Lena Ennis.

Come hear a staged reading of the script at Barnes and Noble in Hadley on March 24th at 2 pm! This program is supported in part by a grant from the Hadley, a local agency which is supported by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency. 

Registration Open! Second Annual Civics Fest on April 6




Food! Music! Theater! Competition!! A celebration of Government and Politics.

Join the League of Women Voters of Amherst for the Second Annual Civics Fest on April 6, 2018, starting at 7 p.m. in the Amherst Regional High School auditorium. Once again, State Representative Solomon Goldstein-Rose will be the Master of Ceremonies. The theme for this year is Public Education.

Teams will compete in a trivia round, an optional debate round, and a final “creative policy” round for the top teams. Register your team here!

Music of the West African Kora at The Jones on April 7


Sean Gaskell will give a performance and educational demonstration on the kora, an ancient 21-stringed harp from West Africa. He will feature traditional songs that are the heart and soul of the kora’s musical repertoire in addition to some of his own personal compositions. The performance will take place at 2:00 pm at the Jones Library in Amherst on Saturday, April 7, 2018.

Sean Gaskell features traditional songs on the 21 stringed West African Kora. The Kora is native to the Mande peoples who live within the countries of Gambia, Senegal, Mali, Guinea, and Guinea Bissau. The music is traditionally played by oral and musical historians known as Griots (Gree-ohs). The Kora is a melodic and seemingly peaceful instrument, which is somewhat contrary to its musical repertoire. Many songs tell ancient stories of war and hardship, while others praise people of high political status and those who helped expand the Mande Empire. While the Kora is only 300 years old, some commonly played songs can be traced back 800 years to the Mande empires’ founding. Gaskell has studied extensively under the instruction of Malamini Jobarteh and Moriba Kuyateh of Brikama, The Gambia, and Kane Mathis of Brooklyn, NY. Gaskell has been featured at numerous festivals in the US, Gambia, and Senegal.

Free and open to the public. For more information about this event, please contact Janet Ryan at 413/259-3223. For more information about the presenter, please visit http://www.seangaskell.com or view video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxkfcUeToiI.

LSSE Art Classes beginning in late March

Exploring Art is for ages 6-8 starting March 26th
822116 - Exploring Art

In this class, students take their ideas ideas and turn them into expressive works of art! Students will explore a variety of art processes including drawing, painting, and collage in a gentle and supportive environment This is great class for kids who love art and exploring materials! This class is capped at 6 students for a small group atmosphere and individual attention.
Joyful Drawing & Painting is for ages 8-11 starting March 28th
822115 - Joyful Drawing & Painting
In this class, students will find their unique artistic voice while developing drawing and painting skills. In a warm supportive environment, we will explore the process of taking our ideas and turning them into works of art that are meaningful to us. Together, we will explore skills and techniques for drawing and painting with a variety of materials. This class is capped at 6 students for small group atmosphere and individual attention. 

Register for an art class at www.LSSE.org. Also, please take a minute to fill out the Rate our Registration Process! survey if you’ve registered with LSSE in the past.

The Town of Amherst's Leisure Services Department is committed to providing town residents with a wide variety of affordable classes and activities for every age group. Fee subsidies and scholarships are available.
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Local Showing of Mudbound on March 21


Unitarian Universalist Society of Amherst Social Action Committee presents:

Mudbound, a 2017 film about two veterans, one black, one white, and their respective experiences when they return home from WWII. The New York Times review puts it this way: ‘‘Mudbound" is a Racial Epic Tuned to Black Lives and White Guilt.

"Mudbound" is a movie about how things change — slowly, unevenly, painfully. It is also, as the title suggests, about how things don’t change, about the stubborn forces of custom, prejudice and power that lock people in place and impede social progress. Set mainly in the Mississippi Delta in the years just after World War II, when Jim Crow was still enshrined in law and practice, the film, directed by Dee Rees, tests and complicates William Faulkner’s much-quoted claim about the not-even-pastness of the past. It’s a work of historical imagination that lands in the present with disquieting, illuminating force….” (N.Y. Times, November 16, 2017)

Refreshments will be served.
Wednesday, March 21, 7-  9:15PM
Unitarian Universalist Society of Amherst
121 N. Pleasant Street, Amherst
Questions: 413-253-2848

Basic Rights in Special Education Workshop on March 19 at 5pm

Please note that the Basic Rights in Special Education Workshop scheduled for 3/12/2018 has been rescheduled for March 19. Details below:

Basic Rights in Special Education. Monday March 19, 2018 @ 5:00 PM, ARHS Library.  Please mark your calendars and join us for this informative workshop for parents and professionals.

RSVP to SEPAC@ARPS.org or call (413) 687-4255.

Tenga en cuenta que el taller de derechos básicos en educación especial programado para esta noche, 12 de marzo de 2018, ha sido reprogramado. Detalles a continuación:
Derechos básicos en educación especial. Lunes 19 de marzo de 2018 @ 5:00 PM, Biblioteca de ARHS. Por favor marque sus calendarios y únase a nosotros para este taller informativo para padres y profesionales.

RSVP a SEPAC@ARPS.org o llame al (413) 687-4255.

Basic Rights in Special Education Workshop – Spanish

Snow Delay/Cancellation Determination Process


message from Dr. Michael Morris, Superintendent of Schools
Amherst, Pelham, and the Amherst-Pelham Regional School Districts



Dear ARPS Community:

Given the high level of interest in how weather-related delay and cancellation decisions are made, I thought it would be helpful to share the process that we use.

First, I would like to acknowledge the large impact that a change in schedule imposes on families. I fully understand how a snow day, delay, or early release schedule has many unintended consequences on family and working life for those in the ARPS community. Our transportation system involves a network of four separate bus companies who transport students aged 3-21 in three counties, eight separate school districts, in a wide range of towns where the weather and road conditions are very different.

Transportation Organization
We have a complex system of drivers/bus companies that, surprisingly, optimizes our finances and operations. Some of our buses and vans are owned by the district and are driven by ARPS employees. We also utilize the Five-Star Bus Company for routes in Amherst and Pelham. Our Regional routes in Shutesbury and Leverett are covered by the Kuzmeskus Bus Company; they also manage the routes for the Shutesbury and Leverett Elementary Schools, which are autonomous districts with their own separate School Committees and a shared Superintendent, Jennifer Haggerty (who also manages the elementary schools for the towns of New Salem, Wendell, and Erving). Finally, we utilize the Vanpool company to transport students with specialized transportation needs and we also provide transportation support for students attending multiple vocational schools across three counties in the area, which each have their own Board of Trustees and Superintendents.

Our Towns
A frequent response on either a day when a weather related delay/cancellation has occurred (or has not occurred) is that a different call should have been made based on the weather in a specific location. I want to acknowledge these responses as fully appropriate and reasonable.  

For instance, on the snow day on March 8, all locations and roads in the Town of Amherst were cleared in time for a two-hour delay to be appropriate. However, the road conditions in several other towns were not safe for travel as per their Highway Departments. Likewise, community members from towns with higher elevations and more dirt roads have expressed concerns about the road conditions near them on days when we have not canceled or delayed the opening of school.

The reality is that on any given day, winter weather varies widely between the four towns of the Region. The range in snowfall amounts from the highest elevations in Pelham, Leverett and Shutesbury are often quite different from those in lower elevations in Amherst. We try to do our best to balance the different weather and road conditions across the four towns of the Region when making these decisions. We do our best to make the best decision for all of our students with the information we have at about 5:00 AM, which usually (but not always) predicts what the conditions will be several hours later.

The Process
Our Transportation Coordinator, local DPW/Highway Departments, Shutesbury/Leverett Superintendent Haggerty, and myself are in contact about weather forecasts the day before any winter weather event. If there is high certainty on the forecast, we have attempted to inform the community of delays/cancellations the night prior if at all possible. When it is not possible, this same group begins communicating at 4:45 in the morning about current conditions. If we cannot receive assurances about the safety of bus travel to all four towns in our Region by the time buses are scheduled to depart to pick up our secondary school students, we assess whether a delay or cancellation is warranted. If the reports we receive indicate that the roads will not support safe transportation by 8:30 AM (when our Regional buses depart on days when we have two-hour delays), we cancel school. Student and bus safety is the primary factor in the decision-making process.

All decisions are made by 5:30 AM, because we know such decisions impact families in significant ways and some of our employees need to leave at that time to get to work. We update our automated phone line with delay/cancellation information (362-1898), contact local media outlets (22News and Western Mass News), and update the ARPS website (www.arps.org) with this information.

Please feel free to contact me if you have any questions about weather-related transportation concerns. We appreciate your patience and understanding of the process that is required when making weather-related decisions in a geographically diverse and expansive region and with a complex network of transportation providers.


Fort River School Building Committee Update


In the spring of 2017 Amherst Town Meeting voted to move forward with a feasibility study of the Fort River Elementary School. The goals of the study are to evaluate the site and building in order to determine what are the possibilities for improvement. The School Administration asked for, and Town Meeting approved, up to $250,000 to accomplish this task that should include a structural analysis, initial schematic designs, and implementation of a “community engagement process”. The committee work is anticipated to take approximately 12 to 18 months.

The Fort River School Building Committee is committed to communicating with the public about its progress and getting a great deal of input along the way to inform decisions. Members of the public are welcome to attend the meetings, the location of each meeting will be published in the town website. Public comment is welcomed at the beginning of the meeting or via email at fortriversbc@amherstma.gov. The public is encouraged to visit the committee’s website www.amherstma.gov/frsbc where documents, schedule, agendas, minutes, and other information are available. Additionally, meetings are recorded and will be broadcast by Amherst Media.

If interested in regular email updates, the public can opt-in to our list-serve by signing up on our website. A copy of these email updates and other documents will be kept on the website and in a binder at Jones Library so that anyone can access our documents and notes. Community listening and information sessions will be scheduled at key points of the process.