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Lanesborough Budget $60,000 Short For Mount Greylock

Patrick RonaniBerkshires Staff
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Mount Greylock Superintendent William Travis appeals to Lanesborough voters on Tuesday night.
LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Cuts could be coming to Mount Greylock Regional High School.

Lanesborough voters passed its fiscal year 2011 budget during Tuesday night’s town meeting, including its monetary assessment to Mount Greylock, which is $60,000 shy of the School Committee’s requested amount.

Fastened by the terms of the regional school district agreement, Lanesborough’s vote eliminates $90,000 from Williamstown’s contribution to the school and results in an overall deficit of $150,000.

The School Committee can either accept the shortfall, which will reportedly lead to cuts in various departments, or it can arrange a district meeting for another vote.

“This is not the end of the story,” Lanesborough Town Administrator Paul Boudreau said. “The Greylock School Committee can go back and decide that they’re going to hold a district meeting where all the voters from Lanesborough and all the voters from Williamstown can vote on the budget.

“There’s a lot more people in Williamstown than there are in Lanesborough, so that $60,000 could get voted on, and we’re bound by it.”

Before Tuesday’s vote, Mount Greylock Superintendent William D. Travis urged Lanesborough to meet the School Committee’s original request of $2,562,839. Because of a significant cut in state aid, specifically in the areas of transportation, special education and employee benefits, Travis said it’s vital that the towns make up the difference.



More than 170 voters showed up for Lanesborough's annual town meeting on Tuesday night at the elementary school.
“These are tough times,” Travis said. “I just suggest that to maintain the quality of the education, I request your support for an increase.”

Larry Bell, a Lanesborough voter and Mount Greylock science teacher, came to the defense of the Finance Committee’s recommended amount. He said that the school has found ways, in the past, to spend money that wasn’t originally budgeted, for expenses including new computers and new hires.

Bell raised concerns that “you don’t always get the whole story at the budget meetings.”

“I’ve been told that I’m not a team player for doing this tonight,” Bell said. “I think our Finance Committee’s recommendation is more fair, from what I see on the inside, than the request to increase the school budget by the Mount Greylock School Committee.”

In the end, the motion to increase the budget by $60,000 was shot down by voters.

School Committee Chairman David Archibald said that if a district meeting doesn’t vote to fill the deficit, cuts could be made to custodians, AP courses, the library and science labs. The next school committee meeting is on Tuesday, June 15, at 7 p.m.

“I had heard it may go this way,” Archibald said of Lanesborough’s vote on the school budget. “We were hoping to present a case so that it wouldn’t go this way, but that’s democracy in action.”

About 170 voters showed up to Tuesday night’s meeting, which lasted nearly 4 ½ hours. More than half the meeting was spent discussing line items in the general government budget, which was amended from the original amount of $9,134,258 to $9,151,263. Voters made raises to the tree, recycling, senior citizen’s transportation and the recreation and athletic program accounts.



Al Terranova can't bear to watch as voters discuss adding $3,000 to the recyclables account in the town budget.
Finance Committee member Al Terranova was visibly frustrated as voters fought for increases, thus bringing the total amount closer to the tax levy limit.

“If we keep on adding this stuff, I hope you’re all ready to vote next week for an override,” Terranova said. “There’s no point to increase a salary, then not to vote positively for an override next week. I just want to caution you about that.”

Lanesborough will hold its town elections next Tuesday from noon to 8 p.m. at town hall. There are five questions on the ballot, including two tax-exemption questions to fund repairs at Mount Greylock Regional High School, and an override question, asking voters whether or not to appropriate an additional $150,000 in real estate and personal property taxes to fund the operating budget.

By meeting’s end, after 27 articles were passed, including the transfer of $150,000 from the free cash account in order to reduce the tax rate, the budget was $3,392 under the levy limit, according to Finance Committee Chairman William Stevens.

Stevens said there is $86,270 left in free cash, and traditionally the town has had at least $100,000 in the account entering a new fiscal year.

“You shouldn’t use free cash for an operating budget,” Stevens said. “But that’s getting more and more difficult to do because the state is killing us with their lousy aid.”
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Pittsfield Council Endorses 11 Departmental Budgets

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council last week preliminarily approved 11 department budgets in under 90 minutes on the first day of fiscal year 2025 hearings.

Mayor Peter Marchetti has proposed a $216,155,210 operating budget, a 5 percent increase from the previous year.  After the council supported a petition for a level-funded budget earlier this year, the mayor asked each department to come up with a level-funded and a level-service-funded spending plan.

"The budget you have in front of you this evening is a responsible budget that provides a balance between a level service and a level-funded budget that kept increases to a minimum while keeping services that met the community's expectations," he said.

Marchetti outlined four major budget drivers: More than $3 million in contractual salaries for city and school workers; a $1.5 million increase in health insurance to $30.5 million; a more than  $887,000 increase in retirement to nearly $17.4 million; and almost $1.1 million in debt service increases.

"These increases total over $6 million," he said. "To cover these obligations, the city and School Committee had to make reductions to be within limits of what we can raise through taxes."

The city expects to earn about $115 million in property taxes in FY25 and raise the remaining amount through state aid and local receipts. The budget proposal also includes a $2.5 million appropriation from free cash to offset the tax rate and an $18.5 million appropriation from the water and sewer enterprise had been applied to the revenue stream.

"Our government is not immune to rising costs to impact each of us every day," Marchetti said. "Many of our neighbors in surrounding communities are also facing increases in their budgets due to the same factors."

He pointed to other Berkshire communities' budgets, including a 3.5 percent increase in Adams and a 12 percent increase in Great Barrington. Pittsfield rests in the middle at a 5.4 percent increase.

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