North Adams Council Holding Public Nuisance Hearing

Staff ReportsiBerkshires
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A building at 160 Eagle St. will be the subject of a public hearing on Tuesday prior to the regular council meeting.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The City Council on Tuesday will hold a public hearing at 7:30 p.m. in the council chambers to determine whether a building in the rear of 160 Eagle St. should be designated a public nuisance.

The residential structure owned by Michael Hernandez is not occupied and is in poor condition.

In the regular meeting to follow the public hearing, Police Officers Brad Vivori, Trevor Manning and Joshua Zustra will be sworn in, as will reserve Officers Jonathan Beaudreau and Nicholas Richards, and reserve firefighters Collin Boucher, Casey Cook, Brad Sacco and Tyler Bolte. The mayor has made a practice of publicly swearing in public safety personnel either officially or ceremonially at City Council meetings.

Also on the agenda is a request to borrow up to $160,000 for technology upgrades, including $78,000 for a new voice over information protocol system for City Hall and Public Safety facilities. The upgrade will allow for caller ID, conferencing, message management, voicemail for all employees and other abilities. According to the mayor's office, the savings will be about $1,200 a month.

Covered in the $160,000 is the replacement of 34 outdated Dell work stations ($20,805); disaster recovery, planning and backup for all IT ($39,911); and faxing over IP, which will allow faxing from every work station ($11,278).

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Tags: agenda,   city council,   IT,   

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North Adams Lifts Boil Water Order for Most of City

Staff Reports
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The city has lifted a boil water order — with several exceptions — that was issued late Monday morning following several water line breaks over the weekend. 
 
As of 2:20 p.m., repairs have been completed, and water tests have shown no presence of total coliform or E. coli bacteria, according to the mayor's office. 
 
However, the state Department of Environmental Protection has continued the boil water requirement for buildings affected by the breaks: 40 Main Street, 10 to 36 American Legion Drive, and 40 American Legion Drive; and 74 to 264 State Road, and 15 to 57 Biltmore Ave.
 
Those areas were directly affected by a water line break on American Legion Drive and one on State Road. 
 
These properties remain under an order to boil water or use bottled water for drinking, making ice, food preparation, brushing teeth, and washing dishes.
 
"Since the initial public notification, we have made repairs and utilized an interconnect between our High and Low Service Areas, increasing pressures throughout the system. Bacteria samples were collected on December 15, 2025, at areas affected by low pressure," a statement from the Water Department reads. 
 
"Repairs are underway to restore water to the remaining affected areas. Bacteria samples will be collected once water is restored. We will notify these affected areas when it is no longer necessary to use boiled or bottled water."
 
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