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The City Council voted to establish the trust fund on Tuesday.

Pittsfield Establishes Trust Fund For Retiree Benefits

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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Councilor At Large Barry Clairmont hopes to transfer about $1.6 million currently sitting in a stabilization account into the OPEB trust fund.

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city is setting aside $50,000 for future retirees, the start of what some city councilors feel will ultimately save millions of dollars.

On Tuesday, the City Council voted to establish an Other Post Employment Benefits (OPEB) trust fund and in the budget; $50,000 is already set aside to fund it. The funds are to pay for health care benefits to future retirees.

"Our auditor has been saying for years that we should establish it," said Councilor at Large Barry Clairmont, who filed the petition to form the fund.

In recent years, the state has changed general accounting practices to include future liabilities and has encouraged cities and towns to have enough stashed away.

In 2008, the auditors estimated that as the city currently pays the yearly cost for retirees, over time it will ultimately pay some $250 million. That $250 million would pay for all of the city's current employees retirement benefits.

However, some of those employees are far from retirement, so if the city starts putting money aside now, interest alone will reduce the overall payout.

Ward 5 Councilor Jonathan Lothrop said once the trust fund is established, the council will then have to look at ways to invest the money. He suggest the city look toward the state Pension Reserves Investment Management Board, which manages billions of dollars in investments for communities.


"You have to invest it in a way that will grow the money," Lothrop said.

According to Clairmont, as the law is currently written, the city treasurer will oversee the funds.

Clairmont said he had asked Mayor Daniel Bianchi to establish it with $100,000, but Bianchi only funded half. The city has been aware of the practice and advice for years but had not put any funds aside until this fiscal year.

Clairmont and Lothrop are hoping the next step would be to take about $1.6 million currently sitting in a stabilization account and put it into the trust fund. That $1.6 million dates back to when the city was in receivership and the state Legislature has to approve the use of those funds — even moving it to the trust fund.

"I would like to see something happen with that," Clairmont said.

The City Council already accepted the trust fund law some years ago, giving it the legal authority to establish a fund. But, to be sure, councilors voted again on Tuesday.

Locally, many towns have not begun accounts while others are already funding. This year, Lenox aggressively set aside $500,000 to dig into the $30 million in liabilities it currently has. Lenox is hoping to put as much aside for nearly a decade before reducing the annual payment.

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BRPC Committee Mulls Input on State Housing Plan

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Regional Planning Commission's Regional Issues Committee brainstormed representation for the county in upcoming housing listening sessions.

"The administration is coming up with what they like to tout is their first housing plan that's been done for Massachusetts, and this is one of a number of various initiatives that they've done over the last several months," Executive Director Thomas Matuszko said.

"But it seems like they are intent upon doing something and taking comments from the different regions across the state and then turning that into policy so here is our chance to really speak up on that."

The Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities and members of the Housing Advisory Council will host multiple listening sessions around the Commonwealth to hear input on the Healey-Driscoll administration's five-year strategic statewide housing plan.

One will be held at Berkshire Community College on May 15 at 2 p.m.

One of Matuszko's biggest concerns is the overall age of the housing stock in Berkshire County.

"And that the various rehab programs that are out there are inadequate and they are too cumbersome to manipulate through," he explained.

"And so I think that there needs to be a greater emphasis not on new housing development only but housing retention and how we can do that in a meaningful way. It's going to be pretty important."

Non-commission member Andrew Groff, Williamstown's community developer director, added that the bureaucracies need to coordinate themselves and "stop creating well-intended policies like the new energy code that actually work against all of this other stuff."

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