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An architect's rendering of the exterior of the proposed new Wahconah Regional High School.

Wahconah Regional School Project Goes to Voters Saturday

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The co-chairman of the Central Berkshire Regional School District said this week that he believes voters in the seven-town district will back a proposal to build a new Wahconah Regional High School.
 
"My level of confidence on the Saturday vote is more positive than not," Tom Callahan, a Dalton resident, said. "Our committee understands the differing opinions and financial capabilities in the CBRSD. When all is said and done, speaking for myself, I believe the voters will opt for a new high school."
 
Voters in all seven Central Berkshire towns head to the polls on Saturday to decide whether to embark on a $72 million project.
 
The vote is the culmination of years of efforts by school officials and would keep the district in line for an estimated $31 million in state aid. It would allow the district to replace a building that forces teachers and students to "work around" its deficiencies with a structure that will meet the needs of 21st-century education, according to the district's superintendent.
 
But the building project is not without its detractors, including all five members of the Finance Committee in Dalton, by far the district's largest community, who last month voted against recommending the project to voters.
 
Town boards in the district have split on the issue. The Dalton Select Board, for example, voted 4-1 in favor of the project.
 
The voters will have the ultimate say, in the first of what could be a two-stage vote in the member towns. A positive vote on Saturday will commit the district to the new Wahconah, with an estimated local price tag of about $42 million, after the Massachusetts School Building Authority determines its ultimate level of participation.
 
If a majority of the district's voters favor the project, the individual towns later will have the option to hold a separate debt exclusion vote to allow tax increases above the 2.5 percent limit allowed by 1980's Proposition 2 1/2. Unlike 2 1/2, the debt exclusion is specific to borrowing for the school project and will end when the debt is paid. 
 
Wahconah could be the latest in a recent spate of high school building projects in the county over the last decade, starting with Cheshire's Hoosac Valley in 2011 and continuing with Taconic in Pittsfield and Mount Greylock in Williamstown, each of which opened the doors to new facilities in the fall of 2018. Another proposed building project, in the Berkshire Hills Regional School District (Monument Mountain) was defeated by the voters in 2014.
 
Of the three successful projects, Wahconah's proposal is most like Taconic's in that it would be entirely a new build. Hoosac Valley was a full renovation; Mount Greylock went the route of an addition/renovation project that preserved parts of its 1960 building while constructing a new three-story academic wing.
 
At Wahconah, officials are looking to build a two-story school that will offer more academic space with a reduced footprint, Superintendent Laurie Casna told the Dalton Finance Committee at its March 20 meeting.
 
That panel peppered Casna and other district officials with questions about the building plan before ultimately voting, one night later, that a projected $1 million annual capital cost for 30 years is more than Dalton's taxpayers can incur.
 
"I've run some rough numbers, and … a $210,000 home will pay somewhere around $4,700 a year in taxes [if district builds a new high school]," Dalton Fin Comm Chair William Drosehn said in a meeting viewable on the Dalton Community Television Youtube channel. "They're presently paying just under $4,000 a year right now. It's a sizable amount of money.
 
"I think a new school is a great idea. Unfortunately, considering the climate we're in, I don't think the timing is very good at this point — being fiscally responsible. I'm the chairman of the Finance Committee, and I guess the town voters have charged me with being fiscally responsible."
 
Advocates for a new high school counter that it would be nearly as expensive for the district to not build a new building.
 
CBRSD Assistant Superintendent Melissa Falkowski told the Dalton Finance Committee the estimated cost for base repairs to the current Wahconah would total about $45.6 million. A new roof and HVAC system alone are estimated to cost about $9 million.
 
And the base repair approach would leave the district with a building that still does not meet Wahconah's academic needs, Falkowski and Casna told the Finance Committee.
 
One Fin Comm member asked whether the district could fund its base repairs through the MSBA's accelerated repairs program, a separate track than the building project program in which the district currently participates.
 
The school officials said that such a grant for repairs is theoretically possible but unlikely.
 
"What we've been advised by our project manager and design team is: When [MSBA has] identified a building as in need of full repair, you're not their favorite candidate for accelerated repair," Casna said.
 
"The building has been flagged as a full-repair building," Falkowski continued. "The MSBA is not going to take tax dollars and put it into a building that's not going to withstand the life of a roof or the life of a building."
 
The MSBA is funded by 1 cent of the commonwealth's 6.25 percent sales tax. The authority funds building projects and repairs with school districts throughout Massachusetts.
 
Prior to the Dalton Fin Comm's March 21 vote against recommending the Wahconah building project to voters, Drosehn suggested that the MSBA's reimbursement rate to Pittsfield for the Taconic project was higher than the rate anticipated in Central Berkshire because Taconic's project was more urgent than the one proposed at Wahconah.
 
"Part of the reason Taconic did so well — first off, it was the kind of community," Drosehn said. "And the other, as I understand it, there were structural problems with that school. The school was literally sinking. So there was a real problem. And I'm kind of thinking maybe Wahconah doesn't have those kinds of problems. There's a level of urgency, and I think MSBA takes that into account.
 
"I'm kind of thinking that's where the MSBA is coming from. When you put that kind of spin on it … I wouldn't blame them for coming from that viewpoint. There are a lot of other schools with a lot bigger problems. [Wahconah] needs work. There's no denying Wahconah needs some repairs. I know we're going to have to spend money on it, I get it."
 
In fact, the MSBA website cites Massachusetts General Law, Chapter 70B, Section 10, which lays out three factors the authority can use in adjusting reimbursement: the community's per capita income, the community's equalized property valuations and the community's proportion of low-income students (typically measured by students on free and reduced lunch).
 
In other words, MSBA's reimbursement level is based on economic conditions of the municipality (or municipalities, in the case of a multi-town district like CBRSD). There is no mention of the condition of existing buildings factoring into the equation.
 
And school officials say the problems at Wahconah go beyond the need for "some repairs." The school needs to be replaced, they say, because the current building's design does not meet the educational needs of the district.
 
Casna, the superintendent, began her presentation to the Finance Committee by talking not about finances but about the pedagogical concerns that drive the district's design for a new building.
 
"One of the driving factors was a visioning session that took place over the course of two days last winter," she said. "What does the building need to do for our children … and, as a result, what does it need to look like? MSBA requires that you submit that education plan, have it approved and have it drive everything you do. Our education plan is supported by the building that has been brought forward.
 
"The feeling right now is that there's a lot of effort that goes into working around the [old] building. This [proposed new Wahconah] is a building that facilitates the work."
 
Polls will be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday in all the Central Berkshire Regional School District towns. More information about the proposed project is available here.

Tags: MSBA,   school project,   Wahconah,   

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Companion Corner: Glo at the Berkshire Humane Society

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — There's a sweet and playful dog at the Berkshire Humane Society waiting for her new family.

iBerkshire's Companion Corner is a weekly series spotlighting an animal in our local shelters that is ready to find a home.

"Glo is about a one-year-old, sweet female pitty mix who has nothing but love to give," said kennel supervisor Stacey Broderick.

Glo has been at the shelter for about three weeks after unfortunately being kicked out of her previous home.

"She came here because her previous home, she was being crated an awful lot, and unfortunately, was creating a little bit of a raucous when she was left by herself," said Broderick. "So she was just being a little barky, a little loud. Neighbors obviously shared walls in an apartment setting we're complaining to the landlord, and the landlord said, unfortunately, that she had to go."

But since coming to the shelter she has been learning a lot.

"She's been nothing but a sweet little girl ever since she is working on crate training, she has been very good for us. We're practicing it with her. She is also working on her house training. In addition to it, it seems that we had a little bit of a reverse situation going on, where she likes to go potties inside, but we are working very hard, and she is learning so quickly," she said. "So even after just a couple weeks with us, she's been really getting the point to go outside and do all of her potties out there."

She would do best in the home as the only dog and possibly without cats. She would also do best with older children who can understand her needs as she needs less activity than other dogs.

"The perfect home would, because of the necessity for her to have a lower activity level, probably without other dogs, just because she can get a little bit rambunctious when she gets excited around them," Broderick said. "So she could certainly have doggie play dates, but her perfect home would be no dogs. Unfortunately, we do have a bit of a prey drive with kitty cats, so probably leaning away from the cats, unless they're incredibly dog savvy ...

"Probably looking toward a home without super young kids, just so they're not jumping, you know, or leaning, or anything along those lines, and understanding that sometimes she's going to just need a break."

Because of a medical condition she wouldn't be able to go on long hikes or do anything extraneous but she is still very active and playful.

"She is absolutely lovely. She's sweet, she's young, she's playful. She wants to be with her people all the time. She loves toys. She does like going out for walks. We do have a couple of medical things that we can certainly give more information to adopters, too," she said. "We have some hip dysplasia that we're looking at, so probably moderate activity level would be best for her.

"She shouldn't necessarily be going on super long hikes, even though she would love to, but she is young and full of life and full of energy, and wants nothing more than to be with her people."

Since Glo has hip dysplasia she will need to maintain a healthy weight to not add stress to her joints and can also benefit from hydrotherapy.

"It's something that somebody will have to have a good relationship with a veterinarian physical therapists, and then if they were interested in doing a hydrotherapy type situation, it can only help her," Broderick said. "We want to keep those muscles built up in the hind end so that her hips are not taking the brunt of the bone on bone action while she is kind of living out her very best life."

Glo hasn't shown any symptoms or difficulties since being at the shelter, but it is a condition that her owners need to understand and it increases her chances of arthritis as she gets older.

Broderick said Fritters Critters in Lee specializes in pet hydrotherapy.

"They basically work on an underwater treadmill. So that's walking under the water so that she has a little bit of resistance and the water is warm, so that it's optimum for therapeutic benefits," she said. "They do have a pool there, too, where she would be able to do some swimming, and it really gives her the ability to exercise and really extend those joints and build up those muscles without the added pressure of gravity and impact as she's walking or playing or running.

"So the hydrotherapy is a great option for dogs, even if you just want to do it for fun. She could really benefit healthwise, from it, too."

She will also have to stay on her joint mobility food to help her.

But Glo is a very happy and playful dog and loves everyone she sees and is hoping to find someone who will love her just as much to take her home.

"I can't say enough good about her. I know that the hip dysplasia sounds like a scary piece of it, as well as the house training," Broderick said. "But honestly, there was not a friendlier, sweeter, more outgoing, social, wants to be best friends with you, kind of dog. She was in the front lobby this past Saturday, and she met like 10 people at the same time, and just made rounds and loved every single person as they came in."

You can visit Glo at the Berkshire Humane Society and read more about her on the website.

The Berkshire Humane Society is open Tuesday through Sunday. The adoption center is open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday, and 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday.

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