Lenox Residents Encouraged to Bring Storm Debris to Compost Site

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LENOX, Mass. — The compost site at wastewater treatment plant on Crystal Street will open on Saturday from 9 to noon for the disposal of any debris from the on July 12 storm. 
 
The Department of Public Works is closing Reservoir Road intermittently this week for tree work.
 
The National Weather Service in Albany, N.Y., said straight-line winds of up to 85 mph blew a path nearly a mile wide and 2 miles long and killed a New Hampshire man.
 
A series of large thunderstorms storms were moving through the Northeast, bringing high winds, rain and hail to some areas. 
 
The severe winds blew through the town about 5 p.m. on July 12, the same day a microburst snapped trees and utility poles in Fort Miller, N.Y.; a day later, an EF-1 tornado with winds up to 90 mph touched down in Kingston, N.Y., causing widespread damage.
 
Damage in Lenox was reportedly sporadic, ranging from broken tree limbs to large trees being uprooted. Roads were blocked, some trees came down on houses and cars, there were power outages and other damage. 
 
Darrin Cawthron, 56, of Derry, N.H., was driving south on Fox Hollow Road when a tree came down on his pickup. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

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Pittsfield Rent Board OKs $30 Rent Increase for Lake Onota Village

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Lake Onota Village owner Richard Baldwin answers a question for resident Amy Booth.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Rent Control Board last week approved a $30 per month rent increase for Lake Onota Village following a public hearing that spanned two meetings. 
 
A number of residents from the mobile home park attended the meeting expressing their disapproval of owner M.H. Communities request for a hefty rent hike citing issues with the lots maintenance.
 
The owner's application to the board requested a 63 percent rent hike, or more than $200 per month, spread out over three years, but before the first meeting, it was revised to 29 percent, or $153 per month. 
 
After the first Rent Control Board meeting in March, co-owner Richard Baldwin said the company worked to "shave" its operating expenses down.
 
During the board's meeting on Wednesday, the owners again revised its request, dropping it to a $33 per month rent increase year-over-year over three years. 
 
The board approved a $30 increase.
 
M.H. Communities reviewed its operating expenses and removed revenue and some nonrecurring expenses, such as advertising, Baldwin said. 
 
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