The trusses will be evaluated for repair and reuse but that work is not expected to affect the timeline or cost.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Recent wind damage at the new fire station's construction site will not cost the taxpayers any money and likely will not impact the project's timeline.
On Thursday morning, the district's construction consultant said the project's construction manager has a plan to resequence the schedule to make up for the time it needs to reconstruct wooden trusses knocked down by the wind over the weekend.
Bruce Decoteau, a retired senior project manager from Williams College, has been advising the Prudential Committee, which oversees the fire district, since the outset of the $22.5 million building project.
Decoteau said there are no cameras on site that recorded the damage, but the best guess from construction manager Consigli Construction is that the damage occurred at some time on Sunday evening.
According to the National Weather Service, the average wind speed in Bennington, Vt., the closest data point, was 15.1 mph with the highest recorded gust at 46 mph as of 4:43 Sunday afternoon.
"I got a photo early Monday morning advising me they had blown over," Decoteau said on Thursday.
Decoteau said the damage should have minimal or no impact on the project timeline, which currently has the Fire Department moving into the Main Street station at the end of the calendar year.
"What they'll do is pour the second-floor deck prior to installing the rest of the trusses," Decoteau said. "[Consigli] had it sequenced the other way around. This will allow them to keep the trades working and recover most of the time.
"You can't have people working underneath the trusses [pouring concrete] while you're setting them."
Decoteau said the town's building inspector told the contractor to have a structural engineer check out the steel structure below the trusses to make sure the collapse did not impact any of the metalwork, and the engineer confirmed that there was no effect.
"Everything is fine to go, and he sent a letter to Ryan [Contenta] stating accordingly," Decoteau said. "That allows us to get the crane on site and move the trusses to the ground."
The wooden trusses will be evaluated to see how much can be repaired and reused and how much needs to be replaced. Decoteau said based on observations from the ground, most of the wood should be usable.
As for the cost of repairs from the storm, that expense will be borne by the subcontractor who installed the trusses, Decoteau said.
"There will be no financial impact to the Williamstown Fire District or the Williamstown taxpayers," he said.
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Library Board Only Race in Williamstown Election
By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Voters in May will have one contested election on the ballot.
Four candidates have had their nomination papers certified for two available three-year seats on the Milne Public Library Board of Trustees in a race that voters will sort out when they go to the polls on Tuesday, May 12.
Janet Curran, Martin Mitsoff, Kathleen Schultze and Michael Sussman — all potential newcomers to the seven-person board — have been certified as candidates for the two open seats on the library's governing body.
Those two positions along with five other local government posts will be on the ballot for the annual town election.
For the Select Board, only incumbents Stephanie Boyd and Shana Dixon submitted papers to be returned to their three-year seats.
A third seat on the five-person board also is on the ballot. Newcomer Nathaniel Budington submitted papers to run for the final year on an unexpired term vacated by Jeffrey Johnson.
Two other candidates are running unopposed to retain their seats after Tuesday's deadline to submit nomination papers expired. Stephen Dew is running for another five-year seat on the Housing Authority, and Roger Lawrence is running for another five years on the Planning Board.
At issue is a 4.3-acre riverfront parcel owned by the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation off Woodlawn Drive near the site of the town's new fire station.
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The Planning Board this month voted unanimously to recommend that the Select Board ask town meeting to accept the provisions of the provisions of the commonwealth's Seasonal Communities law.
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The Mount Greylock Regional School Committee approved a fiscal year 2027 spending plan on Thursday that officials characterize as a "level services" budget. click for more
The Mount Greylock School Committee on Tuesday decided to bring a fiscal year 2027 budget to Thursday's public hearing that maintains level services while seeking double-digit percentage increases in the assessments to each of the district's member towns. click for more
Qwanell Bradley scored 33 points, and Adan Wicks added 29 as the Hoosac Valley boys basketball team won a Division 5 State Championship on Sunday. click for more