Adams' Group To Add Festival To Thunderbolt Race

By Andy McKeeveriBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
File Photo
Last year, the Thunderbolt crowd decided to get the town's statue of President William McKinley in the mood.
ADAMS, Mass. — A group of volunteers are hoping to build on this year's Thunderbolt Ski Race by adding a winter festival.

For the last few months the Pro Adams group has begun planning "Thunderfest" at the Discover the Berkshires Visitors Center and on Hoosac Street to supplement the historic race. The event will feature both indoors and outdoors events like children's games, a "Taste of Adams" cook off, live music and vendors.

"It's just a natural extension of an already awesome event," David Bissaillon, a member of Pro Adams and co-chairman of the event, said on Wednesday. "It's really an event for the town of Adams to showcase ourselves."

Bissaillon said talks began months ago and things really began to take shape when the town's Events Committee and the Thunderbolt Ski Runners jumped on board to help organize it. Now, the three groups are seeking local businesses, bands, restaurants and organizations to join in the fun.

"We're beginning to reach out to the local business community," Bissaillon said. "We want to showcase our downtown businesses, our restaurants, our taverns."

The race will be held on the morning of Feb. 11 and the Thunderbolt Ski Runners typically hold an evening event,  but in between there is a gap that the group hopes to fill with the festival. From noon until 4, the festival aims to keep the race crowd, which numbers in the thousands, in the downtown.

Bissaillon said he has already begun working on permitting. Part of the presentation was to ask the board members to judge the cook off. The board fully supported the group's efforts and raved about how "wonderful" it was that the group took it upon themselves to organize it.

"Speaking for myself, If there is anything I can do to help — I'll park cars, I've done it before — just ask," Chairman Arthur "Skip" Harrington told Bissaillon. "It's so wonderful that a group of volunteers is doing something positive for the community."

The Pro Adams group formed about a year ago and has taken it upon themselves to help market the town. It consists of about 10 volunteers.

The basic outline of the event has been formed but the details and funding still have to be finalized, Bissaillon said.

The race is a 1.6-mile downhill run that began as a tradition in 1935 when it hosted the state's championship downhill skiing race. The last formal race was help in 1948 but local skiers have resurrected race.

Tags: Thunderbolt,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

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. 

View Full Story

More Adams Stories