Budget Goes to North Adams City Council on Tuesday

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The City Council will take up the fiscal 2013 budget on Tuesday night.

The Finance Committee on Thursday gave final recommendations to approve the city's $36.2 million spending plan after three meetings reviewing various aspects of the budget.

Last Wednesday, School Superintendent James Montepare reiterated his presentation from the evening before, when he had presented the $15.69 million school budget at a public hearing with the School Committee. The committee had unanimously approved the budget.

Committee members questioned some line items that were up. Montepare said those reflected, in large part, moving funding around. For example, a technology instructor was hired raising that line item, but the technology budget was cut to offset it.

"If there is anything up there is a movement," he said. "If there is anything down it's a movement or a cut."

Montepare did warn that the city is only $54,000 above its state-mandated minimum spending. Last year, the city had been within $300,000; in the past it had ranged from $1 million to $3 million.

"You can't cut for four years in a row a million, a million, a million," he said. "We've taken $6 million out of this budget over the past few years."

The Northern Berkshire Vocational School District budget is up 1.67 percent.

McCann Superintendent James Brosnan, also on Wednesday, said the city will see some savings if Lanesborough and Cheshire become part of the Northern Berkshire Vocational School District.

The budget is up in some place for equipment and maintenance. Brosnan said the machines used in the shops have to be replaced on a regular cycle as do components in the heating and ventilation. The school converted to gas in fiscal 2009 at a cost of $170,000 but has seen savings in fuel and repairs. The renovation of the school gym will be paid offin fiscal 2017.

Brosnan said the district has seen health-care savings through Berkshire Health Group and by moving retirees onto Medex. The premium split has remained the same at 75/25.

Committee members asked Brosnan what the greatest financial challenges were. He said it was staff and students - such as long-term disability, leaves of absence or extraordinary support - rather than building issues because the facility has been well taken care of.

The city's assessment of the $8.1 million budget is down almost 6 percent, from $890,353 this year to $835,622, largely because of a reduction in North Adams enrollment. More eighth-graders are opting to stay at Drury High School.

On Wednesday, Mayor Richard Alcombright said the $120,000 annual debt for the renovations at Drury High School will "roll off" this coming year and will go into reserves in anticipation of the Conte Middle School Project.

Overall, the city has about $1.8 million in reserves, the bulk of which is free cash ($737,000) and school choice ($875,000). Some $250,000 in free cash and another $150,000 from other reserves will be used to balance the fiscal 2013 budget and $400,000 in school choice funds will go toward the school budget.

Transfers from free cash will be used to balance any accounts this year and the mayor anticipates asking $300,000 to transferred from free cash into the stabilizition fund.

"We need either growth or we need more state money ... or we just need through this budget not to spend it all," said the mayor.

Also on Tuesday's agenda is a proposed ordinance that would give the Historic Commission review of any structures prior to demolition and the authority to delay demolition to investigate a preservation option.


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Tags: city budget,   fiscal 2013,   school budget,   

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MCLA Green Living Seminar to Explore Climate Change Perceptions in the Middle East

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts' (MCLA) Green Living Seminar Series continues on Wednesday, Feb. 4, at 5:30 p.m. with a presentation by Dr. Nimah Mazaheri, Professor of Political Science and Dean of Academic Affairs at Tufts University.
 
The presentation, titled "Faith Under Fire: How Religion Shapes Climate Concern in the Middle East," will take place in MCLA's Feigenbaum Center for Science and Innovation, Room 121.
 
The event is free and open to the public.
 
Mazaheri will discuss his research on how religion influences climate change perceptions across the Middle East, a region facing significant environmental challenges including extreme heat, recurring droughts, and water salinization.
 
Drawing from Arab Barometer surveys of 13,700 people across twelve countries, Mazaheri's research reveals unexpected patterns in how Middle Eastern populations view the climate crisis. His findings show that while Muslims tend to be less concerned about climate change compared to Christians in the region, individuals with a strong sense of religiosity across all faiths demonstrate greater concern about environmental threats. The research also uncovers a "culture war" dynamic, with religious Muslims who endorse Islamist government showing less concern than their secular counterparts.
 
Mazaheri's work focuses on the political economy of the Middle East and North Africa, with particular emphasis on how oil wealth shapes politics and economics in the region. His research has been published in leading journals including Comparative Political Studies, World Politics, and World Development.
 
This semester's Green Living Seminar series explores "Nature and Spirituality," a 12-week examination of how faith, religion, and spiritual traditions shape our relationship with the natural world. 
 
All presentations will be recorded as podcasts available at www.mcla.edu/greenliving.
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