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The board agreed the road needs to be addressed but were concerned about the cost.
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The winding country road is plagued with potholes and no longer has a crown.

Clarksburg Mulling Reconstruction of Horrigan Road

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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City officials say Horrigan Road needs extensive restoration.

CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The town is looking at a bill of between $250,000 and $300,000 to fix the potholed and crumbling Horrigan Road.

Town Administrator Carl McKinney and Highway Foreman Kyle Hurlbut have been fielding complaint calls about the poor condition of the road, including from residents of Stamford, Vt., who use it.

"Basically, it's a complete failure," Hurlbut said, advocating reconstruction over patching he said won't last.  

"I felt I had to come speak to you, the board, because I'm getting hammered [with complaints] out there. I've told people to come to Carl," he said. "My hands are tied."

The town gets about $75,000 in Chapter 90 road funds each year that are quickly eaten up. It's taken several years to raise the $275,000 estimated for the Gates Avenue project that goes out to bid in the next few weeks. Another $275,000 had to be expended from Chapter 90 to fix the East Road Bridge in 2012.

Depending on how much the bid comes in for Gates Avenue, the town anticipates having about $100,000 in the Chapter 90 account next fiscal year.

"How long would we have to save up to do Horrigan Road ... four years?" Hurlbut said. "There's going to be another section of road that needs that ... we can't keep putting this off every year.   

"We're technically going to go back to gravel roads everywhere."

The town has been aware for years that much of its 19 miles of road are in need of serious work. Route 8, River Road, is maintained by the state and has gone through two significant reconstructions between Cross Road and East Road, one because of a collapse caused by Tropical Storm Irene.

West Cross Road is about to undergo a nearly $1 million reconstruction through a MassWorks grant that took years to obtain.

But the other town roads are in critical condition.

A recent Pavement Surface Evaluation and Rating (PASER) report commissioned through the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission found significant issues. The road surface rating system is on a scale of 1 (failed) to 10 (new) based on observation of visible defects.

The majority of the mileage was rated at 6 and under, with Horrigan the worst, followed by West Road, Gates Avenue and a section of Daniels Road.

The map's color coding puts Horrigan at a rating of 3 or 2; both call for full-depth repairs, with a 2 requiring reconstruction with extensive base repairs.


The estimates to reconstruct Horrigan come from calculations made through the state Department of Transportation and a local paving company. The numbers match up, Hurlbut told the Selectmen on Wednesday. It does not include the large culvert at the road's intersection with Middle Road that the Highway Department doesn't want to touch.

After "a very lengthy" discussion with the town's auditor, Thomas Scanlon of Scanlon & Associates, McKinney said the town could take out a five-year debt-exclusion loan to fix Horrigan and use free cash to pay off the library construction loan. He expected to have an email from Scanlon recommending that course.

"We have another 21 years [on the library] and we're paying almost 5 percent," he said. The town's other debts for the landfill and two highway trucks will be paid off within the next four years. "Our town has almost no debt."

McKinney has advocated in the past to pay off the library (about $65,000) and said he understood this would be the start of a conversation with the Finance Committee, which is wary of spending too much free cash.

"It's something we have to take a look at," Selectman William Schrade said. "I'm willing to look at anyway to make it work."

Chairman Jeffrey Levanos thought West Road repairs were "mind boggling" but felt it was more difficult to determine where to begin on that road.

"All of our roads are in terrible shape and Horrigan Road is the place to start," he said.

Selectwoman Linda Reardon said taxpayers had to be informed of the costs and the tax impact.

"If you're going to do something this costly, people will want to know," she said.

McKinney said a rough estimate of paying $50,000 a year would cost property owners somewhere between 50 and 70 cents per $1,000 evaluation. As an exclusion debt, it would be outside Proposition 2 1/2 and only last as long as it took to pay off the debt.

"I'm not an advocate of debt but I think the people need and deserve good roads," he said.

Hurlbut also informed the board that pothole repairs would begin this week with the opening of asphalt plants in Pittsfield and Lenox Dale. North Adams had been able to start earlier because it has a hotbox that allowed it to pick up asphalt in the earlier-opening plant in Deerfield and it had an asphalt recycler.

The recycler runs around $180,000, he said, but the hotbox (which keeps asphalt malleable for up to 48 hours) was $40,000, and something the town could consider budgeting for in the future.

The town received an extra $11,293 from the state for pothole repairs; McKinney said receipts for reimbursement had to be in by June 30.

Road Condition Report, Clarksburg, Mass. by iBerkshires.com


Tags: Chapter 90,   road work,   

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Pittsfield School Committee OKs $82M Budget, $1.5M Cuts

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The school budget is less grim than the original proposal but still requires more than $1.5 million in cuts.

On Thursday, the School Committee approved an $82.8 million spending plan for fiscal year 2025, including a city appropriation of $80.4 million and $2.4 million in Chapter 70 funds.

The cuts made to balance the budget include about 50 staff reductions — some due to the sunsetting of federal Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief funds.

"The final version does not answer all needs. It will be unacceptable to some or to many but I must say that tonight's final proposal is very different than where we started when we believed we would have a $3,600,000 reduction. I want to assure everyone that every effort has been made to minimize the impact on both students, families, and staff members while also ensuring that our district has the necessary resources to progress forward," Superintendent Joseph Curtis said.

"Nevertheless, there are incredibly passionate, dedicated staff members who will not be with us next year. This pains me as I've been a part of this organization for now 30 years so I want to assure everyone that our team, this has weighed very heavily in our hearts, this entire process. This is not a group of people that is looking at a spreadsheet saying ‘Well that can go and this can go’ and take that lightly."

Assistant Superintendent for Business and Finance Kristen Behnke and other officials worked with the state Department of Secondary and Elementary Education to rectify an error in the Chapter 70 funding formula, recognized 11 more low-income students in the district, and added an additional $2.4 million to the FY25 budget.

Curtis commented that when he first saw the governor’s FY25 budget, he was "rather stunned."

"The extraordinary circumstances we face this budget season by the conclusion of the substantial ESSER federal grant and a significant reduction in Chapter 70 allotment caused challenges for this team and our school principals and our educators and our staff that have been nothing short of all-consuming," he said.

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