BHS Sets Community Meeting on North Adams Regional Hospital Reopening

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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. – Residents will have a chance to speak to the possibility of North Adams Regional Hospital reopening. 
 
Berkshire Health Systems has scheduled a community meeting at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 3, at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts' Church Street Center at 265 Church St.
 
Health system officials will discuss its application for a critical access hospital designation that will allow the re-opening of inpatient beds in at its North Adams facility.
 
This project is part of BHS’s strategic plan to expand access to care and advance health and wellness for all across the region.
 
The hospital closed in 2014 for bankruptcy reasons and its assets purchased by BHS, which reopened it with a satellite emergency facility, offices for local practices and limited medical services. 
 
The health system is hoping to reopen the facility with a full emergency room and up to 25 inpatient beds, similar to its Fairview Hospital in Great Barrington. Fairview was able to obtain critical access hospital designation some years ago; the North Adams hospital's parent company, Northern Berkshire Healthcare, was unable to in the few years leading up to its bankruptcy as a way to increase Medicare/Medicaid reimbursements. 
 
BHS officials say a change rules allowed for them to apply for the CAH designation. Prior to this, NARH had been rejected for CAH status because it was within 35 miles on a numbered highway to Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield. Last year, the U.S. Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services changed that to 15 miles for hospitals on secondary roads in mountainous terrain. One lane Route 7 is now considered secondary.
 
BHS officials anticipate having inpatient services by winter, pending licensing and regulatory approval, and restoration of surgical services. 
 
Parking for the community is available behind the center and attendees should enter through the glass doors at the main Church Street entrance to the building. 
 
The meeting will focus on what a critical access hospital is, the application process for becoming a critical access hospital, and what a critical access hospital will mean for healthcare in the Northern Berkshire region. BHS is hosting this meeting so that members of the public can learn more about the planned reopening and provide input to health system representatives. 

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Clarksburg OKs $5.1M Budget; Moves CPA Adoption Forward

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Newly elected Moderator Seth Alexander kept the meeting moving. 
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The annual town meeting sped through most of the warrant on Wednesday night, swiftly passing a total budget of $5.1 million for fiscal 2025 with no comments. 
 
Close to 70 voters at Clarksburg School also moved adoption of the state's Community Preservation Act to the November ballot after a lot of questions in trying to understand the scope of the act. 
 
The town operating budget is $1,767,759, down $113,995 largely because of debt falling off. Major increases include insurance, utilities and supplies; the addition of a full-time laborer in the Department of Public Works and an additional eight hours a week for the accountant.
 
The school budget is at $2,967,609, up $129,192 or 4 percent over this year. Clarksburg's assessment to the Northern Berkshire Vocational School District is $363,220.
 
Approved was delaying the swearing in of new officers until after town meeting; extending the one-year terms of moderator and tree warden to three years beginning with the 2025 election; switching the licensing of dogs beginning in January and enacting a bylaw ordering dog owners to pick up after their pets. This last was amended to include the words "and wheelchair-bound" after the exemption for owners who are blind. 
 
The town more recently established an Agricultural Committee and on Wednesday approved a right-to-farm bylaw to protect agriculture. 
 
Larry Beach of River Road asked why anyone would be against and what the downside would be. Select Board Chair Robert Norcross said neighbors of farmers can complain about smells and livestock like chickens. 
 
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