- It's June and officially Pride Month, Springfield, Greenfield and Pittsfield will celebrate with parades this weekend.
- In the days leading up to the 2023 Springfield mayoral election, the campaign of challenger Justin Hurst was accused of paying voters to choose him. Hurst has vehemently denied the allegations.
- It's been 5 days since federal agents detained a landscape gardener from his job outside Creative Building Solutions on Maple Avenue in Great Barrington. Owners of the building say the agents were wearing masks and refused to show IDs.
- The seizures were part of the latest surge against suspected unlawful immigrants in Mass.
- On May 12 Khloe Rosario Quiñones was struck by a vehicle on Newland Street, a roadway off of Plainfield Street in Springfield, which is a busy main artery.
- The photos are believed to be the earliest-known photos of enslaved people in America.
- Drafts of the next Massachusetts budget have cleared the House and Senate. They now move to a six-person conference committee, which must come up with a single approach.
- A federal judge in Boston Thursday blocked President Donald Trump’s executive order to shut down the U.S. Department of Education and ordered employees who were fired in mass layoffs to be re-instated. Easthampton was among the plaintiffs.
- City officials say they have appealed the Trump istration's cancellation of a $20 million grant that was already in the works - and are also seeking legal representation in court
- The auto club AAA predicts more than 45 million people nationally will travel more than 50 miles from home, which would break a record set last year. And most will do so by vehicle.
- Berkshire Eagle reporter Heather Bellow found the majority of nursing homes in the Berkshires fed each resident for less than $10 a day.
- Edward M. Augustus, Jr., who leads the housing office, denied the majority of the findings.
- Hampden County Sheriff Nick Cocchi spoke with high school seniors about the risks of drunk driving, and his personal experience being arrested for an OUI last September
- More than four months into the Legislative session, lawmakers on Beacon Hill have not agreed on a rules package, and that's beginning to affect western Mass. residents.