News & Notes: No Gas-Tax Hearings in Berkshires

By Larry KratkaBerkshire News Network
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The governor is trying to drum up support for a 19-cent gas tax to help fund transportation reform but the Berkshires won't get a chance to weigh in.

Of the four public sessions planned across the state, the closest is being held in Springfield tonight with Gov. Deval Patrick planning to personally presenting the plan.

A spokesman in the district office of Rep. Joseph Wagner, House chairman of the Joint Committee on Transportation, told the Berkshire News Network that another meeting is scheduled for Methuen but two other locations are currently undetermined. The Berkshire News Network was told that one location could be on the South Shore but it wasn't thought that a meeting would set in the Berkshires.

What support there is for the tax is in the eastern part of the state, which is facing higher turnpike and bridge tolls and rate hikes for the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority.

The Berkshires is the most likely location to object to the governor's proposed gasoline tax. The rural area has minimal public transportation and a short section of the MassPike running through it.

"I will certainly convey that to [Transportation Secretary James A. Aloisi Jr.] that the berkshire should have one especially in light of the fact we are being asked to back the gas tax in an area that doesn't have an alternate form of transportation," said state Rep. William "Smitty" Pignatelli, D-Lenox, speaking with the Berkshire News Network. Berkshires residents are dependent on motor vehicles to get to around or to make a living, he said.

Pignatelli said adding another 19 cents to the gas tax in Massachusetts would make it the highest gas tax in the country. The state already has a 23.5 cent tax; while gas prices have dropped to nearly half that of last summer, they've slowly been creeping back up over the past couple months.

AAA of Southern New England found Monday that self-serve, regular unleaded gasoline was averaging $1.879 per gallon, two cents more than last week. Still, the current price is 6 cents below the national average for self-serve unleaded of $1.93, and the price is $1.20 less than the $3.07 found this time a year ago.


Patrick has said he would veto any gas tax thought too low to fund reforms and prevent toll and T hikes. The MassPike Authority last week OK'ed a $100 million toll hike that would reversed if the gas tax passed.

The tax will be a hard sell in Western Mass., where it's widely seen as just another scheme to pour money into Boston's Big Dig. Aloisi was in Springfield on Tuesday to rally support among Patrick campaign volunteers and rail backers, according to the Republican, with mixed results.

The Springfield session will be held this afternoon at 4 at Springfield College.

BRTA Hearings

Berkshire residents are getting chance to discuss ideas for public transportation in the county in at three public hearings.

The first was held last week in Pittsfield and was attended by about a dozen people. Berkshire Regional Transit Authority Administrator Gary Sheppard told the audience what he thinks people want, including Sunday and evening service.

The next meeting will be tonight at 6:30 at Western Gateway Heritage State Park in the Shippers Office at 115 State St., North Adams. The third will be held at the Mason Library in Great Barrington on Thursday, March 12, at 6:30.
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Multiple Departments Respond to Lanesborough Structure Fire

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Multiple fire departments responded to a structure fire off Narragansett Avenue on Wednesday afternoon. 

The Fire Department received a call from the owner of 6 Bangor St. reporting a smoke and flames at around 1:44 p.m.

Firefighters arriving on scene reported heavy smoke emanating from the the 1940s single-family ranch home in the thickly settle neighborhood.

The blaze was brought under control in less than an hour and there were no civilian or firefighter injuries. 

"The homeowner was outside doing some work, evidently, opened the door when she came back in the house, and there were flames and smoke, so she backed out and called us, and that's all we know right now," Deputy Fire Chief Glen Storie said around 2:35 p.m. 

The fire was out at that time, and first responders observed "quite a bit of damage" to the home. The cause is still under investigation. 

Lanesborough, Cheshire, and Pittsfield departments responded to the scene, and Hancock covered the station during the call. 

"The first crew in knocked the fire right down with the first engine," Storie said. 

Smoke could be seen coming from the back of the home. Part of Narragansett Avenue and Bangor Avenue were blocked off while firefighters battled the blaze. 

 

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