Lenox Selectmen Take Anti-Pipeline Stance

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
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The Board of Selectmen said they can't stop the company from doing surveys of land but they might be able to stop the pipeline itself.
LENOX, Mass — The town's Selectmen took a firm stance Wednesday in saying they don't want the proposed natural gas line to come through their town.
 
The Selectmen passed a motion saying that it opposes Kinder Morgan's efforts to build a new gas line. The expansion of the Tennessee Gas Pipeline is proposed to go through multiple Berkshire towns on its way through to Franklin and Worcester counties.
 
"We have a vague, proverbial line on a map. We know there is a strong preference of Kinder Morgan to use existing right of way," said Town Manager Christopher Ketchen, adding that so far the proposals seem to "circle the currently existing AT&T right of ways."
 
The company has asked to survey land as it craft its plans but the board held back approval. At town meeting, a citizen's petition to oppose the pipeline passed easily and many advocates hoped the board would fight the survey work. 
 
However, on Wednesday, the Board of Selectmen opted to hold onto resources rather than spend money on fighting the survey work.
 
"The article also didn't offer any funding for fighting the survey," said Chairman Channing Gibson. "The legal right to survey is likely going to trump any effort to fight it."
 
Selectman Dave Roche agreed.
 
"We are a town of limited resources. The money we do have I would like to see be used to oppose the pipeline itself," he said. "We will never get them not to be able to survey."
 
The board also reviewed a letter Selectman Warren Archey, a former state forester, is writing to the state asking for an environmental study to be done.
 
"We need to see that environmental impact done in a very professional way," Archey said, adding that he wants state Rep. William "Smitty" Pignatelli and state Sen. Benjamin Downing to "back" the town in it.
 
Archey said he wants the company to look for a different route because he has concerns over water quality and the dangers with a "failure" in the pipes. Gibson added the size of the pipe is concerning as well.
 
With an exact route undermined, the board is waiting to take any further action and is allowing the company to survey. Once the company proposes a route, the Selectmen say they will be ready to fight.
 
"I need to know where the fight is before I show up for it," Selectman Ken Fowler said.
 
Roche voiced similar thoughts in saying, "I'd be in favor of fighting this thing tooth and nail. But fighting it when we know where it is going to go."
 
At town meeting, discussion did circle around fracking, or high-pressure fracturing of shale to release natural gas, and what the town's position should be. The Selectmen said that is a bigger scope of issues than what the town is facing right now. Gibson said 92 percent of the town's gas is fracked, so trying to reverse that isn't in the town's best interest, while opposing the pipeline is.
 
"We're not going to let anything slip through the cracks," Gibson said, assuring those who petitioned against the pipeline that the selectmen are watching the progress closely.

Tags: gas pipeline,   natural gas,   

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Lenox Library Lecture Series to Feature Mark Volpe

LENOX, Mass. — Lenox Library will conclude the 2023-2024 season of its Distinguished Lecture Series this Sunday, April 21, 2024 at 4:00 p.m. when Mark Volpe, former President and Chief Operating Officer of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, will discuss "My 23 Years at the Boston Symphony Orchestra."

During his near-quarter-century with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Mark Volpe distinguished himself among orchestral administrators the world over.?He was responsible for all the activities of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Boston Pops Orchestra, and Tanglewood, a scope of activities unmatched by any other orchestra in the world.?He drove the BSO’s artistic mission of musical excellence by bringing the BSO to the widest possible audience through live performances, traditional and new media, and a variety of social media platforms. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Mark worked tirelessly to lead the BSO through the most challenging period in its history.

Now in its 17th season, the Distinguished Lecture Series is organized and hosted by Dr. Jeremy Yudkin, a resident of the Berkshires and Professor of Music and Co-Director of the Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University. Lectures are free and open to the public. Please visit https://lenoxlib.org or the Library's Facebook page for more information.

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