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The truck's plow caught on the top of the retaining wall.
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Rand Street takes a sharp left at the top.

North Adams Highway Truck Flips on Steep Street

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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A city plow is hauled out of the back yard of a home at 51 Rand St.

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A city plow-driver narrowly escaped serious injury when his truck flipped over an embankment on Rand Street on Saturday.

Commissioner of Public Services Timothy Lescarbeau said Glenn Roberts was working on the steep incline just after 1:30 p.m. when his truck went over.

Roberts was taken to North Adams Regional Hospital and treated and released later that afternoon. Lescarbeau said Roberts was "banged up."

The amount of damage to the truck was unknown but Lescarbeau said it could be total loss.

"It's just unfortunate. I'm just happy Glenn is doing well and escaped serious injury here," said Mayor Richard Alcombright at the scene. "We can always buy a truck but we can't replace a person.

"People think plowing snow is just plowing snow ... all of our public safety and public services folks take risks every time they go out the door."

A man clearing ice on the upper part of Rand saw the truck go over as it was backing up the incline while sanding (a standard practice), and aided Roberts in getting out of the truck.

The truck came to rest upside-down in the back yard of 51 Rand. The plow caught on the cement-block retaining wall and workers at the scene believed that and the sander in the dump body prevented vehicle from rolling into the house.



Emergency services responded to the call at 1:41 p.m. The upper section of Rand, a sharp S-curve that dead-ends, was closed at as heavy-duty two trucks extricated the vehicle. North Adams Ambulance Service, police, firefighters and a Department of Public Works crew responded.

National Grid had to be called in when a tree branch took down the electric wires as workers attempted to clear the area to get to the vehicle. The last house on the street remained without power into the evening while the vehicle was recovered.

It took around three hours for Joseph Dean of Dean's Quality Auto and another specialized hauler from the Erving area to painstakingly pull the truck back up the incline.

The scene wasn't completely cleared until nearly 9 p.m.

The accident came three days into a major snow event that has dumped nearly 2 feet of snow across parts of the Berkshires. Highway crews have been working nearly continuously and, in fact, the backup truck at the scene had to leave to address slick roads as the temperature began to drop.

Alcombright was upset with derogatory comments he'd seen on Facebook about the accident.

"We're a city of hills and we've got a lot of treacherous hills here. ... These guys earn every single penny we pay them."

 

Tags: DPW,   highway,   motor vehicle accident,   snowstorm,   

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North Adams Council Gives Initial OK to Zoning Change

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The City Council wrapped up business in about 30 minutes on Tuesday, moving several ordinance changes forward. 
 
A zoning change that would add a residential property to the commercial zone on State Road was adopted to a second reading but met with some pushback. The Planning Board recommended the change.
 
The vote was 5-2, with two other councilors abstaining, indicating there may be difficulty reaching a supermajority vote of six for final passage.
 
Centerville Sticks LLC (Tourists resort) had requested the extension of the Business 2 zone to cover 935 State Road. Centerville had purchased the large single-family home adjacent the resort in 2022. 
 
Ben Svenson, principal of Centerville, had told a joint meeting of the Planning Board and City Council earlier this month that it was a matter of space and safety. 
 
The resort had been growing and an office building across Route 2 was filled up. 
 
"We've had this wonderful opportunity to grow our development company. That's meant we have more office jobs and we filled that building up," he said. "This is really about safety. Getting people across Route 2 is somewhat perilous."
 
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