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Clarksburg School Committee members Eric Denette, left, Chairwoman Laura Wood and Cynthia Brule meet under the portico outside the elementary school entrance on Thursday evening.

Clarksburg School Committee Sounds Alarm on Town's Management

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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North Berkshire School Union Superintendent John Franzoni, left, and School Committee Secretary Ronna Brandt follow Thursday's meeting. Franzoni raised the alarm about the management of the town of Clarksburg and how it is affecting the town school. 
 
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The School Committee on Thursday decided to ask the Select Board to hold a joint meeting to discuss recent turmoil at Town Hall, its impact on the elementary school and what is being done to bring stability back to town government.
 
North Berkshire School Union Superintendent John Franzoni gave the committee an update on the situation in light of recent revelations of problems maintaining the town's books.
 
"I'm an employee of Clarksburg, and I'm concerned about my position, to be truthful," Franzoni said. "It's definitely a tenuous situation, and it needs to be discussed more openly. We appreciate that they're trying, but we need more."
 
Franzoni said the people in town government who have had the most interaction with the district office the last couple of years have not been reachable over the last month.
 
"The more important person is the town administrator," Franzoni said. "That's the person in charge of the day-to-day duties in Town Hall. That person's not there and hasn't been there for over three weeks. What is the town going to do?"
 
Town Administrator Rebecca Stone was berated by the chair of the Select Board over inefficiency at Town Hall at an August meeting and left the room mid-meeting. That chair, Ronald Boucher, resigned from the board on Sept. 2. On Wednesday, the remaining two Select Board members held an executive session to discuss negotiations with the town administrator.
 
Meanwhile, the town has engaged an outside consultant to try to put the town's books in order.
 
On Thursday, Franzoni told the School Committee that he consulted the school district's counsel about what steps, if any, the School Committee could take to get answers from the Select Board about the state of town governance.
 
"Adam Dupere said there can be a request for information from residents, the School Committee, the library, whoever," Franzoni said. "You can say, as town residents, we're requesting a meeting to discuss the situation."
 
School Committee Chair Laura Wood said she would reach out to Select Board Chair Danielle Luchi about arranging a meeting.
 
Residents speaking from the floor of Thursday's meeting and members of the School Committee agreed that such a meeting needs to be held in the evening to allow more participation from the community. The Select Board has held its last few meetings with posted times ranging from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m.
 
"I think there needs to be meetings at night that are being held in the morning all the time so that the town can go there and ask what's going on," Franzoni said. "They have consultants in there working, I think, up to three days a week. [The consultants] have said the problems were a lot bigger than they were led to believe, and they're worried about what the plan is going forward."
 
The problems are having a direct impact on the town's preK-through-8 school.
 
Franzoni said he first became aware in late spring of this year that incorrect payroll deductions were being made from employees' paychecks. In July, he said, "One [employee] said, 'It's a joke. Every week, my paycheck is wrong,'" Franzoni said.
 
•  In early June, anyone with a life insurance policy through the town received a letter on a Friday afternoon saying their life insurance was being canceled because bills were not being paid.
 
 Recently, the school ran into trouble because the town's Amazon account was delinquent. The school was attempting to make purchases against a grant that had to be used by Sept. 1, but, "We were told at the end of August that our Amazon account was not available because the town was not paying the bill."
 
•  Franzoni said the town appears to have no plan to close out the books on fiscal year 2021, which ended on June 30. The school needs that report in order to meet an Oct. 1 deadline to file its financial report with the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.
 
• The school building itself needs renovations to make it compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act and to remove asbestos and address its roof, Franzoni reminded the School Committee. "The town still didn't have a bond rating a year ago, and we're further away from that than ever."
 
 Franzoni said deficiencies with the Clarksburg building are one reason that talk of a merger with the Stamford, Vt., school district stalled, but Clarksburg cannot address the problems in the building if it can't borrow money for needed infrastructure fixes.
 
"This is really a concern about what's going to happen going into the future with all aspects of the town," Franzoni said. "It doesn't just impact the school. It impacts all residents here.
 
"I'm just worried about what's going to happen next with the town because [the Select Board doesn't] have a plan about who is in charge of the Town of Clarksburg."
 
The School Committee chair agreed.
 
"They need to get an interim person as soon as possible," Wood said.
 
"I feel like the message isn't reaching the town. The town should have a meeting like this for people to ask questions."
 
Residents at Thursday's meeting wondered aloud whether the town needs to be placed into receivership by the commonwealth, an idea that Franzoni did not dismiss out of hand.
 
"[NBSU Business Administrator Jennifer Macksey] has shared with me that when she worked for North Adams 20 years ago, she was involved with an audit in Clarksburg where there was a reference to the state taking over, and she said the condition is worse now," Franzoni said. "You can't function without a town administrator."

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State Fire Marshal: New Tracking Tool Identifies 50 Lithium-Ion Battery Fires

STOW, Mass. — The Massachusetts Department of Fire Services' new tool for tracking lithium-ion battery fires has helped to identify 50 such incidents in the past six months, more than double the annual average detected by a national fire data reporting system, said State Fire Marshal Jon M. Davine.
 
The Department of Fire Services launched its Lithium-Ion Battery Fire Investigative Checklist on Oct. 13, 2023. It immediately went into use by the State Police Fire & Explosion Investigation Unit assigned to the State Fire Marshal's office, and local fire departments were urged to adopt it as well. 
 
Developed by the DFS Fire Safety Division, the checklist can be used by fire investigators to gather basic information about fires in which lithium-ion batteries played a part. That information is then entered into a database to identify patterns and trends.
 
"We knew anecdotally that lithium-ion batteries were involved in more fires than the existing data suggested," said State Fire Marshal Davine. "In just the past six months, investigators using this simple checklist have revealed many more incidents than we've seen in prior years."
 
Prior to the checklist, the state's fire service relied on battery fire data reported to the Massachusetts Fire Incident Reporting System (MFIRS), a state-level tool that mirrors and feeds into the National Fire Incident Reporting System (NFIRS). NFIRS tracks battery fires but does not specifically gather data on the types of batteries involved. Some fields do not require the detailed information that Massachusetts officials were seeking, and some fires may be coded according to the type of device involved rather than the type of battery. Moreover, MFIRS reports sometimes take weeks or months to be completed and uploaded.
 
"Investigators using the Lithium-Ion Battery Fire Checklist are getting us better data faster," said State Fire Marshal Davine. "The tool is helpful, but the people using it are the key to its success."
 
From 2019 to 2023, an average of 19.4 lithium-ion battery fires per year were reported to MFIRS – less than half the number identified by investigators using the checklist over the past six months. The increase since last fall could be due to the growing number of consumer devices powered by these batteries, increased attention by local fire investigators, or other factors, State Fire Marshal Davine said. For example, fires that started with another item but impinged upon a battery-powered device, causing it to go into thermal runaway, might not be categorized as a battery fire in MFIRS or NFIRS.
 
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