WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The multimodal path from Syndicate Road to the Spruces Park finally has a name.
The Select Board on Monday voted 5-0 to dub the 2.4-mile trail the Mohican Recreational Path, to "recognize and and honor the indigenous people who first settled this area."
"We're anxious to get this done so we can move on to the next steps of doing the public opening piece," Town Manager Robert Menicocci told the board.
Menicocci added that naming the path will help the town build a public awareness campaign around the expected behavior on the trail, including the use of leashes for dogs.
The name itself is a long-discussed replacement for the "Mohawk Trail" name that the Massachusetts Department of Transportation attached to the project during construction. Once construction was complete and the path was deeded to the town this year, Menicocci asked the board and, by extension, the community at large, for help in finding a name.
Ultimately, that conversation included a discussion with representatives from the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohican Indians.
The board Monday briefly considered whether it should allow for one more round of community response to the suggested name before holding a vote.
"I actually love the name," Select Board Chair Jeffrey Johnson said. "I love that it came from consultation with the Stockbridge-Munsee tribal council. I'm OK with it, but I also want to hear from others."
After member Stephanie Boyd pointed out that a version of the name that incorporated the Mohican people was included in coverage of the board's July meeting, Randal Fippinger moved to hold the final vote on Monday. It passed without further discussion.
Most of the discussion on Monday concerned the question of whether the town should implement the residential tax exemption for property taxes.
Boyd, who said she has been thinking about the RTE for a year, gave her second detailed presentation to her colleagues, attempting to answer the questions they raised on July 24.
The discussion, which consumed about 75 minutes of a 2 hour, 15 minute meeting, included objections from two former Select Board members and pushback from two current members.
The board will face a decision point on the RTE at its annual tax classification hearing, scheduled for Sept. 11. But Boyd on Monday indicated she would be happy to see the board keep the idea under study for at least another year even if it makes no change to the current tax policy for fiscal 2024.
The decisions the board did make on Monday were far less contentious.
In addition to naming the pedestrian and bicycle path, the board voted 5-0 to allow a one-day alcohol permit for a wine tasting at Friday's grand opening for the Roam Gallery on Water Street, to allow Menicocci to attend the International City/County Management Association annual conference in Texas next month and to appoint Hugh Daley to one of two town seats on the board of the Hoosac Water Quality District.
Johnson noted that Williamstown has one other spot to fill on the joint board with North Adams and that he hoped a resident would step forward and apply in time to be appointed at the next Select Board meeting on Sept. 11.
Fippinger asked Daley to explain for the audience watching Monday's meeting on the town's community access television station, WilliNet, what such an appointment entails.
"It's an extremely well run [intermunicipal] organization that needs two representatives from each community to go through the budget and make sure things are going well … and communicate about it to various boards," Daley said. "It doesn't require you to know how to treat sewage. That is professionally done by the crews that run the facility."
Daley said the board meets monthly on the third Wednesday at 4 p.m.
Any town resident interested in that position or another town appointment can fill out one of the town's Government Engagement forms.
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Williamstown Looks to Start Riverbank Stabilization Projects in FY27
By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Town Hall is hoping to make progress on four riverfront infrastructure projects in the fiscal year 2027 budget.
Town Manager Robert Menicocci told the Finance Committee this month that the town is working with state agencies to develop riverbank stabilization plans while also pursuing help with the cost of that work.
Menicocci characterized two of the projects as small: the stabilization of banks on the Green River and Hoosic River related to small landfills.
The other two projects are further downriver from the former landfill site: near the junction of Syndicate Road and North Street (Route 7) and further downriver near the Hoosic Water Quality District's water treatment plant.
The North Street site has been top of mind for the town since December 2019, when a Christmas Eve storm brought about the loss of a large piece of the river bank and threatened to expose a sewer main line.
Menicocci explained that a final solution for the site — which has been before the town's Conservation Commission several times in the last six years — has been held up by discussions among state regulators.
"What we know at the moment is on the Hoosic River, especially, the state is looking for us to stabilize the situation before we even get to the long-term solution," Menicocci said. "We are battling with them because the part of the state that regulates the landfill is like, 'You've got to do this, and you've got to do it yesterday.' And then, the other side of the same agency looks at environmental protection and says, 'You know what, you've got a couple of things in the river there, some grass and some turtles. You can't do anything.'
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Nolan Booth scored the go-ahead goal with 6 minutes, 22 seconds left in the third, and Ben Harris made 20 saves to give McCann Tech the crown. click for more
The Community Preservation Committee on Tuesday voted to backtrack on a plan to ask town meeting to increase the town's Community Preservation Act surcharge on local property tax bills. click for more
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