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The columbarium at Arlington National Cemetery. This is a wall version; some cremation repositories are vaults or buildings.

Adams Looks at Columbarium For Cemetery

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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With cremations on the rise and cemetery space on the decline, the cemetery commissioners are looking into the possiblity of a columbarium.

ADAMS, Mass. — The Cemetery Commission is looking at the possibility of installing a columbarium for its cemeteries.

Cemetery Commissioner Bruce Shepley told the commission last Thursday that he would like to explore the possibility of installing a columbarium, a facility that houses cremated remains.

"There are some very impressive monuments throughout the country that are these large walls with compartments that hold cremains ... they are getting more and more popular," Shepley said. "The culture is changing."

Cemetery Supervisor David Nuvallie said this concept is not new to the commission and prior commissioners were actively perusing the idea.

"Five or six years ago they were really into it ... the former town administrator was really into it, too, because there is money to be made with these," Nuvallie said. "We save land and we are going green in a way. Those [embalming] chemicals are not going into the ground."

Shepley added it would also give the town the opportunity to install a reflective garden or something of the like.

Commissioner James Taylor said the cemeteries are filling up and much of the open land in Bellevue Cemetery is not suitable for standard burials.  

"If this is going to be above ground it will work because there are places there you just can't dig," Taylor said.

Nuvallie said standard burials are becoming a thing of the past and when he was first brought on the job in the 1980s, only 9 percent of burials were cremations. He said now it is about 50/50.

The commission decided to do some more research and possibly visit the columbarium in Springfield.

Nuvallie said recently a tree was taken down in Maple Street Cemetery.


"It was tangled in the lines and I had National Grid take it down yesterday for free, no charge," Nuvallie said. "It would have cost about $1,200 at least."

He said he has concerns about another tree that is 5 feet in diameter that has to come down. He said he wants it down in a month.  

The commission told him to put it out to bid but asked if any of these trees will be replaced.

Nuvallie said he does not have the money in his budget.

"My budget does not allow me to replace anything," he said. "I get $3,000 and that barely gets me four trees. We don't even have enough to grind stumps."

However, Nuvallie said the tree farm at Bellevue Cemetery is ready to be harvested. He said he planted 20 Jefferson elm trees in 2010 after the town had bad luck with American Liberty elms grown in the 1980s.

"I haven't seen one live so we abandoned that elm tree farm and replaced it with a Jefferson elm tree farm," he said. "They are ready right now for next spring ... I wouldn't wait much longer than that because they will be too hard to handle ... I hate to see them sit there and die."

He said they have to be root pruned and replanted next spring.

Nuvallie said he would like to use them at Maple Street Cemetery and re-establish the center road tree canopy. Many of the trees are long gone.

"I liked that when I first came here 30 years ago; it was like a tunnel," he said.

The commission gave Nuvallie the authority to do want he wants with the trees. They asked him to leave five trees as spares.


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Adams Welcomes New Officer; Appoints Housing Authority Board Member

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Officer Cole Desroches recently graduated from the Police Academy. 
ADAMS, Mass. — The Selectmen welcomed the newest member of the Adams Police Department, Officer Cole Desroches, on Wednesday evening. 
 
Desroches graduated from the Police Academy on March 22 in the top tier in his class. He's currently in the field training program and assigned to Sgt. Curtis Crane. He attended Hoosac Valley High School and Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. 
 
"He's going to serve and protect the town of Adams very well," said Crane, who with Sgts. Matthew Wright and Gregory Onorato stepped in to introduce the new officer while Chief R. Scott Kelley was on vacation. 
 
"We don't often get an opportunity to kind of talk about, frankly, some of the positive things that are happening in town and one of the many things that I feel are positive with are the Adams Police Department," said Town Administrator Jay Green. "We are right now at full staff. We have a full complement of officers. We have a chief who just resigned a three-year contract. ... We have four very capable sergeants (including Donna Malloy)."
 
The force consists of the chief, the four sergeants, a full-time detective and 11 patrol officers. It also has a new position in Cpl. Joshua Baker who is responsible for training and keeping staff equipped. 
 
"We're on the cutting edge of ensuring that we have proper training in a very changing environment with law enforcement," continued Green. "And we have a nice complement of officers and we have a well-respected detective who handles some very complicated cases."
 
He called out the half-dozen officers who attended the meeting for the work they're doing as well as the K9 unit. 
 
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