Letter: Ice Cream Social Raises More Than $400 for Williamstown Youth Center

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To the editor:

Wild Oats Market, a cooperative market in Williamstown, provided the Williamstown Youth Center with a check for $409, representing the proceeds from the co-op’s annual Ice Cream Social, which took place on Saturday, Aug. 1. The market provides the Youth Center with produce at cost throughout the year and has done so for more than a decade.

As a co-op, Wild Oats is in business to serve its members, many of whom are parents whose children have been involved in Youth Center programs. The Youth Center benefits many in the Wild Oats community as well as in the community of North Berkshire County. We’re extremely pleased to make them the recipient of the proceeds from this year’s fundraiser.

The Williamstown Youth Center serves children, adolescents and their families by providing quality educational, athletic, recreational and artistic programs in a safe, well-supervised environment that also provides age-appropriate challenges. Wild Oats Market provides members, customers and the community with local and organic products and healthy options for food and personal and household care. It donates resources to and otherwise supports several worthy community organizations, including the Williamstown Food Pantry and Berkshire Food Project.

 

 

 

Wild Oats General Manager David Durfee
Williamstown

 

 

 

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Williamstown Affordable Housing Trust Hears Objections to Summer Street Proposal

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Neighbors concerned about a proposed subdivision off Summer Street last week raised the specter of a lawsuit against the town and/or Northern Berkshire Habitat for Humanity.
 
"If I'm not mistaken, I think this is kind of a new thing for Williamstown, an affordable housing subdivision of this size that's plunked down in the middle, or the midst of houses in a mature neighborhood," Summer Street resident Christopher Bolton told the Affordable Housing Trust board, reading from a prepared statement, last Wednesday. "I think all of us, the Trust, Habitat, the community, have a vested interest in giving this project the best chance of success that it can have. We all remember subdivisions that have been blocked by neighbors who have become frustrated with the developers and resorted to adversarial legal processes.
 
"But most of us in the neighborhood would welcome this at the right scale if the Trust and Northern Berkshire Habitat would communicate with us and compromise with us and try to address some of our concerns."
 
Bolton and other residents of the neighborhood were invited to speak to the board of the trust, which in 2015 purchased the Summer Street lot along with a parcel at the corner of Cole Avenue and Maple Street with the intent of developing new affordable housing on the vacant lots.
 
Currently, Northern Berkshire Habitat for Humanity, which built two homes at the Cole/Maple property, is developing plans to build up to five single-family homes on the 1.75-acre Summer Street lot. Earlier this month, many of the same would-be neighbors raised objections to the scale of the proposed subdivision and its impact on the neighborhood in front of the Planning Board.
 
The Affordable Housing Trust board heard many of the same arguments at its meeting. It also heard from some voices not heard at the Planning Board session.
 
And the trustees agreed that the developer needs to engage in a three-way conversation with the abutters and the trust, which still owns the land, to develop a plan that is more acceptable to all parties.
 
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