Squirrel Raccoon Responsible for North Adams, Rte. 2 Outage

Staff ReportsiBerkshires
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Update: The North Adams Transcript reported on Friday, April, 8, 2011, that last weekend's power outage was caused by a raccoon. We'd heard  that, too, and specifically asked the spokesman about it but were given the answer of squirrel. According to a different National Grid spokesman, the Transcript was told the raccoon "was able to get around the barriers and into the higher voltage area."

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — A squirrel is responsible for the power outage on Saturday night that left some 1,400 customers in North Adams in the dark for nearly two hours, including Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts.

National Grid spokesman David Graves said a squirrel got into a substation on Walker Street and damaged a piece of equipment. Some 28 customers in Clarksburg near the substation and another 410 along Route 2 in Florida were also affected. Power was restored at 11:27 p.m.

"All substations are equipped with anti-animal protections but squirrels can get into just about anywhere they want to go to get to a food source," said Graves.

The nosy critters are frequent disruptors of power service and have an uncanny ability to get into places they don't belong. A Google search on "squirrels power outages" returned 241,000 results in 0.14 seconds. A 2007 USA Today article (cutely named "Suicide squirrels driving utilities nuts") says the acrobatic rodents cost utitilies millions every year in equipment and manpower.

Three weeks ago, an errant crow apparently caused an arc at a substation in Greylock that cut off power to 7,000 customers in the city's West End and along Route 7 south on Saturday morning.


North Adams East End, Route 2 In The Dark
10:16PM / Saturday, April 02, 2011


NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Nearly 2,000 National Grid customers are out of power in sections of the city and as far east as Drury along Route 2.

Power went out about 9:45 p.m. on Saturday; several customers on the east side of the city reported hearing a loud bang before the lights went out. National Grid's website says power is not expected to be back on until midnight. No further information was immediately available; if our readers have any information they are welcome to post here or at Facebook.com/iBerkshires.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Clarksburg School Pressed to Find More Savings for Fiscal 2027

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Clarksburg Town Administrator Ronald Boucher says the town's ability to levy more taxes is severely limited and he doesn't want to go to an override vote. 
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — School officials are looking at the elimination of three teaching assistants, prekindergarten for 3-year-olds and a two part-time positions to reduce the fiscal 2027 budget. 
 
Business Manager Jordan Rennell on Thursday went through the latest draft of the budget during a joint meeting of the School Committee, Select Board and Finance Committee, explaining the figures behind a projected spending plan of $3,299,206, up $213,563 or 6.92 percent over this year. 
 
"This budget reflects what has changed since March, when I showed you a 6.8 [percent]," said Rennell to a packed classroom of residents and teachers. "Unfortunately, it went to 6.9 [percent]."
 
Rennell, who's new in the position, explained before she could even begin comparing this year's and next year's budget, there was a $151,000 difference "between what we voted on and what we needed to survive."
 
The bulk of that was employee health insurance, which has become a major factor in school and municipal budgets across the state. 
 
"I took those true numbers from FY26 and I dumped them into FY27 and if we kept everything the same, every program, every teacher, every TA, the same our bottom line budget would increase 11.2 percent," she said. "Between the collaborative work between the town and the principal and Superintendent [John] Franzoni and all of the pieces of the puzzle, we were able to make some hard, gut-wrenching cuts that got us to that 6.9 percent."
 
That includes Rennell's former position as the preK 3 teacher, the three assistants, a 0.2 speech position and a 0.2 occupational therapy assistant. 
 
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