Williamstown Town, Fire Election Nomination Papers Available

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Nomination papers are now available for all the elected town offices that will be on the ballot in the May 10 town election and May 24 Fire District election.
 
Included on the ballot in the town election will be two three-year seats on the Select Board currently held by Jane Patton and Wade Hasty; one three-year term as town moderator, currently held by Adam Filson;
four three-year seats on the Milne Library Board of Trustees; one five-year seat on the Planning Board, held by Chris Winters; and one three-year seat on the Northern Berkshire Vocational Regional School District (McCann Tech) Committee, held by David Westall.
 
The Fire District, a separate municipal entity apart from town government, has two seats up for election on the five-person Prudential Committee that governs the district. Those seats each have a three-year term.
 
Candidates seeking to run for offices in either the town or Fire District election can pick up papers from Town Clerk Nicole Beverly. All signatures on nomination papers must be in ink; no electronic signatures are allowed.
 
Completed nomination papers for the Town Election must be returned by Tuesday, March 22. Completed nomination papers for the Prudential Committee election must be returned by Tuesday, April 5.
 
For information, contact Beverly at nbeverly@williamstownma.gov or call 413-458-3500, ext.101.

Tags: election 2022,   town elections,   

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Williamstown Community Preservation Act Applicants Make Cases to Committee

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Community Preservation Committee on Tuesday heard from six applicants seeking CPA funds from May's annual town meeting, including one grant seeker that was not included in the applications posted on the town's website prior to the meeting.
 
That website included nine applications as of Tuesday evening, with requests totaling just more than $1 million — well over the $624,000 in available Community Preservation Act funds that the committee anticipates being available for fiscal year 2027.
 
A 10th request came from the town's Agricultural Commission, whose proponents made their cases in person to the CPC on Tuesday. The other four are scheduled to give presentations to the committee at its Jan. 27 meeting.
 
Between now and March, the committee will need to decide what, if any, grant requests it will recommend to May's town meeting, where members will have the final say on allocations.
 
Ag Commissioners Sarah Gardner and Brian Cole appeared before the committee to talk about the body's request for $25,000 to create a farmland protection fund.
 
"It would be a fund the commission could use to participate in the exercise of a right of first refusal when Chapter [61] land comes out of chapter status," Gardner explained, alluding to a process that came up most recently when the Select Board assigned the town's right of first refusal to the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation, which ultimately acquired a parcel on Oblong Road that otherwise would have been sold off for residential development.
 
"The town has a right of first refusal, but that has to be acted on in 120 days. It's not something we can fund raise for. We have to have money in the bank. And we'd have to partner with a land trust or some other interested party like Rural Lands or the Berkshire Natural Resources Council. Agricultural commissions in the state are empowered to create these funds."
 
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