Clarksburg Considers Two Possible Solar Arrays

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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Kirt Mayland of Reservoir Road Holdings reviews plans for a private array off Gravel Bank Road.

CLARKSBURG, Mass. — Clarksburg is considering a municipal solar array on the former landfill.

The Selectmen on Monday were also updated on a proposal for the development of a private array on Gravel Bank Road.

Town Administrator Carl McKinney informed the board that he plans to apply for a state Clean Energy Resiliency Initiative grant that will pay for technical consulting of a 77-acre parcel of town-owned land.

McKinney said the parcel extends from the Department of Public Works building on West Cross Road north to the old dump.

A solar array would be placed on the capped landfill and some of the land could possibly be developed for public use.

"There are 77 acres. We could make mountain bike or hiking trails. We are into this Mass in Motion thing. It is right near the school, and it is right near the Senior Center," McKinney said. "There are 77 acres of land that really do not have much purpose. ... There is a lot of cool stuff we could do with that."

McKinney said the land cannot be sold because of the covered landfill. He said the landfill will continue to be tested and all past readings have deemed it safe.

The consultant's survey will lead to recommendations of what can be done and how to develop it.

McKinney said the solar array would generate revenue as well as provide electricity to save the town money. He said the solar array could power the DPW building and turn the elementary school into an emergency operation center less dependent on unsustainable resources.

He said if Clarksburg does not start looking for similar ways to create revenue it will not survive because it has "limited growth capacity."

"The state owns 53 percent of the town and they give us a whole lot of nothing in the way of pilot money," McKinney said. "I am not against forestland but when they own half of the town, they give the town $20,000 a year, and are looking to acquire more, they are going to bankrupt the town in short order."

Town Administrator Carl McKinney explains the potential for a municipal solar array.

In addition to the landfill solar array, Kirt Mayland of Reservoir Road Holdings in Avon, Conn., met with the board to go over the possible construction of a small ground-mounted array on Ronald Krutiak's land on Gravel Bank Road.

He said he has entered into a possible agreement with Krutiak and would like to build a 4.2-acre array.

Mayland said nearly 75 percent of his arrays are built on gravel or sand pits because he focuses on environmentally degraded areas that are hidden from view.

"I try not to create, as much as possible, any local opposition to the extent of visual effects," Mayland said. "I like to find good sites where there are no wetlands and no environmental issues. I am an environmental lawyer by training so I am particularly sensitive to wetlands and small streams."


Tags: landfill,   municipal solar,   solar array,   

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Pittsfield Firefighters Rescue Woman From Burning Home

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A woman was saved from the second floor of a structure fire on Marlboro Drive on Friday evening. 
 
Two search teams had to work through a hoarding situation inside the single-family home at 1 Marlboro after the blaze was called in at about 6:45 p.m. 
 
The woman was found by the Tower 1 team at the top of the stairs about 15 minutes after the first unit arrived on scene. She was taken to Berkshire Medical Center by County Ambulance. 
 
Neighbors first reported smoke coming from the house with fire alarms sounding. Engine 6 confirmed smoke coming from the house and were met with serious hoarding conditions making access inside the house difficult. Engine 2 was requested to respond as well and eight off-duty firefighters were called in to man an engine and ladder truck at headquarters to cover the city. 
 
Multiple companies worked to overcome the hoarding condition behind the entry door to get inside and locate a spreading fire in the kitchen on the first floor. At this time, neighbors informed firefighters there was a woman still inside the house and that she usually stays on the second floor. T1 crew worked to gain access the second story from the front while Engine 3 went to a rear second-floor window. Both companies were tasked with a "Vent Enter Search" tactic that focuses on getting directly to the victim, which can be extremely dangerous with active fire on the floor below. 
 
E6 located and began extinguishing the majority of the fire in the kitchen while T1 made entry under extreme smoke conditions. Minutes later they located the woman and worked to get her out a rear window to the E3 team. 
 
Once water supply had been established, primary and secondary searches were conducted of all floors of the home and the fire was completely extinguished. 
 
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