UNDER CONSTRUCTION - MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW AND SO ON
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Monday, October 6, 2025
The math of rural health access
New from CommonWealth Beacon
FLOOD THE ZONE: The frequency and severity of heavy precipitation events and flooding is increasing in Massachusetts and is projected to continue to grow over time. In the Bay State, where housing markets are already strained, FEMA’s recent expansion of its flood maps is butting up against the state’s drive to supercharge new construction. Jordan Wolman has more.
OPINION: Despite doing exactly what they were designed to do – increase higher education enrollment – a set of transformative new public higher educational stipend programs are facing quiet rollbacks. Bahar Akman Imboden, managing director of the Hildreth Institute, warns that cuts would be short-sighted, erode public trust, harm low-income students, and jeopardize the long-term prosperity of our state.
In some ways, health care providers in the more far-flung regions of Massachusetts are running into the same problems as everyone else, like the primary care crisis, specialist staffing shortages, and coverage fears from looming Medicaid cuts. Adding in narrow roadways, a dispersed and aging population, and fierce New England hill town weather only makes the access math harder.
This week on The Codcast, CommonWealth Beacon reporter Jennifer Smith talks with Michael Leary, director of media relations for Berkshire Health Systems. The system has three hospitals, including the 298-bed Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield as the county’s primary hospital. Two critical access hospitals – Fairview Hospital in Great Barrington and North Adams Regional Hospital – anchor the southern and northern edges of the county.
They dive into what makes Berkshire County such a complicated puzzle of health care access, even with the re-opening of the North Adams hospital after a decade of closure.
“I vividly remember the day” the hospital closed, said Leary, a North Adams resident for over 30 years. A good friend worked as his communications counterpart at North Adams Regional, which at the time was managed by the separate Northern Berkshire Healthcare.
Leary said his friend called on a Tuesday morning, “and said, ‘You know, I just wanna let you know North Adams Regional is closing.’ And I said, ‘When?’ And he said, ‘Friday,’ which was a shock to everybody.”
The hospital was not financially sustainable because it did not qualify for critical access hospital status, which comes with dedicated federal Medicaid and Medicare funding. At the time, Leary noted, federal legislation said that if the center was within a certain number of minutes or miles from an acute care hospital, it did not qualify. North Adams “fell right into the narrow edges of that” with Berkshire Medical Center and a hospital in Bennington, Vermont.
Through finagling by US Rep. Richard Neal, the language was changed to include a carve out for hospitals accessible by just a two-way road like North Adams. With the designation in hand, the facility re-opened a decade after closing.
But access issues persist, Leary said. “Transportation is always an issue in the Berkshires due to the wide geography,” he said, “and the fact that we are limited with the type of rural main roads that we have here in the county.”
And the dispersed population makes maintaining infrastructure like maternity units difficult. The North Adams hospital had a full maternity unit before its closure, but on re-opening as a critical access site it didn’t have the expected numbers that would make a maternity unit sustainable, Leary said. People looking for more than an OB/GYN have to travel to Pittsfield or further.
The other open question is the impacts of federal funding cuts to Medicaid programing, which would not take effect until after the 2026 midterms. Berkshire Medical Center and Fairview Hospital will receive part of a $17 million allocation – with the specific hospital-by-hospital amount not yet released – from $122 million in state funding announced in September to shore up acute care hospitals.
Berkshire Medical Systems has not publicly announced plans to pursue some of the $50 billion rural health fund included as part of the Trump tax law signed in July.
“We are keeping a very close eye on [the Medicaid cuts] and whatever impact it would have here on the Berkshires,” Leary said. “We are very fortunate to have had a very good sustainable financial model for a number of years now. We consider ourselves to be a very good financial performer. It doesn't mean that we're not worried, it doesn't mean that we're not challenged, but we are keeping an eye on everything, and we will continue to serve our patients as best we can.”
On the episode, Leary discusses the difficult geographic features of Berkshire County (2:45), challenges with recruiting staff (11:25), and health policy changes on the federal level (21:25).
ALL POLITICS IS LOCAL: A legislative push gaining steam in the State House over data collection restrictions is raising the ire of state and local Massachusetts businesses, not just the Big Tech companies. A who's who of influential business groups is warning against the sweeping measure that recently cleared the state Senate, Chris Lisinski reports.
THERAPY CATCH-22: Massachusetts has a ramp off the usual judicial process for certain defendants with serious mental health issues. The catch? They have to be arrested first, Jennifer Smith reports.
OPINION: As former Massachusetts Gov. Charlie Baker leads college sports through its transition of payments for university athletes, he might turn to another Baker for inspiration. Thomas A. Barnico, author and teacher at Boston College Law School, explains.
What We're Reading
ENERGY: A group of Massachusetts lawmakers are demanding that the US Energy Department explain why it killed around $466 million in grants bound for the Bay State. (MassLive)
HOUSING: The Healey administration estimated as many as 10,000 units could be built in five years under new zoning rules allowing accessory dwelling units (ADUs) in any single-family area. But that lofty prediction isn’t exactly coming true, as residents living in areas in need of housing aren’t jumping on the new law to build ADUs. (The Berkshire Eagle – paywall)
HEALTH: Department of Mental Health Commissioner Brooke Doyle is leaving her post, following a contentious budgeting cycle at the agency after the Healey administration attempted to slash half of the case manager workforce. (State House News Service – paywall)
POLITICS: The fight over the $135,000 raise that Quincy Mayor Thomas Koch ordered for himself in 2024, which the city council passed unanimously, might not be over. Organizers of an unsuccessful measure to reduce the pay hike are accusing the city clerk's office of unfairly disqualifying 1,851 of signatures for "illegibility." (The Patriot Ledger – paywall)
SHUTDOWN: Staff at the Boston office of the US Environmental Protection Agency are not certain they are supposed to be on the job. Despite most non-essential federal workers being furloughed, the EPA told staff to continue working this week, and employees say they’re not sure if they’re being paid. (GBH News)
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