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The Community Preservation Committee is supporting further efforts to re-create a beach at Pontoosuc Lake.

Pittsfield Seeking New Location For Pontoosuc Lake Beach

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Community Preservation Committee has given the city its blessing to continue working toward a Pontoosuc Lake beach.
 
Parks and Open Spaces Manager James McGrath asked the committee Monday for permission to spend down the balance of the city's Community Preservation Funds to find a new location for the beach.
 
"I think it is just too important to the city and is a valuable park space," McGrath said. "This is a site that I think is not living up to its full potential and, at one point in time, that was a premier location."
 
Over a year ago, Friends of Pontoosuc Lake were approved for $15,000 from the Community Preservation Act funds to re-establish a city beach at Pontoosuc Lake Park. 
 
McGrath said the city hired SK Design Group to look at drainage issues that have deteriorated the city beach over the years.
 
"It was a very popular spot where there was in fact a lifeguard station and a changing hut and a series of docks but over time a lot of that went away," he said. "What we were left with was simply an old beach at the bottom of an old staircase … there is no more and over time this was taken over as grass and maintained as grass.
 
McGrath said the project would help the city understand drainage issues that led to the deterioration of the beach. He said the study would inform new drainage that could intercept the water and drain off in the lake and dry up the area.  
 
SK design did some survey work but ultimately it was found that the proposed beach, which is about 200 feet long, is now a wetland and therefore has to follow wetland restrictions.
 
"There are now rules that prohibit us from converting this back into a beach," McGrath said. "It would be the taking of a wetland so we are sort of at a stopping point.
 
There are two ways in which the project can go: forget about it or look for a new location along the waterfront.
 
McGrath said if allowed to go forward, they would ask permission to spend the remaining $12,000 to continue survey work along the shore in hopes of finding a new location that could support a public beach.
 
The new beach would have to be connected to the established parking area and thought is for looking eastward to avoid the busy channel.
 
SK Design would work with the city to get as far as possible in the development of the park with the remaining money. McGrath said additional funds would be sought if needed through another competitive application. 
 
He was asked if there was any interest in letting the area simply stay a wetland and letting it turn into an ecological site. McGrath said the future of this plot is still unknown and this could be looked at. But first, he said, a conversation needs to be had with the community and the Parks Commission. To continue surveying the land would begin this conversation. 
 
People continue to fish, swim, and launch boats from the grassy area and Chairman John Dickson said even if the activity was prohibited there, he thought people would continue doing what they have been doing for years and utilizing the water access. 
 
McGrath agreed and said this beach and Burbank Park are probably the most utilized parks in the city during the summer and he felt developing some kind of beach on Pontoosuc Lake would greatly improve the resource. 
 
"People are not spending the afternoon here at a sandy beach because we don't have that so maybe it is just more undeveloped," he said. "But the views from this location are some of the best in the city over the lake. They can't be beat there is a lot of potential at this park."
 
The committee unanimously approved the request to continue study and design work.

Tags: parks & rec,   Pontoosuc,   

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EPA Lays Out Draft Plan for PCB Remediation in Pittsfield

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

Ward 4 Councilor James Conant requested the meeting be held at Herberg Middle School as his ward will be most affected. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — U.S. The Environmental Protection Agency and General Electric have a preliminary plan to remediate polychlorinated biphenyls from the city's Rest of River stretch by 2032.

"We're going to implement the remedy, move on, and in five years we can be done with the majority of the issues in Pittsfield," Project Manager Dean Tagliaferro said during a hearing on Wednesday.

"The goal is to restore the (Housatonic) river, make the river an asset. Right now, it's a liability."

The PCB-polluted "Rest of River" stretches nearly 125 miles from the confluence of the East and West Branches of the river in Pittsfield to the end of Reach 16 just before Long Island Sound in Connecticut.  The city's five-mile reach, 5A, goes from the confluence to the wastewater treatment plant and includes river channels, banks, backwaters, and 325 acres of floodplains.

The event was held at Herberg Middle School, as Ward 4 Councilor James Conant wanted to ensure that the residents who will be most affected by the cleanup didn't have to travel far.

Conant emphasized that "nothing is set in actual stone" and it will not be solidified for many months.

In February 2020, the Rest of River settlement agreement that outlines the continued cleanup was signed by the U.S. EPA, GE, the state, the city of Pittsfield, the towns of Lenox, Lee, Stockbridge, Great Barrington, and Sheffield, and other interested parties.

Remediation has been in progress since the 1970s, including 27 cleanups. The remedy settled in 2020 includes the removal of one million cubic yards of contaminated sediment and floodplain soils, an 89 percent reduction of downstream transport of PCBs, an upland disposal facility located near Woods Pond (which has been contested by Southern Berkshire residents) as well as offsite disposal, and the removal of two dams.

The estimated cost is about $576 million and will take about 13 years to complete once construction begins.

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