MORALES
MORALES

Morales awarded fellowship to work at Community Legal Aid

Community Legal Aid, a nonprofit that provides free legal services to low-income and elderly residents of Western and Central Massachusetts, announced attorney Claribel Morales has been awarded the Bart Gordon Fellowship by the Massachusetts Legal Assistance Corp. (MLAC).

The fellowship will support Morales’ housing work in Western Massachusetts, where she will assist tenants facing homelessness or denied the housing of their choice for discriminatory reasons, according to a Community Legal Aid press release. She will be based in Community Legal Aid’s Springfield office starting this month.

A 2019 graduate of Western New England University’s School of Law, Morales joined Community Legal Aid in the summer of 2019 as an AmeriCorps legal advocate, serving in the organization’s Civil Legal Aid for Victims of Crime and Housing Units. A native of Trenton, N.J., she earned her bachelor’s degree in criminal justice in 2008 and a master’s degree in public administration in 2014 from the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York.

According to the release, Morales worked at the Bronx District Attorney’s Office for six years as a paralegal before moving to Massachusetts to attend law school. She then interned at the Massachusetts Fair Housing Center in Holyoke and the Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities in Hartford, Conn. She also participated in the Legal Services Clinic, a partnership between Western New England University’s School of Law and Community Legal Aid, where she assisted tenants with eviction cases in the Western Housing Court.

“Even though she is just beginning her legal career, Claribel Morales has already demonstrated her strong commitment to ensuring that the most vulnerable people among us can live in safe housing,” said Lynne Parker, executive director of MLAC. “Her work is so needed during the COVID-19 crisis, when many people are at risk of losing their homes. I’m thrilled that MLAC can fund this essential work through the Bart Gordon Fellowship.”

Massachusetts Legal Assistance Corp., reportedly the largest funding source for civil legal aid in Massachusetts, created the Bart Gordon Fellowship to improve access to justice for people who face linguistic or cultural barriers to attaining legal assistance, the release states. The fellowship funds positions for recent law school graduates at legal aid organizations. The fellowship is named in memory of Bart Gordon, a Springfield attorney and founding member of its board of directors.

Fee waived for coin deposits

GREENFIELD — In light of the recent coin shortage, Greenfield Cooperative Bank announced that the fee for non-account holders to use the coin counter machines will be temporarily waived.

“We feel eliminating the fee is the right thing to do to encourage people to turn in their coins during this shortage,” said Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Tony Worden.

According to a bank press release, coin counters can be accessed at Greenfield Cooperative Bank’s main office branches in Amherst, Shelburne Falls, Turners Falls and Greenfield.

Bernardston natives holding grand opening of gym

WEST SPRINGFIELD — Bernardston natives Dan and Jessye Deane will hold the grand opening of their new branch of F45 Training at 1464 Riverdale St. on Saturday.

The Deanes, who introduced Massachusetts to the Australian franchise in 2018 with their first location, F45 Training Hampshire Meadows in Hadley, had originally planned to open the 2,700-square-foot West Springfield branch in April, but their plans were put on hold due to the pandemic.

According to a press release about the studio’s grand opening, it will involve one-hour “Hollywood” workouts at 6:45, 8 and 9:15 a.m.

Unlike traditional box gyms, F45 Training blends high-intensity interval training, functional training, and circuit training and pulls from 4,100 exercises, ensuring that no workout is the same. F45, which references functional 45-minute sessions, can be modified for any fitness level, the release states.

“During each workout, you get all of the energy of being in a safe, small group environment but you still have the technique and encouragement of working alongside personal trainers,” Jessye Deane said.

To take safety precautions amid the pandemic, the Deanes will continue to offer daily online training and have adjusted in-studio athletic programming to eliminate equipment sharing and minimize capacity. All members will be required to wear masks.

For more information, visit f45training.com/riverdale.