Group of Adams Residents Takes on Marketing Town

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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Selectmen Scott Nichols, Paula Melville and Arthur Harrington hold up a brochure on Adams for the camera.
ADAMS, Mass. — A dozen residents are transforming talk into action by implementing ways to promote Adams as a great place to live.

David Bissaillon told the Selectmen on Wednesday night that the group, ProAdams, grew out of conversations about how to tap into the 500 jobs being added over the next few years by General Dynamics in Pittsfield.

"Our discussions have been pretty informal at this point but we're trying to put together some goals and objectives," said Bissaillon. "Where can we help the town in terms of promoting the town, trying to help the town internally brand itself as the wonderful place to live that we know it is."

The group's first effort is brochure detailing the town's highlights, activities, educational opportunities and community events and offering a personal tour. Bissaillon said the brochure, designed by group member Dayne Poirot, is being included in packets being given to General Dynamic interviewees.

"We want to work with the town and find ways to put our money where our mouth is," said Bissaillon, who added that the group has been in contact with Town Administrator Jonathan Butler and the Office of Community Development on how private citizens can help the town.

"I just think it's really good," said Butler, who added he'd met with group members a few times. "Marketing is an extremely expensive thing for towns to endeavor to do. The people who have put this together have a a lot of expertise across a lot of disciplines and I think it's going to be a great resource."

Chairman Michael Ouellette termed the volunteer group as "fantastic" and Selectman Arthur "Skip" Harrington applauded its efforts and the professionalism of the brochure.

ProAdams will soon have a website and Facebook page, and be on YouTube, Twitter and Linked In.


Member Steven Melito said a community clean up day is being planned for May and there will be opportunities for others to get involved.

"Together, I really feel we can make Adams a much better place for everyone," said Melito. "Whether you're young or old, no matter where you work, whether you've been here for a long time or whether you're new to town."

In other business,

• Town Clerk Haley Meczywor said dog licenses are available at $8 for neutered dogs; $20 for nonneutered. A rabies clinic will be held from 9 to noon on Saturday, April 9, at the Forest Wardens on Summer Street and on Saturday, April 16, also from 9 to noon at the North Adams Fire Department.

• The deadline to register to vote in the town election is April 12; the Board of Registrars will be available until 8 that evening.

•  Jeffrey Lefebvre said the Maple Grove Civic Club will hold a candidates' forum on Sunday, April 17, at 3 p.m. at the Polish National Alliance. The public and any candidate for office are invited to attend.

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Cheshire Looks to AG's Office for Blighted Property Help

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

CHESHIRE, Mass. — The Select Board heard a presentation last week from the state's Neighborhood Renewal Division program that could help rehabilitate two properties condemned by the Board of Health.

Janice Fahey, assistant attorney general for the division, explained program and what it means at last Tuesday's meeting.

"Our mission is to work with cities and towns in order to ensure safer neighborhoods by working with cities and towns to rehabilitate and bring them into compliance with the state sanitary code and to create safe, habitable homes," Fahey said.

At the March 17 meeting, Town Administrator Jennifer Morse said 200 School St. and 73 West Mountain Road were condemned by the Board of Health and a request was sent to the Attorney General's Office Division of Receivership Programs.

The program, active since 1995, has expanded to work with 169 municipal partners and 205 active properties, with 54 active cases in litigation. It has brought $714,000 into city and town coffers through tax and fee recoveries. The process involves identifying properties, conducting inspections, issuing orders to correct violations, and potentially appointing receivers if owners are uncooperative. 

Fahey said the division works with the local board of health to do a title search on who owns the property.

"If the owner is cooperative, then we will just work with them to bring the property up to the sanitary code. And it's uncooperative, we may file a receivership petition. So when first of all, who is a receiver? A receiver can be anyone who has knowledge and capacity to work with a property and bring it up to the sanitary code," she said.

Fahey said the cost to fix property cannot exceed the cost of its  market value as the receiver has to get paid.

"This isn't something that is going to be making the receiver rich. It's kind of going to be something that just basically cleans up the property, gets it rehabbed, gets it back on the tax rolls, and hopefully a family moves in, and there has to be the receiver, has to have funding. Sometimes there are grants that we'll talk about later as well, but in the end there, they have to have some type of ability to get loans or. Fund a project and get insurance as well."

After being appointed by the court, the receiver will do an inspection and create a budget and scope of work. Once property is brought up to standard sanitary code, they ask the court for authority to foreclose on the property to recover what they spent. In some cases, instead of foreclosure, there may be a fair market value sale approved by the court.

Once the property is sold either through auction or sale the town will get paid municipal fees and the unpaid property taxes, then the receiver will get paid.

Fahey said it takes a lot of work and showed pictures of some properties rehabilitated throught the program that she described as a team effort.

"That involves everyone. It involves the city and town. It involves the receiver, certainly, and it takes a lot of people to put this together, and the time range is pretty significant, from a couple of months to a couple of years," she said. 

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