Sign-up and post on Iberkshires today.It's Free!
Already a member? Log In
39°  H- 70%
The Berkshires online guide to events, news and Berkshire County community information.
Monday December 1, 2008
 Make us your homepage!
 

Daily Digest

Like to Write?
Passionate about local sports? Into the environment? Obsessive about local meetings?

Let your neighbors know what's going on in Berkshire County! iBerkshires accepts submissions about local events, news and opinion pieces. There are openings for freelance work, too, for qualified candidates. E-mail tdaniels@iberkshires.com to find out more.
Got Flu?
Track its spread through Google!
How much is heating oil this week?
How to get heating help
Win a restaurant gift certificate.
Need to contact iBerkshires? Here's how.

Obituaries

Mildred Clark Lasher, 99
Gerald J. Baclawski, 71
Gino J. Cortesi, 83
Adrien "Lefty" Lefevre, 85
Peter G. Arlos, 82
Former Pittsfield councilor
More obituaries

What's Playing


A television-hero pup (John Travolta) thinks he's a real superdog in the Disney film "Bolt."
Movie schedules and times

Sales Fliers

 
 

Columnists

That's Life

Dealing with Dirty Laundry

Independent Investor

Economy Will Dictate Agenda, Not President

Pick of the Week

Staind

Sports 'N Stuff

NFL Midseason Report Card



Other Stuff

Long Waits at State's Unemployment Offices
Federal government has 8,000 job openings
The president-elect's new Web site
www.change.gov

 Search: 
 for    

Related Stories

 
Printer Friendly Version
   Recommend this story to a friend

Northwest Hill Property to Be Conserved

By Tammy Daniels - November 27, 2007

David Ranzer takes the oath to serve on the Williamstown Zoning Board of Appeals.
WILLIAMSTOWN - The Selectmen have given their endorsement for a plan that will conserve a tract of land on Northwest Hill Road that had once been eyed for a housing development.

They also on Monday night appointed David Ranzer to a vacant position on the Zoning Board of Appeals.

Some 37.6 acres, bounded by Hopkins Forest and Buxton Brook, was purchased by abuttors Joseph and Theresa "Tracy" Finnegan as part of a nearly 50-acre package for about $1 million. Another 10 acres was purchased by Williams College for $250,000. Six acres was donated to the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation and a small fifth lot was used to straighten a neighbor's property line.

The board approved a conservation restriction on the 37 acres, which will be managed by the Williamstown Rural Land Foundation. The plan was presented to the board by attorney Elisabeth Goodman, representing the Finnegans.

Developers Duncan Brown, Foster Devereaux and Donald Westall, who had been doing business as Buxton Lane LLC, had hoped to build eight homes on the property but ran into development difficulties and abuttors' opposition. Negotiations over the summer ended with the sale of the property with an eye to restricting its development.

Leslie Reed-Evans, executive director of the Rural Lands Foundation, said the reason for preserving the parcel was the vernal pools it contains.

While the pools are actually on the Williams College parcel, the wooded habitat on the adjacent parcel is important to the life cycle of the fauna that breed in the seasonal waters.

"If you preserve the pools but you don't preserve the area in which they spend most of their lives, you're sort of only doing part of the job," she said.

The property also provides a link between Williams College's Hopkins Forest and open space land owned by the town.

The 37 acres, described as the "upland area," will be open for educational purposes through the foundation and will be monitored by it to ensure the restrictions are being met. The so-called exclusionary parcel on the lower area, would be monitored along the boundaries.

Reed-Evans said two parcels owned by the foundation between the Finnegan's property and Hopkins Forest would probably be transferred to the Finnegans at some point and a conservation restriction placed on them.

The Finnegans have reserved the rights to two more housing lots on the parcel on which their house now stands.

Williams' L-shaped parcel will become part of Hopkins Forest, which surrounds the Finnegans' property. College officials have said the vernal pools will be used in the academic studies now done in the forest. While the forest is not under a conservation restriction, it is primarily used for study and recreation.

"It was really our goal in the beginning if we were able to get the land to keep it the way it is," said Joseph Finnegan. "It's a beautiful piece of land and we want it to stay that way."

Goodman said the plan must be approved the Conservation Commission on Thursday before it gains final approval by the state Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.

The board approved the restriction unanimously. The board also approved a conservation restriction on 2 1/2 acres along the Green River owned by Williams College.

Attorney Jamie Art said the town had given the OK on the restriction earlier this year but the state's Energy and Environmental Affairs was not happy with some of the language and wanted more clarification.

For example, some of the wording made it sound like the restriction was to preserve pastureland because the caretaker pastures a horse on it rather than for the crooked-stemmed aster, which is on the state's threatened list.

The language was changed, the crooked-stemmed aster is doing quite well and the board OK'd the restriction unanimously. It, too, now goes to the Conservation Commission.

ZBA Appointment

Ranzer has been a part-time resident since 1982 and full time since 1995. He was financial consultant and adviser for 37 years with Merril Lynch, retiring as first vice president of investments. He also was president of Congregation Beth Israel for five years and chose its current location on Lois Street in North Adams.

"I've been very fortunate in my life and I think it's time to pay back," he said."I really think I can bring a balance between looking out for the town and its residents.

"I'm really delighted that Dave applied for this position," said Selectman Ronald Turbin. "It's just what the town needs, what the Zoning Board of Appeals needs."

The board has been operating with a vacant seat and only one alternate who's often out of town. Town officials have been concerned that such a crucial board has been making decisions with one member lacking. A super majority, required in some decisions, meant applicants would need a unanimous vote of four to go forward - an unfair situation, said officials.

At the last meeting, board members had discussed how to get citizens to apply for several vacant town seats, including the ZBA. They considered "an act of desperation" - sending a letter to another resident who had been rejected for a different board - but instead decided they each should call possible candidates.

Ranzer was appointed unanimously by the four selectmen present (Selectwoman Jane Allen was absent) to a term to expire June 30, 2009.

In other business:

  ● The board also renewed alcohol, common victualer and music entertainment licenses to a number of restaurants and package stores.

  ● Approved a change of manager for Richard Ruether Post 152 American Legion from Gary Walsh to George D. Sylvester.

  ● Set a public hearing on the proposal by Williams College to install an above-ground 10,000 gallon diesel fuel tank on Heating Plant Drive for Monday, Dec. 10, at 7:05 p.m.

  ● Decided it will meet with the town auditors on Dec. 10.
Your Comments
Post Comment
No Comments


iBerkshires.com Text Ads
www.iberkshires.com
www.iberkshires.com
www.ediblearrangements.com
www.ateffinejeweler.com
Advertise on iBerkshires.com



Essentials
Berkshire Nightlife
Berkshire Photos
Berkshire Wallpaper
Borrow Movies
Class Reunion Page
Columnists
Dannyoart.com
Movie Times
Obituaries
Randy Trabold

Enter your email address below to receive our FREE iBerkshires.com Newsletter

| Home | A & E | Automotive | Business | Community News | Dining | Lodging & Travel |
| Real Estate | Schools | Sports & Outdoors | Berkshires Weather | Weddings | Berkshires Map |
Advertise | Recommend This Page | Help
Contact Us | Privacy Policy| User Agreement
Execution Time: 241 ms