Adams Planning to Sell Old Community Center Building

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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The Selectmen agreed to begin the process of selling off the old community center as soon as possible.

ADAMS, Mass. — The Selectmen have agreed to begin drafting a request for proposals for the current Adams Youth Center property at 20 East St.

The Youth Center hopes to move into the Memorial Middle School once the heating and ventilation system is has been replaced.

The town determined several years ago to divest itself of the East Street Community Center. The Council on Aging, which had shared the building with the Youth Center, removed to the Visitors Center more than two years ago.

Town Administrator Anthony Mazzucco asked the Selectmen at Wednesday's workshop meeting if it would be advantageous to get the RFP out as soon as possible.

Whether the school can be occupied is dependent on whether the town receives a $300,000 Community Development Block Grant. Director of Community Development Donna Cesan said the town will not know if until summer if it will receive this money.

Selectman Joseph Nowak said he is hesitant to go forward with the RFP because he does not want to leave the Youth Center without a place to stay if the town does not receive the money needed to make the building habitable.

"I certainly would like to makes sure that the Youth Center has a home before the youth center [building] goes up for sale," he said. "I don't want to push the Youth Center out when they don't have a place to go."

Mazzucco said the RFP process could take six months to a year.

"I think possibly before we have to act, we would hear if we received the money anyways," Mazzucco said. "So I think we just have to make sure we get the two processes to collide together."

Selectman Richard Blanchard said the Youth Center has been offered places to stay temporarily if the school building cannot be used and so it will not be without a home.

Selectmen Arthur "Skip" Harrington said it would be good to get the RFP out as soon as possible because the sale of the community center building could help fund the Memorial School.

The East Street Community Center was once a dormitory attached to a sanitorium for priests and nuns.

The town has attempted to fund the Memorial Building project completely with state and federal grants. After receiving funds to replace the former middle school's roof, the town set its eyes on the final step needed to make the building usable: the HVAC system. Because of this, the process has taken a long time and the town has been waiting for something to nudge the project in a forward direction.

Harrington said if the community center is sold it could help fund the Memorial School project and move the whole process forward faster.

"If we get a buyer, it might help us out getting the chicken ready for the egg or the egg ready for the chicken," Harrington said.

The board also agreed that the building will be hard to sell and it would be best to start as soon as possible.

Cesan said the town could add a condition to the RFP that would allow the Youth Center to occupy the East Street property for an agreed amount of time if the town does not receive the funds for the school building. She said this way the center will have a home until the funds or a temporary location can be found.

"I think there are ways of still getting information to the board and town that … could be very helpful as we go forward with the Memorial building without creating any hardship," Cesan said.

Mazzucco also handed out packets to the board members containing information on all of the town-owned property. He said he would like them to go through them and sort them all into categories in hopes that they can find land they can sell, rehab, develop, or maybe even give away to abutters. He said research will be involved to see why and when the town received the properties.


Tags: Adams Memorial Middle School,   RFP,   youth center,   

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Scholarship Offered to BArT Graduates

ADAMS, Mass. — Graduates of Berkshire Arts & Technology Charter Public School (BArT) who have completed their first year of college are invited to apply for the Julia Bowen Bridge to College Scholarship.
 
The scholarship fund was established in 2017 to honor Julia Bowen, BArT's founding executive director. Through her service to the school, Bowen demonstrated her commitment to supporting all students' successful path to and through college. In this spirit, the scholarship was created by and is managed by the BArT Foundation to provide financial assistance to select BArT alumni through their college career.
 
A scholarship of up to $1,250 will be awarded to a BArT alumnus or alumna who has successfully completed year 1 of college. Assuming successful completion of the school year, the award will be continued through years 2, 3, and 4 and, if need be, 5. The award does NOT need to be used for tuition.
 
Applications may be accessed at https://bit.ly/Bowen2024. The application process includes a narrative about the applicant, how the successful applicant plans to use the Bowen Scholarship to increase the likelihood of college success, and how the applicant has or will support the BArT alumni network or college office.
 
The application deadline is Friday, May 17, 2024.
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