Pittsfield Con Comm Ratifies Two Emergency Work Permits

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Conservation Commission ratified two emergency permits for infrastructure work subject to the Wetlands Protection Act on Thursday.

Erosion damage had to be repaired on the roadway shoulder of Dan Casey Memorial Drive and a blocked culvert needed to be addressed on East New Lenox Road. The two projects were completed by June 1.
   
Both required a WPA emergency certification form through the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection with the Pittsfield Highway Department as the applicant.

On Dan Casey Memorial Drive, stone was placed in eroded portions of the causeway. The form states that the area was between an existing stone and concrete retaining wall and the road shoulder and was approximately 50 square feet of area and about 5.5 cubic yards of volume.

The retaining wall separates the road from Onota Lake and stone was not placed at a higher elevation than the existing road.

The repair began on May 13 and was completed on May 20.

Conservation Agent Robert Van Der Kar pointed out that no work was done in the lake and was contained to the causeway. The emergency certification form stated that no work is allowed beyond the width of the road shoulder and retaining walls.

This causeway is soon to receive a million-dollar reconstruction that will go out to bid this year. It includes replacing existing culverts with three 5-by-10-foot precast concrete culverts, two new retaining walls, roadway surfaces, and new guard rails.


On East New Lenox Road, a culvert blockage with roadside drainage swale was addressed. Sediment was removed within a non-jurisdictional swale and associated culvert on the east edge of the road underneath a driveway at 73 East New Lenox Road.

Van Der Kar said the permit was just to be safe, as he didn't think the work was in jurisdictional areas and added that it “looks good” now.

The repair began on May 24 and was completed on June 1.

In other news, the commission continued an application from the town of Lanesborough and Friends of Pontoosuc Lake for an aquatic plant management program that addresses non-indigenous vegetation control within the lake.

The commission wants a peer review of the situation before they approve herbicide treatments. It voted to hire Northeast Aquatic Research and authorize the expenditure of up to about $7,000 before the motion to continue.

A few residents called into the virtual meeting to speak against the program.

"I do not support this filing because it does not meet the criteria for a limited ecological restoration project and at this time, it is not a betterment for the lake," resident Daniel Miraglia said.


Tags: conservation commission,   culvert,   

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Pittsfield Reviews Financial Condition Before FY27 Budget

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The average single-family home in Pittsfield has increased by more than 40 percent since 2022. 

This was reported during a joint meeting of the City Council and School Committee on March 19, when the city's financial condition was reviewed ahead of the fiscal year 2027 budget process.

Mayor Peter Marchetti said the administration is getting "granular" with line items to find cost savings in the budget.  At the time, they had spoken to a handful of departments, asking tough questions and identifying vacancies and retirements. 

Last fiscal year’s $226,246,942 spending plan was a nearly 4.8 percent increase from FY24. 

In the last five years, the average single-family home in Pittsfield has increased 42 percent, from $222,073 in 2022 to $315,335 in 2026. 

"Your tax bill is your property value times the tax rate," the mayor explained. 

"When the tax rate goes up, it's usually because property values have gone down. When the property values go up, the tax rate comes down." 

Tax bills have increased on average by $280 per year over the last five years; the average home costs $5,518 annually in 2026. In 2022, the residential tax rate was $18.56 per thousand dollars of valuation, and the tax rate is $17.50 in 2026. 

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