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Clarksburg Seeking Write-In Candidates for Empty Posts

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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CLARKSBURG, Mass. — This town of 1,702 is heading for a crisis on May 23. 
 
That's the day of the town election and five offices will have blank spaces next to them on the ballot, including for the Select Board. Three are on the Planning Board, and if there are no write-in candidates, that board effectively won't exist on May 24. 
 
"It takes a village to run a village," said Town Administrator Carl McKinney on Thursday. "And I will have no Planning Board after the election. The state demands we have five people on the Planning Board. 
 
"I will have one. Nobody took out papers to run."
 
Like many small towns, Clarksburg has been having trouble finding people to fill the important elected and appointed positions that keep it running. Some officials wear multiple hats, like the current chair of the Select Board who's also chair of the School Committee.
 
McKinney got involved in town government after the 2001 attacks with the idea of thinking globally while working locally to fix this one corner. 
 
Since then, he's served on the Finance Committee and the Select Board and in various offices. In addition to his paid post, he's still the town's representative on the solid waste district as well as the emergency management coordinator and the Americans With Disabilities coordinator. Most recently, he stepped in as a replacement on the Planning Board to keep the number on the board to at least four people. 
 
"I'm not afraid of working but I can't be five people at once," he said. "Our Finance Committee needs two people, our Board of Selectmen is going to be short one."
 
The town also needs two alternates for the Zoning Board of Appeals, somebody for the Handicapped Commission and someone for the Northern Berkshire Solid Waste District. The town's in the middle of budget season and has exactly one person on the Finance Committee.
 
McKinney is pushing get current issues on the Planning Board's agenda done before the election. Getting a public hearing for a proposed solar bylaw scheduled will be tight, and might end up being held the night before the election. And sitting out there is a final decision on a proposed cell tower on River Road — a project that first came before the board last year. 
 
"If I don't have a Planning Board next year it's not going to happen," he said of the solar bylaw. And as for the cell tower, "I would be remiss in my responsibility to dump that on a new and inexperienced board. It behooves us to make our decision."
 
Public service isn't glamorous, McKinney acknowledged, and isn't well paid. It takes a lot of time and a lot of patience. 
 
People expect a level of service but it takes, he said, "living, breathing human beings to operate a town."
 
He's encouraging citizens to come forward and write-in candidates to fill out an empty roster.
 
"If we chose to be a town unto ourselves, we need people," McKinney said. "If not, then the type of government we have becomes questionable, the sustainability becomes questionable, and the ability to govern is highly questionable." 

Tags: election 2017,   town elections,   


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State Fire Marshal: New Tracking Tool Identifies 50 Lithium-Ion Battery Fires

STOW, Mass. — The Massachusetts Department of Fire Services' new tool for tracking lithium-ion battery fires has helped to identify 50 such incidents in the past six months, more than double the annual average detected by a national fire data reporting system, said State Fire Marshal Jon M. Davine.
 
The Department of Fire Services launched its Lithium-Ion Battery Fire Investigative Checklist on Oct. 13, 2023. It immediately went into use by the State Police Fire & Explosion Investigation Unit assigned to the State Fire Marshal's office, and local fire departments were urged to adopt it as well. 
 
Developed by the DFS Fire Safety Division, the checklist can be used by fire investigators to gather basic information about fires in which lithium-ion batteries played a part. That information is then entered into a database to identify patterns and trends.
 
"We knew anecdotally that lithium-ion batteries were involved in more fires than the existing data suggested," said State Fire Marshal Davine. "In just the past six months, investigators using this simple checklist have revealed many more incidents than we've seen in prior years."
 
Prior to the checklist, the state's fire service relied on battery fire data reported to the Massachusetts Fire Incident Reporting System (MFIRS), a state-level tool that mirrors and feeds into the National Fire Incident Reporting System (NFIRS). NFIRS tracks battery fires but does not specifically gather data on the types of batteries involved. Some fields do not require the detailed information that Massachusetts officials were seeking, and some fires may be coded according to the type of device involved rather than the type of battery. Moreover, MFIRS reports sometimes take weeks or months to be completed and uploaded.
 
"Investigators using the Lithium-Ion Battery Fire Checklist are getting us better data faster," said State Fire Marshal Davine. "The tool is helpful, but the people using it are the key to its success."
 
From 2019 to 2023, an average of 19.4 lithium-ion battery fires per year were reported to MFIRS – less than half the number identified by investigators using the checklist over the past six months. The increase since last fall could be due to the growing number of consumer devices powered by these batteries, increased attention by local fire investigators, or other factors, State Fire Marshal Davine said. For example, fires that started with another item but impinged upon a battery-powered device, causing it to go into thermal runaway, might not be categorized as a battery fire in MFIRS or NFIRS.
 
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