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BCC Partners with Rural Recovery Resources

  The training program was made possible with a $1 million Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) grant awarded to Rural Recovery Resources, a project created by the South Berkshire Opioid Consortium (SBOC). The SBOC consists of four funded partners: Berkshire Community College, The Brien Center, Fairview Hospital, and the Railroad Street Youth Project. BCC will conduct training sessions twice a year for the next three years.     The BCC training curriculum focuses on increasing knowledge and awareness of substance use disorders, reducing stigma, and helping to provide better screening, assessment, and referral services in South Berkshire County. The two-hour training sessions, running weekly through June 15, are titled Overview of Addictions, Cultivating an Attitude of Hope and Curiosity, Addiction is More Than Just Drug Use, Multiple Pathways to Change, and The Invitation to Work Together as a Community.  

Berkshire Nonprofit Award nominees chosen

Berkshire Nonprofit Award nominees chosen
berkshireeagle.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from berkshireeagle.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

iBerkshires com - The Berkshires online guide to events, news and Berkshire County community information

iBerkshires com - The Berkshires online guide to events, news and Berkshire County community information
iberkshires.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from iberkshires.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

In theory, pot might pose problems Great Barrington pinpoints 5 entities where dispensary s fees could mitigate them

GREAT BARRINGTON — As pot shops bloom in a legal landscape, so might problems. But there is a tariff on recreational cannabis that state and local officials hope will counter them called Community Impact Funds — one that already has amounted to $1.7 million in town revenue from Theory Wellness. Now, $185,000 of that fund money can be spent, and the town is giving it to four local organizations and the school district to help prevent or solve any fallout from legal pot. That amount represents the company’s first-quarter fee to the town, after opening in January 2019. On Monday, the Select Board announced the recipients of the Community Impact Fund program, after a committee made the decision:

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