Letter: Fire District Vote Could Affect School, Police Projects

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This email is submitted as a comment to this article on the special Fire District meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 15.
 
 
I am writing these comments as an individual property owner, not as the president of the Williamstown Chamber of Commerce nor as a member of the Mount Greylock Regional High School Committee's School Building Committee.
 
Please make every effort to go to the Fire District special meeting tonight at Wiliamstown Elementary School at 7 p.m. Voter registration starts at 6:30 p.m.
 
Besides the FD's original warrant, there will likely be motions made about several different amended versions at tonight's meeting. 
 
Andy Hogeland's amendment idea was mentioned in the article above. Another amendment idea is to authorize the FD to negotiate an extension on the purchase-and-sale agreement including a not-to-exceed amount for a non-refundable deposit on the property to tie it up for three to six more months while the work on the joint public safety building analysis is completed. This option makes the most sense to me.
 
While I wholeheartedly support the idea that we need a new joint public safety building, the new high school must be our top priority. In about 18 months we will be facing a vote to approve our share of the capital required for the school. 
 
if the new fire station, new police station and/or a joint public safety building gets ahead of that project it will be monumentally harder for us to convince the majority in town to take on the additional taxes required to build a new school. This is the idea of tax fatigue that Dan Gendron referred to at the FinCom meeting. Furthermore, allowing the FD to purchase the Lehovec property before we truly know if it can support a joint public safety building jeopardizes the joint public safety building project. 
 
A big part of the savings of a joint building project is we only have to purchase one piece of land. That means we should purchase one piece of property that we know meets all of the requirements for a joint public safety building BEFORE we buy it which is why I believe we should wait until after the PD's study is done to pull the trigger on any purchases.
 
Your vote may be the difference maker. I hope to see you all there tonight.
 
Allen Jezouit
Williamstown

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Hancock Town Meeting Votes to Strike Meme Some Found 'Divisive'

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff

Hancock town meeting members Monday vote on a routine item early in the meeting.
HANCOCK, Mass. — By the narrowest of margins Monday, the annual town meeting voted to strike from the town report messaging that some residents described as, "inflammatory," "divisive" and unwelcoming to new residents.
 
On a vote of 50-48, the meeting voted to remove the inside cover of the report as it appeared on the town website and in printed versions distributed prior to the meeting and at the elementary school on Monday night.
 
The text, which appeared to be a reprinted version of an Internet meme, read, "You came here from there because you didn't like it there, and now you want to change here to be like there. You are welcome here, only don't try to make here like there. If you want to make here like there, you shouldn't have left there in the first place."
 
After the meeting breezed through the first 18 articles on the town meeting warrant agenda with hardly a dissenting vote, a member rose to ask if it would be unreasonable for the meeting to vote to remove the meme under Article 19, the "other business" article.
 
"No, you cannot remove it," Board of Selectmen Chair Sherman Derby answered immediately.
 
After it became clear that Moderator Brian Fairbank would entertain discussion about the meme, Derby took the floor to address the issue that has been discussed in town circles since the report was printed earlier this spring.
 
"Let me tell you about something that happened this year," Derby said. "The School Department got rid of Christmas. And they got rid of Columbus Day. Now it's Indigenous People's Day.
 
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