City of Greenfield

City of Greenfield City Hall is currently open weekdays 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. The official City of Greenfield page Building Hours 9 am - 4 pm Monday- Friday.

Pay bills or order vital records online: https://unipaygold.unibank.com/customerinfo.aspx

A reminder about street closures and Pride celebrations this weekend in Greenfield:🏳️‍🌈 Pride Parade and Festival - Satu...
06/11/2026

A reminder about street closures and Pride celebrations this weekend in Greenfield:

🏳️‍🌈 Pride Parade and Festival - Saturday, June 13
• Parade - Pride celebrations will start with a parade through Greenfield. Lineup for the parade will begin at 11 AM at Greenfield Middle School. The parade will begin at noon and is anticipated to conclude by 1 PM. It will travel down Sanderson Street, Federal Street, Main Street, and Miles Street, before ending at Energy Park. Rolling street closures will occur along the parade route.
• Festival – The Pride festival will continue at Energy Park and along Miles Street. Miles Street and Fiske Avenue will be closed to vehicles from 8 AM to 5 PM on June 13.

🅿️ Parking & Access
• All vehicles must be removed from Miles Street and Fiske Avenue by 6 PM on June 12.
• For the safety of event participants, Miles Street will be fully closed to all non-emergency motorized traffic from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM on June 13.
• Parking will be free in municipal parking lots (including the Olive Street Garage) after 5 PM on Friday and all day Saturday.
• A volunteer will be at Miles Street to ensure safe access for vehicles during set-up.

More event information is available at franklincountypride.org.

Image description: A map of the Pride parade route.

We're hiring!👩‍🚒 Greenfield - MA Fire Department Firefighers👨‍🔧 City of Greenfield DPW Mechanics, Foresters, Laborers,📚G...
06/03/2026

We're hiring!
👩‍🚒 Greenfield - MA Fire Department Firefighers
👨‍🔧 City of Greenfield DPW Mechanics, Foresters, Laborers,
📚Greenfield Public Library & Senior Center Staff..and more!

Check out job openings with the City of Greenfield!

Greenfield will celebrate Pride month in June with events including a parade and festival organized by Franklin County P...
06/02/2026

Greenfield will celebrate Pride month in June with events including a parade and festival organized by Franklin County Pride, Inc.!

🏳️‍🌈 Pride Flag Raising - Friday, June 5
Mayor Desorgher will issue a proclamation declaring June as Pride month in Greenfield at a flag raising on the Greenfield Common in front of City Hall at 1 PM on Friday, June 5.

🎉 Pride Parade and Festival - Saturday, June 13
• Parade - Pride celebrations will continue on June 13, starting with a parade through Greenfield. Lineup for the parade will begin at 11 AM at Greenfield Middle School. The parade will begin at noon and is anticipated to conclude by 1 PM. It will travel down Sanderson Street, Federal Street, Main Street, and Miles Street, before ending at Energy Park. Rolling street closures will occur along the parade route.
• Festival – The Pride festival will continue at Energy Park and along Miles Street, which will be closed to vehicles from 8 AM to 5 PM on June 13.

🅿️ Parking & Access
• All vehicles must be removed from Miles Street and Fiske Avenue by 6 PM on June 12.
• For the safety of event participants, Miles Street will be fully closed to all non-emergency motorized traffic from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM on June 13.
• Parking will be free in municipal parking lots (including the Olive Street Garage) after 5 PM on Friday and all day Saturday.
• A volunteer will be at Miles Street to ensure safe access for vehicles during set-up.

More event information is available at franklincountypride.org.

Image description: Photos from previous years' Pride celebrations.

Check out our new bike plan! 🚴‍♀️ Where do you want to ride?
05/27/2026

Check out our new bike plan! 🚴‍♀️ Where do you want to ride?

Greenfield plans to implement a new bike plan to improve biking routes, enhance transportation and increase recreational activities for residents.

🅿 Free parking?! 🆓The only times you'll pay to park in the Olive Street Garage are M - F, 8 a.m. - 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. - ...
05/27/2026

🅿 Free parking?! 🆓

The only times you'll pay to park in the Olive Street Garage are M - F, 8 a.m. - 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. - 5 p.m.

🥇 First hour is always free!
🏝 Weekends are free!
🍽 During lunch is free (M - F, 11 a.m. - 2 p.m.)!
🎉 Holidays are free!
🦅 Floor 4 (the roof) is always free!
⌚ It's open 24/7!
🔌 There's EV charging!
🛁 The garage is scheduled to be cleaned in late June.

🐾GPD Comfort K9 Frank is asking if you've licensed your dog yet.🐾License with the Clerk's Office before June 1 to avoid ...
05/26/2026

🐾GPD Comfort K9 Frank is asking if you've licensed your dog yet.🐾

License with the Clerk's Office before June 1 to avoid a $40 late fee.

Frank wants you to spend that money on treats, not fees! 🍖

Image description: GPD Comfort K9 Frank laying on a quilt.

In recognition of Memorial Day, we are sharing a speech by Chief of Staff Erin Anhalt delivered at this morning's ceremo...
05/25/2026

In recognition of Memorial Day, we are sharing a speech by Chief of Staff Erin Anhalt delivered at this morning's ceremony:

In the final months of the Civil War, the Confederacy used a racetrack in Charleston as a prison camp for captured Union soldiers. More than 260 of those men died there, of disease and exposure, and were dumped in a mass grave behind the grandstand. One of the first things the newly freed Black Americans did was to give those Union soldiers, the ones who had fought for their liberation, a proper burial. For two weeks they exhumed the bodies and reinterred each and every one. They built a fence around the new graveyard and dedicated it to “Martyrs of the Racecourse.”

Then, on May 1, 1865, about ten thousand people gathered there. Three thousand Black schoolchildren led the procession, carrying armfuls of roses and singing "John Brown's Body." Behind them marched Black Union regiments, including George Jarvis, a Black soldier who enlisted right here in Greenfield to the famed 54th Massachusetts Regiment. They sang, they prayed, and they laid flowers on every grave. Memorial Day, as we know it, was born that day in Charleston, by people who understood, perhaps better than anyone in this country ever has, what it means to owe a debt to the dead.

That is the tradition we carry forward today, here in Greenfield, and in towns across America.

Since we stood in this place one year ago, more than a thousand American service members have died while serving — in training accidents, in aviation mishaps, in vehicle crashes, in operations overseas, and, tragically, by their own hand. Thirteen of those Americans were killed in hostilities in the Middle East. Each one had a name. Each one had people waiting for them. Each one is now a folded flag on someone's mantle.

We also cannot forget those who lose their lives to war injuries that are unseen after they return home. The battle follows women and men into their kitchens at three in the morning; sits with them at dinner tables; and challenges them while they are going on bike rides with their kids. We have lost more service members and veterans to PTSD every single year since 1972 than were lost in combat or training accidents.They are Memorial Day names too. They served. They came home wounded in ways no scan can see. And we owe them every bit as much remembrance, and every bit as much help, as those who fell on a battlefield.

This day sits heavy on me. I was a Navy spouse from 1999 until my husband retired in 2020 which was over twenty one years. If you've been part of a military family, you know it shapes you for the rest of your life. You learn the geography of goodbyes. You learn what a deployment does to a marriage, to a child, to a parent waiting by a phone. You make friends in base housing who become family, and you watch some of those families receive the knock on the door that everyone fears. Once you've been part of that community, the loss of any service member anywhere, any branch, any age hits close. They all feel like ours.

So today, in Greenfield, we remember them. The Union soldiers laid to rest by freed people in Charleston in 1865. The men and women lost in every war since. The ones lost this past year. And the ones still fighting battles inside themselves.

May they rest in peace. May their families know they are not forgotten. And may we be worthy of their sacrifice.

Image description: Spring blooms in Section 35 of Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, VA.

05/22/2026

We appreciate the outpouring of support for repairs to our beloved Poet's Seat Tower. We are still assessing the issues and repairs so we don't have any timelines or potential costs.

There are currently NO fundraising efforts, including GoFundMe or other collection efforts, that are being organized or sanctioned by the city. If you see any of these please be aware that they are currently not something the city is overseeing and they are not associated with us in any way.

We will continue to make sure that we keep the public as informed as possible and thank you all again for your generosity.

City of Greenfield offices will be closed Monday 5/25, in honor of Memorial Day.The recycling schedule for the week of 5...
05/22/2026

City of Greenfield offices will be closed Monday 5/25, in honor of Memorial Day.

The recycling schedule for the week of 5/25 is:
- Monday’s collection is Tuesday
- Tuesday’s collection is Wednesday
- Wednesday’s collection is Thursday
- Thursday’s collection is Friday

It is a “B” week for recycling.

05/21/2026

⚠ Poet’s Seat Tower Closed 🚧

Sadly, we are closing the tower until further notice. Several structural safety issues were found during a recent inspection.

The issues include:
- Degraded welds and voids between the metal stair treads and stringers.
- Significant cracks, including one running from the I-beam under the observation deck to the arched window below.
- Crumbled and missing mortar between the rocks of the outer structure.

We're assessing the issues and will reopen the tower as soon as possible. The area around the tower remains open.

Address

14 Court Square
Greenfield, MA
01301

Opening Hours

Monday 8:30am - 5pm
Tuesday 8:30am - 5pm
Wednesday 8:30am - 5pm
Thursday 8:30am - 5pm
Friday 8:30am - 5pm

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