City Council OKs Higher Tax Rate

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NORTH ADAMS - The state has rejected the city's recent assessment of commercial properties, meaning homeowners are going to get hit with higher taxes. Two weeks ago, the City Council passed a tax rate based on a reviewed assessment of commercial and residential properties that took into account recent renovations and real estate prices. Mayor John Barrett III said at the time that the state would go through the assessments "with a fine-tooth comb to make sure they're justified." The Department of Revenue apparently hit a snarl, disallowing higher evaluations for the nearly full downtown plaza and Time Warner property and nearly a $1 million in improvements to the Xtra MartConvenience Store and gas station on Ashland Street. The mayor called an emergency meeting Saturday to ask the council to approve a higher residential tax rate to cover a $450,000 shortfall, according to a report in the North Adams Transcript, after the state disallowed more than $4 million in commercial assessments. Homeowners were already looking at an average increase of $160 to $165, now it will be closer to $190, said the mayor. The new tax rate is $11.32 per $1,000 for residential properties (19 cents higher than this year); commercial, industrial and personal property taxes will be $26.72 per $1,000 (10 cents higher than last year). The city had originally set a rate of $11.22 and $26.39 two weeks ago. That means the owner of home valued at $100,000 can expect to pay $1,132 in property taxes. The tax hike could have been higher if a home rule petition on the city's levy capacity on the commercial side hadn't passed the Legislature only hours before the last City Council meeting two weeks ago. Gov. Deval Patrick's municipal relief package had called for residential property owners to bear more of the tax burden as property values stabilized after a period of stagnant growth on the commercial side. The home rule petition allows the city two years over which to shift about 7 percent of the burden onto homeowners.
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Sanford, Maine, Edges SteepleCats in Season Opener

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. – The SteepleCats Sunday started their 2026 season the way they ended their 2025 campaign: with a narrow loss to the Sanford Mainers.
 
Sanford, which won a best-of-three playoff series against North Adams last August, scored four runs on 14 hits to earn a 4-2 win at Joe Wolfe Field.
 
The Mainers broke a 1-1 tie with a two-run rally in the third inning, and four Sanford pitchers combined to collect 11 strikeouts as the visitors improved to 2-1 this summer.
 
North Adams, which saw its planned road opener rained out on Saturday, got to open the season in front of its home fans.
 
And those fans saw a strong performance from the North Adams pitching staff, which, despite allowing 14 hits, including five doubles, gave up just three earned runs.
 
“I like the grit,” SteepleCats coach Mike Gladu said of his team’s Game 1 performance. “I thought the pitchers performed pretty well. We had a couple of situations where we definitely should have gotten some runs in and didn’t get that hit.
 
“And there were a couple of plays with a little rust. Certainly, the ball that was hit over [Evan] Meier’s in left field, he just mistracked that one. And the extra run they scored in the eighth, the kid wasn’t going to go [from third on a fly ball], we made a throw and nobody could stop it.
 
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