The truck slid down the small incline and into the building.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The first snowfall of the season in Williamstown got the winter driving season going with a bang on Monday morning when a town vehicle collided with one of Town Hall's neighbors.
No one was injured in the early morning low-speed collision of a town truck that appears to have slipped off the driveway that wraps around the municipal building, down a small incline and into a storage structure adjacent to the Northside Motel.
Town Manager Jason Hoch said the incident happened before his arrival at Town Hall just after 8 a.m.
He was not able to provide many details late Monday morning as he awaited a report from the Williamstown Police Department. He said it was likely the town would be submitting an insurance claim arising out of the accident.
He also noted that there were slick conditions throughout town on Monday morning and that the first freeze and snowfall often can be problematic.
"There isn't even that residual salt [from previous saltings] to help prevent icing," Hoch noted.
Hoch said the vehicle in question was on the road doing water inspections. The area it appears to have slipped from is in the northwest corner of the Town Hall property, which remains well shaded. Hoch said Monday morning he was not sure whether the stretch was salted before or after the accident.
The owner of the motel was not immediately available for comment.
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Hancock Town Meeting Votes to Strike Meme Some Found 'Divisive'
By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
Hancock town meeting members Monday vote on a routine item early in the meeting.
HANCOCK, Mass. — By the narrowest of margins Monday, the annual town meeting voted to strike from the town report messaging that some residents described as, "inflammatory," "divisive" and unwelcoming to new residents.
On a vote of 50-48, the meeting voted to remove the inside cover of the report as it appeared on the town website and in printed versions distributed prior to the meeting and at the elementary school on Monday night.
The text, which appeared to be a reprinted version of an Internet meme, read, "You came here from there because you didn't like it there, and now you want to change here to be like there. You are welcome here, only don't try to make here like there. If you want to make here like there, you shouldn't have left there in the first place."
After the meeting breezed through the first 18 articles on the town meeting warrant agenda with hardly a dissenting vote, a member rose to ask if it would be unreasonable for the meeting to vote to remove the meme under Article 19, the "other business" article.
"No, you cannot remove it," Board of Selectmen Chair Sherman Derby answered immediately.
After it became clear that Moderator Brian Fairbank would entertain discussion about the meme, Derby took the floor to address the issue that has been discussed in town circles since the report was printed earlier this spring.
"Let me tell you about something that happened this year," Derby said. "The School Department got rid of Christmas. And they got rid of Columbus Day. Now it's Indigenous People's Day.
Town meeting voters will be asked Monday to approve a request to change state law in a way that will preserve education at Hancock Elementary School. click for more
The Charter Review Committee on Wednesday voted unanimously to endorse an amended version of the compliance provision it drafted to be added to the Town Charter. click for more
Developer David Traggorth asked the trustees to make the contribution from its coffers to help unlock an additional $5.4 million in state funds for the planned 54-unit apartment building at the south end of the Cable Mills site.
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