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Adams Seeks Input on Hazard Mitigation Plan

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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ADAMS, Mss. — The town's is looking for public input on its completed hazard mitigation draft plan.
 
Interim Town Administrator Donna Cesan told the Selectmen on Wednesday that earlier this week a public meeting was held go over the completed draft.
 
"The draft plan is now complete and it addresses action that can eliminate or reduce the risk to life or property in the event of a natural disaster," she said.
 
Town officials began working on the plan last year after receiving grant funds to bring on the assistance of the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission. Interest in forming the plan was sparked after the two September floods that caused more than $2 million in damage throughout town.
 
These storms only affected Adams so there was little in the way of Federal or Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency grants for which the town could apply. However, with a completed plan, more funding will be available to the town. 
 
"An approved plan is required for a municipality to be eligible for FEMA or MEMA  funding," Cesan said. "It is part of a broader effort to try to get grant funding to address some of the damage that the town received in September."
 
But before the town submits the plan to FEMA it wants input from the public so the draft plan has been posted on the town's website.
 
"Any comments from the board or the public would be appreciated," she said. "We want to make it the best effort possible so the plan will serve the town well."
 
The town will seek input until Feb 12.
 
The selectmen said they were happy that the plan is coming to completion.
 
"I think we have a good jump on this compared to all of the other communities," Selectman Joseph Nowak said. "This is important for us to finish and I think we have done a good job."
 
In other business, the Selectmen heard from members of American Legion Post 160 during public comment about possibly establishing a veteran's property tax work-off program.
 
The plan would work similar to the senior citizen's tax work-off program the town established last year and would allow veterans, who have been honorably discharged, to complete tasks for the town and receive credit toward their property taxes.
 
Seniors ages 60 and above are eligible for the senior program so veterans would have to be under this age to apply for the veteran's tax work off program.
 
The Selectmen liked the idea but had to wait until next meeting to consider the program because it was not officially on the agenda.
 
"I think it is a great way to reach out to help the veterans," Nowak said. "At face value, I think it is a great idea."

Tags: hazard mitigation,   property taxes,   

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Special Minerals Agrees to Pay Adams, River Groups Over River Discharge

Staff ReportsiBerkshires

Adams plans to use the $50,000 it will get in the consent decree toward the removal of the Peck's Road Dam. 
BOSTON — Specialty Minerals is expected to pay $299,000 for a discharge of calcium carbonate into the Hoosic River nearly three years ago in a consent decree with the Attorney General's Office. 
 
The river turned visibly white from Adams to the Vermont state line from the mineral that leaked out from the plant's settling ponds on Howland Avenue in November 2021. 
 
Calcium carbonate, also known as chalk or limestone, is not toxic to humans or animals. However, the sudden discoloration of the water alarmed local officials and environmentalists and prompted an emergency session of the Northern Berkshire Regional Emergency Planning Committee. 
 
"We allege that this company violated its permits, disregarded federal and state law, and put the Hoosic River — a resource cherished by the Adams community — at risk," said AG Andrea Campbell in a statement. "I am grateful for this collaboration with our state agency partners and committed to holding polluters accountable and working to bring resources back to communities disproportionately impacted by environmental harms."   
 
If approved by the U.S. District Court of Massachusetts, the consent decree will require Specialty Minerals to pay a total of $299,000, which includes payments to the town of Adams and three community groups in Northern Berkshire County that will be used to benefit water quality and prevent stormwater impacts. 
 
Once approved, most of the settlement would fund multiple projects to benefit water quality, including infrastructure improvements and native plantings to mitigate stormwater impacts in the Hoosic River Watershed. Specifically, the proposed settlement provides for: 
  • $50,000 to the town of Adams for infrastructure improvements in a tributary of the Hoosic River
  • $50,000 to Hoosic River Revival for stormwater mitigation projects  
  • $50,000 to Hoosic River Watershed Association for a native plant garden and other projects to mitigate stormwater impacts and benefit water quality 
  • $50,000 to Sonrisas to fund invasive plant removal and native plant habitat establishment at Finca Luna Búho, a community land project that centers the voices and prioritizes the decision-making of those living in marginalization. 
It will also provide $30,000 in civil assessments to the state's Natural Heritage Endangered Species Fund and $20,000 in civil penalties for violation of state law, as well as $49,000 to offset the costs of the AG's enforcement efforts. 
 
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