image description
Gov. Maura Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll address the annual Mass Municipal Association on Friday morning.
image description
The goals laid out by Healey and Driscoll were met with cheers and applause.
image description
Mayor Michelle Wu speaks with an MMA member before taking the stage to welcome the gathering.
image description
North Adams Councilor Lisa Blackmer, first vice president of the Massachusetts Municipal Councillors Association, with Pittsfield Chief Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Officer Michael Obasohan, left, and new North Adams Councilor Andrew Fitch.

Healey, Driscoll Announce Local Funding, Municipal Empowerment Act

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story

Professor, author and political commentator Eddie Glaude Jr. gives the keynote address on democracy and race.
BOSTON — Municipal officials were presented a bounty of new measures and funding designed to help cities and towns weather the changing economic conditions.
 
The announcement included raises in unrestricted local aid and Chapter 90 road funds and the filing of a Municipal Empowerment Act to that looks to maintain certain pandemic-era relief, address procurement regulations and raise the caps on local tax options
 
Gov. Maura Healey and Lt. Gov. Kim Driscoll laid out their budgetary and legislative plans to an appreciative audience Friday at the opening of the annual Massachusetts Municipal Association conference. 
 
"We still have revenue growth, but it's not the way it's been," said Healey, with a nod to a falling revenue forecast. "So we recognize that there are real challenges for all of us."
 
The event at the Hynes Convention Center featured the introduction to the broader membership of MMA's new Executive Director Adam Chapdelaine, a welcome from Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, remarks by outgoing President Jill Hai, a Lexington select board member, and a keynote address on democracy and race by Eddie S. Glaude Jr., a writer, commentator and professor of African American Studies at Princeton University. 
 
The conference includes a trade show, workshops and the annual business meeting on Saturday at which John McLaughlin, a Waltham councilor, will be elected president. 
 
Healey and Driscoll displayed their close-knit working relationship, taking turns at the microphone spelling out their plans. Driscoll joked to laughter that they were a little like Amy Poehler and Tina Fey. 
 
The governor said the budget she will be presenting next week will see an increase of 3 percent in unrestricted local aid — above the 2 percent consensus revenue forecast — including $16 million for rural communities. Funding for Community Compact programs will triple at $6 million and a half-million each will go to two programs for promoting careers in municipal finance.
 
Chapter 90 funding will come in at $400 million over two years and supplemental funding at $100 million, Driscoll said, "making sure that we're building more resilient, but tackling those things that we know residents really care about."
 
"Because we know the formula has challenges, we have $24 million in rural road aid," she continued.
 
If they liked those numbers, the lieutenant governor said, they were going to be "very happy" with the next package.
 
"We're pleased to announce today that next week along with the FY25 budget and our Chapter 90 proposal, we will be filing significant act reform to strengthen local government known as the Municipal Empowerment Act," she said. "It is designed to provide local government the resources, the tools and the flexibilities we need locally to try and ease this moment. ... 
 
"This is a packet of really great things I'm super excited to be a part of this effort."
 
The governor said the proposals are a direct result of the many listening sessions held across the state with officials on how some processes and regulations had made it harder to do their work on behalf of citizens. 
 
Among the proposals is a new property tax exemption for seniors with a cost of living adjust; a new look at unfunded liabilities such as other post-employment benefits; integration of regional boards of assessors to address the lack of services in that field; a special valuation of telecom and utility property; easing and streamlining the procurement process in some cases; increasing borrowing on small projects from 30 to 40 years; and addressing "double poles" (when a utility leaves the old pole with the new) which was greeted with whoops and applause.  
 
Revenue generators include increasing the caps for local tax options: up to 7 percent for lodging, 1 percent for meals and 5 percent for motor vehicle excise tax surcharges.
 
"For the first time that I can ever remember in 20 years, we're going to adjust that motor vehicle excise allocation in a way that's going to deliver real dollars for the needs that you have at the local level," said Driscoll, former mayor of Salem.
 
Healey pointed to the large of amount of federal funding being made available through measures like the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act. 
 
"When we started, we said we're going put together a team to make sure we are chasing every single last federal dollar and maximizing everything that we can to bring back to the state and municipalities," she said. "It paid off. In one year alone through that effort We brought back $3 billion."
 
Both officials wore buttons promote the Affordable Homes Act that they and Secretary of Housing and Livable Communities Ed Augustus had testified in favor of on Thursday before the Joint Committee on Housing. Housing has become a focus of the administration with Healey describing the high cost of housing as critical deterrent to workforce development and quality of living.  
 
Driscoll reminded the MMA membership that their support was critical to pushing through these measures. 
 
"It doesn't happen unless we advocate for it. We come together to really showcase how meaningful this is, how important it is," she said. "We're going to need your help together with the whole line."

Tags: driscoll,   healey,   MMA,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Amphibious Toads Procreate in Perplexing Amplexus

By Tor HanseniBerkshires columnist
 

Toads lay their eggs in the spring along the edges of waterways. Photos by Tor Hansen.
My first impressions of toads came about when my father Len Hansen rented a seaside house high on a sand dune in North Truro, Cape Cod back in 1954. 
 
With Cape Cod Bay stretching out to the west, and Twinefield so abundant in wildflowers to the east, North Truro became a naturalist's dream, where I could search for sea shells at the seashore, or chase beetles and butterflies with my trusty green butterfly net. 
 
Twinefield was a treasure trove for wildlife — a vast glacial rolling sandplain shaped by successive glaciers, its sandy soil rich in silicon, thus able to stimulate growth for a diverse biota. A place where in successive years I would expand my insect collection to fill cigar boxes with every order of insects abounding in beach plum, ox-eye daisy and milkweed. During our brief summer vacation there, we boys would exclaim in our excitement, "Oh here is another hoppy toad," one of many Fowler's toads (Bufo woodhousei fowleri ) that inhabited the moist surroundings, at home in the Ammophyla beach grass, thickets of beach plum, bayberry, and black cherry bushes. 
 
They sparkled in rich colors of green amber on beige and reddish tinted warts. Most anurans have those glistening eyes, gold on black irises so beguiling around the dark pupils. Today I reflect on a favorite analogy, the riveting eye suggests a solar eclipse in pictorial aura.
 
In the distinct toad majority in the Outer Cape, Fowler's toads turned up in the most unusual of places. When we Hansens first moved in to rent Riding Lights, we would wash the sand and salt from our feet in the outdoor shower where toads would be drinking and basking in the moisture near my feet. As dusk fades into darkness, the happy surprise would gather under the night lights where moths were fluttering about the front door and the toads would snatch bugs with outstretched tongue.
 
In later years, mother Eleanor added much needed color and variety to Grace's original garden. Our smallest and perhaps most acrobatic butterflies are the skippers, flitting and somersaulting to alight and drink heartily the nectar abounding at yellow sickle-leaved coreopsis and succulent pink live forever sedums of autumn. These hearty late bloomers signaled oases for many fall migrants including painted ladies, red admirals and of course monarchs on there odyssey to over-winter in Mexico. 
 
Our newly found next-door neighbors, the Bergmarks, added a lot to share our zeal for this undiscovered country, and while still in our teens, Billy Atwood, who today is a nuclear physicist in California, suggested we should include the Baltimore checkerspot in our survey, as he too had a keen interest in insects. Still unfamiliar to me then, in later years I would come across a thriving colony in Twinefield, that yielded a rare phenotype checkerspot (Euphydryas phaeton p. superba) that I wrote about featured in The Cape Naturalist ( Museum of Natural History, Brewster Cape Cod 1991). 
 
View Full Story

More North Adams Stories