PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The city recouped slightly more than $800,000 in back taxes ahead of Thursday's tax lien auction.
Director of Finance Matthew Kerwood said the owners of nearly 500 properties with tax liens were sent notification of the upcoming auction and 156 owners came to City Hall to settle the debts.
Kerwood said the liens on 86 properties were paid in full resulting in an immediate revenue boost of about $575,000 and 70 other payment plans were set up — reeling about another $240,000 in back taxes. The exact figures were changing even as late as Wednesday afternoon with owners still making arrangments.
"There were in excess of 470 properties that received the inial notification," Kerwood said.
The new payment plans are also expected to result in $115,000 worth of additional revenue per month. Those 156 properties are now safe from the auction but some 300 liens will be auctioned Thursday afternoon.
"Not all of them will sell," Kerwood said.
The auction isn't for the properties themselves but instead for the right to collect the back taxes owed. Collection companies and investors will purchase the liens and thus take over the collection responsibilities -- as well as the legal right to foreclose if there is continued non-payment.
Kerwood said three bidders have already signed up to partake in the auction online and some 35 total packages have been downloaded. Those physically going to City Hall on Thursday for the auction don't have to be registered ahead of time so exactly how many companies participate won't be known until it happens.
Kerwood said one particular company had purchased numerous liens in 2015 and has again expressed interested in purchasing more this time too, a promising sign for auction day.
The effort is aimed to recoup back taxes without going through the lengthy land court process to foreclose on a property and then resell it. In total, the city is owed about $6.8 million in principal for back taxes and about $5.7 million in interest.
"They are both sound strategies. This particular strategy removes us from the process of having to go to foreclosure. We are paid for the lien immediately so our outstanding receivable is paid and we don't have to move to the process of foreclosure," Kerwood said.
"We don't really want to be property owners in the grand scheme of things. We want to see these individuals who have outstanding taxes to have payment plans."
The city, working with Strategic Auction Alliance, placed many of those outstanding liens for auction on Thursday at 1 p.m. while giving property owners a chance to catch up ahead of time. Kerwood said the remaining 300 or so liens are being sold individually and are not being bundled.
But it doesn't represent all of the back taxes owed to the city.
"Anybody who was in an existing payment plan was not subject to the auction. The others not on the initial list were ones that we are currently going through land court or we knew there was a bankruptcy," Kerwood said.
Some of those hitting the auction block are already anticipated not to sell. Kerwood said the city opted to include some properties known as "land of low value."
"For the most part these land of low values are little lots, vacant lots, some of them have demo liens and some of them don't. They are just little orphan pieces of properties that whoever owned it basically walked away from it. We get a fair amount of interest about these properties primarily from abutters," Kerwood said.
Following the auction, the city plans to document a list of those properties and look for the Department of Revenue to rule that the city will never recoup what is owed. The city could then be granted those lots, which could be later auctioned, giving neighbors a chance to buy the land at or below assessed value.
Those attending the auction likely already know which liens those are because investors spend a fair amount of time researching ahead of the auction and are putting $15,000 down just to participate.
"They are investors. Before they bid on these liens there is a whole lot of legal work to make sure the paper trail is in order," Kerwood said.
The city last held an auction in 2015 - the first for the city - and reeled in $1.2 million ahead of time and then another $667,000 at auction. That brought in about 20 percent of the total back taxes at the time. The money goes to the city's general fund.
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Licensing Board OK'd alterations for several local businesses during its last meeting of the year on Monday.
This includes an amendment to the Berkshire Museum's entertainment license in advance of its reopening after capital improvements, a change of license category for Hot Plate Brewing Co., and a change of catering company for Berkshire Hills Country Club.
It's been a good year for Hot Plate, as they were nominated No. 3 in USA Today's list of "Best New Brewery," and can now serve all alcoholic beverages. Because of a new state law, businesses can trade an existing beer and wine license for an all-alcohol license.
"The state saw this as an opportunity to enhance businesses all across the commonwealth of Massachusetts," Chair Thomas Campoli explained.
Executive Director Kimberley Bush Tomio explained that there are no proposed changes in entertainment from the former license, and board members suggested moving the license's hours later than 5 p.m. in case of an event at the museum.
"It's going to be phenomenal when we get open," she said. "And we do hope to help support the museum through rentals and things like that, so it's helpful to have this license in place."
Berkshire Hills Country Club will have a new in-house food provider, as the board approved a management agreement with Berkshire Hospitality Group, which operates the restaurant at Shire Breu-Haus in Dalton.
Welcome the New Year by celebrating with others at events marking the beginning of 2026, including live music, skiing, fireworks, and numerous parties.
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In 2025, the city remained challenged by the homelessness crisis, though the development of new supportive housing offered a promising outlook. click for more
The ribbon was cut on Thursday Dec. 19, on nearly 40 supportive permanent housing units; nine at The First, located within the Zion Lutheran Church, and 28 on West Housatonic Street. click for more