Adams Targeting Blighted Properties

By Jen ThomasiBerkshires Staff
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Adams wants to do something about blighted properties in town.
ADAMS — Armed with a list of 10 blighted properties — half of which are condemned — Code Enforcement Officer Scott Koczela has presented the Board of Selectmen with a report of structures that will be considered for razing or rehabilitation in the coming months.

At their Wednesday workshop meeting, the Selectmen examined pictures of several abandoned buildings, all with severe structural damage and many considered public hazards.

"Adams is seeing an increasing number of abandoned buildings," said Koczela in an interview on Thursday. "We have to step up and do something."

A survey board — put together through a collaboration of the Board of Health and the building inspector's office — will review the properties (six of which have back taxes owed on them) and determine whether or not they can be saved.

North Adams recently established a board to review blighted neighborhoods; four properties have been ordered razed and others are expected to follow.

"One building like these really affects a neighborhood," said Koczela. "Some of these, with money, you could bring them back up."

Four of the properties are located on Summer Street, including the longtime convenience store at the corner of Summer and East Hoosac streets.

"The roof had a leak a few years ago and water started coming through the electrical fixtures," said Koczela. Now condemned, the property's roof is open and major renovations would need to be made to the interior to repair the structure.

"We went in there in the winter and there was 2 inches of ice on the floor," said Koczela.

Two other buildings on the street, 58-60 Summer and 62 Summer, are both condemned and would require extensive interior and exterior work. The commercial space at 62 Summer St., though up for sale by the owner, has not been attractive to potential buyers.

"And 58-60 is even worse on the inside than it is on the outside," said Koczela.

A property at 84 Columbia St., owned by Daniel Borer, who has come under fire for failing to maintain his properties, was abandoned after a minimal attempt at cleaning up the five-unit former mill housing. A small amount of back taxes is still owed and the property's copper piping was removed by Borer.

A single-family home at 32 Willow St. could be saved if the right buyer were interested in investing the money to rehabilitate it but Koczela has deemed the building "structurally compromised" and children have taken to breaking in and spray-painting the walls.

The Willow Street property also carries the biggest debt, with more than $13,000 owed in back taxes.

Though Koczela and Building Inspector Daniel Pelletier recognized that many of the structures were likely to be torn down, they planned on waiting at least a year before taking any action.

"Right now, we're just gathering a list," said Koczela. "The plan long term is to deal with these either by getting them rehabilitated or to remove them and, hopefully, sell the property and have a viable structure back on them."


Blighted Properties
Address Status Taxes Conditions
graph of schedule
11 Lime St.
Unoccupied $2,914.29 Storage building, unsound, roof partially collapsed, unsecured, neighborhood hazard
graph of schedule
17-23 Spring St.
Condemned
$1,187.21
One commercial, three residential units, code violations, owner is reported doing work inside but no permits pulled
graph of schedule
2 Grove St.
Foreclosed;
Unoccupied
 None Two-family, numerous code violations, attached two-car garage is unsound

graph of schedule

62 Summer St.

 Condemned  None Commercial space, unmaintained, dumping ground, potential hazard

graph of schedule
92 Summer St.
 Unoccupied  $5042.52
One commercial, three residential units; outbuildings unsound, main building in disrepair and damaged by vandals

graph of schedule

58-60 Summer St.

 Condemned  $1378.69
One commercial, three residential units, requires extensive repairs on interior and exterior

graph of schedule

60 Grove St.

 Condemned  None Four residential units, interior open to elements, structural integrity  questionable
graph of schedule
32 Willow St.
Posted by Building Department as an unsafe structure  $13,691.04 Single-family, open to elements and unauthorized access neighborhood hazard

graph of schedule

121 Summer St.

 Condemned  None One commercial space, walls and ceilings opened to elements, structure requires extensive rehabilitation

graph of schedule

84 Columbia St.

Abandoned project
 $197.37 Five-unit rental property, open to elements and unauthorized access
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Special Minerals Agrees to Pay Adams, River Groups Over River Discharge

Staff ReportsiBerkshires

Adams plans to use the $50,000 it will get in the consent decree toward the removal of the Peck's Road Dam. 
BOSTON — Specialty Minerals is expected to pay $299,000 for a discharge of calcium carbonate into the Hoosic River nearly three years ago in a consent decree with the Attorney General's Office. 
 
The river turned visibly white from Adams to the Vermont state line from the mineral that leaked out from the plant's settling ponds on Howland Avenue in November 2021. 
 
Calcium carbonate, also known as chalk or limestone, is not toxic to humans or animals. However, the sudden discoloration of the water alarmed local officials and environmentalists and prompted an emergency session of the Northern Berkshire Regional Emergency Planning Committee. 
 
"We allege that this company violated its permits, disregarded federal and state law, and put the Hoosic River — a resource cherished by the Adams community — at risk," said AG Andrea Campbell in a statement. "I am grateful for this collaboration with our state agency partners and committed to holding polluters accountable and working to bring resources back to communities disproportionately impacted by environmental harms."   
 
If approved by the U.S. District Court of Massachusetts, the consent decree will require Specialty Minerals to pay a total of $299,000, which includes payments to the town of Adams and three community groups in Northern Berkshire County that will be used to benefit water quality and prevent stormwater impacts. 
 
Once approved, most of the settlement would fund multiple projects to benefit water quality, including infrastructure improvements and native plantings to mitigate stormwater impacts in the Hoosic River Watershed. Specifically, the proposed settlement provides for: 
  • $50,000 to the town of Adams for infrastructure improvements in a tributary of the Hoosic River
  • $50,000 to Hoosic River Revival for stormwater mitigation projects  
  • $50,000 to Hoosic River Watershed Association for a native plant garden and other projects to mitigate stormwater impacts and benefit water quality 
  • $50,000 to Sonrisas to fund invasive plant removal and native plant habitat establishment at Finca Luna Búho, a community land project that centers the voices and prioritizes the decision-making of those living in marginalization. 
It will also provide $30,000 in civil assessments to the state's Natural Heritage Endangered Species Fund and $20,000 in civil penalties for violation of state law, as well as $49,000 to offset the costs of the AG's enforcement efforts. 
 
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