North Adams City Council Will Seat Victor Early

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A new city councilor will be seated within a week of getting elected this November.

The City Council on Tuesday night unanimously approved a recommendation by council President Alan Marden to more swiftly fill the seat left vacant by former Councilor Clark H. Billings through the general election on Nov. 3.

Fifteen candidates, including eight incumbents, are vying for the seats handed to the top nine vote-getters. The newest councilor will be the non-incumbent polling the most votes. Any other new councilors will be sworn in at the first of the year with any incumbents re-elected.

Councilor Gailanne Cariddi said she had been approached by a couple people who didn't want to run but were interested in filling in until the new council was elected.

"I thought it should be that the voting public should fill the seat," said Cariddi. "I think that the public is served best by a full council."

Councilor Ronald Boucher agreed: "If you have a 4-4 vote it's essentially no vote."

Marden said there are only three meetings before the election, and another three afterward. The council is usually sworn in the first week of January.


Billings resigned his seat effective Aug. 29, the same date he retired from Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. He hadn't attended a meeting since May.

The council also accepted a communication from Susan Chilson, president of the North Adams Teachers Association, stating the city had not lived up to the council's desire for open dialogue over the festering health insurance issue.

Chilson, speaking as a representative of the North Adams Public Health Insurance Committee (created by the city's three unions last year in anticipation of joining the state's Group Insurance Commission), said the committee had had one meeting with the city's attorney that went nowhere.

The unions allege the city has been underfunding its self-insurance plan by more than a $1 million over the past few years, effectively raising the raising the employees' premium above 30 percent. Mayor John Barrett III rejected the allegations raised at a City Council meeting in July.

Chilson said the unions wish to see the current state of the so-called insurance trust fund to determine if the city is meeting its obligations.

The council also gave approved the second reading of an order authorizing the mayor to borrow $680,000 toward a school feasibility study.
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SteepleCats Fall to Upper Valley Nighthawks

By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The North Adams SteepleCats were unable to overcome a pair of multi-run innings Friday night at Joe Wolfe Field, falling 5-1 to the Upper Valley Nighthawks.
 
North Adams pitcher Jakob Foster was making his first start after throwing only two innings earlier in the season and looked sharp early. The right-hander struck out two in a scoreless first inning before punching out three more hitters in the second, allowing just a hit batter to reach base.
 
Upper Valley broke through in the third. Alejandro Puig opened the inning with a single before James Love doubled with two outs. A two-run double by Magoulik gave the Nighthawks a 2-0 lead before Foster escaped the frame.
 
The SteepleCats struggled to generate offense against Upper Valley starter Trey Sejnoha, who retired the first nine North Adams hitters in order. Nick Lamelo finally reached in the third, hustling into second on a ball misplayed in right field.
 
North Adams put together its best threat of the game in the fourth. Bobby Stang reached on an error and Nelphie Lopez worked a walk to put two runners aboard. Chris Diaz moved both runners into scoring position with a groundout, but Sejnoha induced a foul fly ball to end the inning and strand both runners.
 
The Nighthawks added to their lead in the fifth. After an error extended the inning, Upper Valley loaded the bases before a hit batter forced home a run. Jake Bell followed with a two-run double, pushing the Nighthawks’ advantage to 5-0.
 
The SteepleCats answered with another opportunity in the bottom half of the inning. Shawn Stephenson and Owen Arias recorded back-to-back infield singles, and a walk to Evan Meier loaded the bases with two outs. Reliever Nick Tamburro entered and escaped the jam with a strikeout, preserving the shutout.
 
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