Williamstown Select Board Contributes Town Funds to July 4 Fireworks

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board agreed Monday to provide at least $1,000 and up to $2,500 of town funds to support the fireworks display at Taconic Golf Club on July 4.
 
Board member Jane Patton, who manages the club, brought a funding request to the body and argued that the pyrotechnic display is an opportunity to build community that should be supported by taxpayer dollars.
 
"I've had a number of people ask me why the town doesn't cover the cost," Patton said.
 
"It is a town event meant to bring the town together. I think it's reasonable to say people enjoy it, and it's been quite successful as a town event."
 
Patton said it costs about $15,000 to stage the event at Taconic, which allows people on its grounds free of charge; it prohibits "outside food/drink" but offers food and beverages, last year at a cost of $18 for adults and $6 for children under 10.
 
"I'm here to suggest the town participate this year in whatever way they can, as much as possible, and to consider it being a town function — the fireworks piece — going forward," Patton said.
 
Patton said that in 2017, the town contributed $1,500 toward the event. In 2018 and '19, the town contribution was $2,500. The event was suspended in 2020, at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and Patton said she asked for a contribution but received no response in 2021 and 2022.
 
"I think it was because we had an interim town manager and other issues going on," she said.
 
Patton said currently the fireworks are paid for through private donations. 
 
Her colleagues agreed there should be some municipal support for the event, but it was unclear on Monday evening what the source of that money might be.
 
In the past, first-year Town Manager Bob Menicocci said, the Select Board had approved funds from its discretionary account, budgeted at $10,000 for the fiscal year that begins on July 1.
 
In FY23, the year that ends on June 30, that figure was $36,500, and there was some thought that money remains in the "other contract services" line in the Select Board's budget. But Menicocci indicated it would be problematic to spend FY23 dollars on an event that takes place in FY24.
 
"Going forward, it's reasonable to build it in [to the budget]," Menicocci said. "Hopefully next year, we can have a deeper conversation about the commitment of the community to recreation as a whole and to tourism as such.
 
"Our resources are finite, so it's all dividing up the pie in some way."
 
Andrew Hogeland said he was hesitant to commit a quarter of the $10,000 for FY24 in the first week of the fiscal year.
 
In the end, Randal Fippinger moved to authorize that the board spend $1,000 from its FY24 allocation or $2,500 if the town manager can determine a way to use FY23 funds.
 
The motion passed, 4-0-1, with Patton abstaining.
 
In other business on Monday, the board was supposed to hear a presentation on waste-to-hydrogen power generation, but the presenter was unable to attend.
 
And Menicocci told the board that the town was ready for a process to name the new multipurpose trail built over the last couple of years from Syndicate Road to the Spruces Park.
 
Originally, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation had dubbed the route the "Mohawk Trail," but the town took those signs down after residents noted that it would be a misnomer in an area where the indigenous people were ancestors of what is now known as the Stockbridge-Munsee Mohican Tribe.
 
Menicocci said his staff would be happy to direct a process for naming the trail that incorporates a wide range of town input. He said he would be happy to accept suggestions for the name or offers to help vet potential names; Menicocci can be reached at rmenicocci@williamstownma.gov.
 
He said the project is at a point where a ribbon cutting would be appropriate in the next few months, and he would like to have a name before that date.
 
Finally, Select Board Chair Jeffrey Johnson directed residents to a list of committee positions in town government.
 
"If you're interested in town government, we're interested in you," Johnson said. "New faces are welcome."

Tags: bike path,   fireworks,   

If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Williamstown Board Signs Off on Utility Infrastructure, Conservation Restriction

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Select Board on Monday approved one request from Berkshire Gas to install equipment in the town's right-of-way and put off another request pending more information from the utility.
 
Berkshire Gas was before the board looking for an OK to install a telemetering station on Church Street near the elementary school and a regulator station on North Street (Route 7) near the Clark Art Institute's satellite parking lot.
 
A senior engineering technician from Berkshire Gas attended the meeting to speak on behalf of the former request, but no one from the utility attended to support the North Street proposal.
 
"There was supposed to be someone else to talk about the regulator station," Wes Scalise told the board.
 
Town Manager Robert Menicocci and Department of Public Works Director Craig Clough told the board that the proposed 5-foot tall structure generated some safety concerns on the part of Town Hall.
 
"As you come around what is a relatively blind corner, you have a parking lot there during peak time that has a lot of traffic going in and out," Menicocci told the board. "We wanted to get a sense of the size [of the proposed installation] and whether any work was done to analyze what sight lines are like when people are pulling out of that lot."
 
Clough told the board that when he met with Berkshire Gas on the application, he suggested that the regulator station should be installed as far from the curb as possible and, if the Clark was amenable, out of the town's right-of-way entirely if possible. 
 
View Full Story

More Williamstown Stories