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Parishioners hear the bad news about St. Stanislaus Kostka in Adams on Sunday morning Mass.

Adams' St. Stan's Facing Short-Term Closure, Long-Term Uncertainty

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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Parishioners mounted a three-year vigil in a successful attempt to keep the church open but black mold in the structure makes its future uncertain.
ADAMS, Mass. — Surrounded by decorations and bright lights in a sanctuary decked out for the Christmas season, the Rev. Barrent Pease delivered a sobering message to parishioners at St. Stanislaus Kostka Mission Church on Sunday morning.
 
The 116-year-old church is facing a short-term closure and its long-term viability is very much in doubt.
 
The immediate problem, Pease reported, is that black mold has been confirmed in the historic Hoosac Street structure.
 
Down the road, the parish is facing repair bills well beyond its means.
 
In fact, Pease expressed doubt that Adams' Roman Catholic community can foot the bill for an estimated $100,000 worth of work needed to address the mold issue, which presents an immediate threat to the health of parishioners.
 
Pease advised that congregants who have respiratory issues immediately should plan to attend Mass in another of the area's churches, and he told attendees at Sunday's 8 a.m. Mass to throw away the face coverings they were wearing after the service because mold spores could become trapped in the masks.
 
The parish is waiting on orders from the town of Adams to temporarily lock the doors to St. Stan's, Pease said in a 15-minute homily given over entirely to issues with the building.
 
In addition to cleaning the black mold already inside the church, the parish would be looking at exterior repairs that include installing a French drain around the perimeter and repairing or even replacing the church roof to prevent moisture from continuing to enter the space, he said.
 
"I don't know how much it's going to cost, but it's going to be expensive," Pease said. "I was told, the best-case scenario, for a project of this size, is going to cost a minimum of $50,000 to $100,000 with removal and remediation.
 
"In addition to that, we have the architectural problems to resolve."
 
Those issues are likely to cost in the neighborhood of $4 million to address, Pease told the congregation.
 
The priest said parish officials have consulted with professional fundraisers who said the faith community likely could raise, at best, $500,000 in a capital campaign, well short of what it would need.
 
The bottom line is that St. Stanislaus Kostka, whose closure parishioners staved off in 2012, likely will not survive indefinitely, Pease said.
 
"Sooner or later, this bad news was going to happen," he said from the pulpit. "It's unfortunate that the mold makes it more immediate."
 
According to a 100-page report from EnviroBiomics Inc., posted on the parish's website, "Potential health effects and symptoms associated with mold exposures include but are not limited to allergic reactions, asthma and other respiratory complaints."
 
A separate report from December 2020 from Amherst architect Kuhn-Riddle details structural work needed at St. Stan's with an estimated price tag of $2.8 million, though, as Pease noted in Sunday's homily, construction costs have risen during the COVID-19 pandemic.
 
Pease called upon parishioners at St. Stan's to join their fellow Catholics at its sister church at the other end of Hoosac Street, Notre Dame. The move would unite Adams' historically Polish-American and French-American communities under one roof; in 2009, Notre Dame and St. Stan's consolidated, along with St. Thomas Aquinas, to form St. John Paul II Parish.
 
"We can't save the building, but we can save the contents — the altar, the statues, the artwork," Pease said. "We can bring those things, once they've been inspected and cleaned to make sure we're not bringing any mold over, to 21 Maple St. ... and combine the legacies of the Polish and French communities so that both legacies survive.
 
"Looking at the future of the church in Adams, the people of St. Stan's are the key to that future. We can choose, and I said this at the 4 o'clock Mass last night [at Notre Dame], we can choose to come together now and survive, or we can choose to remain separate and both communities ... won't make it the next 20 years."

Tags: church,   closure,   st stans,   

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Letter: Progress Means Moving on Paper Mill Cleanup

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor:

Our town is facing a clear choice: move a long-abandoned industrial site toward cleanup and productive use or allow it to remain a deteriorating symbol of inaction.

The Community Development team has applied for a $4 million EPA grant to remediate the former Curtis Mill property, a site that has sat idle for more than two decades. The purpose of this funding is straightforward: address environmental concerns and prepare the property for safe commercial redevelopment that can contribute to our tax base and economic vitality.

Yet opposition has emerged based on arguments that miss the point of what this project is designed to do. We are hearing that basement vats should be preserved, that demolition might create dust, and that the plan is somehow "unimaginative" because it prioritizes cleanup and feasibility over wishful reuse of a contaminated, aging structure.

These objections ignore both the environmental realities of the site and the strict federal requirements tied to this grant funding. Given the condition of most of the site's existing buildings, our engineering firm determined it was not cost-effective to renovate. Without cleanup, no private interest will risk investment in this site now or in the future.

This is not a blank check renovation project. It is an environmental remediation effort governed by safety standards, engineering assessments, and financial constraints. Adding speculative preservation ideas or delaying action risks derailing the very funding that makes cleanup possible in the first place. Without this grant, the likely outcome is not a charming restoration, it is continued vacancy, ongoing deterioration, and zero economic benefit.

For more than 20 years, the property has remained unused. Now, when real funding is within reach to finally address the problem, we should be rallying behind a practical path forward not creating obstacles based on narrow or unrealistic preferences.

I encourage residents to review the proposal materials and understand what is truly at stake. The Adams Board of Selectmen and Community Development staff have done the hard work to put our town in position for this opportunity. That effort deserves support.

Progress sometimes requires letting go of what a building used to be so that the community can gain what it needs to become.

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