Two large Southworth Street trees are marked for removal because of their proximity to electrical lines. Some 41 trees have been marked for removal or trimming by National Grid.
A tree on North Hoosac Road in Williamstown is marked for removal.
One of dozens of trees that arborists say are a risk to fall and damage main electrical transmission lines.
A sign on a tree gives information about the public hearing on the tree removals this coming Tuesday at Town Hall.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The town's tree warden is hoping that people who object to plans to remove or prune 41 town-owned trees will attend a Tuesday public hearing and listen to the reasons why those trees need to be addressed.
Robert McCarthy said Thursday that he has been receiving calls from residents concerned about the planned cuttings and he is aware of the discussion generated on social media about the proposal from National Grid.
McCarthy said he understands why the plan has raised eyebrows. It is the biggest such initiative he can recall in more than 30 years in the town post.
And, in his opinion, it is a positive for town residents.
"This whole thing comes from a division of National Grid which they call hazard tree mitigation," McCarthy said. "They go tree by tree, walk the areas and identify trees … they feel should be removed. If we had a major storm, these would be the first ones on their wires."
And the wires in question are three-phase main electrical wires that serve hundreds, if not thousands of residents, McCarthy explained.
Likewise, the trees are in town rights of way on main roads, like North Hoosac, Cole Avenue, Bridges Road, Simonds Road and North Street.
Experts from National Grid, trained arborists like McCarthy himself, have examined the trees in question to assess their health and potential to come down on power lines, causing widespread outages in the event of a storm.
Of the 41 trees at issue, 16 are being addressed because of proximity to power lines alone, and three of those 16 are set to be trimmed, not cut down. The remaining 25 have health issues ranging from "greater than 25 percent decline" to "mostly dead." Seven of the trees are ash with evidence of the invasive emerald ash borer, a pest that has decimated the species throughout the region.
McCarthy, 85, who has been a certified arborist since his 20s, likened the borer to Dutch elm disease, which swept through the nation in the 20th century.
But there are problems beyond disease or bugs that are particularly relevant to neighborhood trees in the public right of way. Sidewalks, underground utilities (gas and sewer, for example) and road cuts all impact a tree's root systems, McCarthy explained.
"When we look at a tree, we look at the species of tree No. 1," he said. "We know which trees have shallow root systems. We know if those trees have a severe lean toward the wires. Those trees will come down first in a storm.
"A lot of people look at trees and see green leaves, and that's good enough for them. But, so to speak, they can't see the trees for the forests. They don't have the expertise we have as arborists."
He said recently the owner of a home on Route 43 found a tree marked on their property for removal and called him to ask about it.
"She said, the tree looks green, and I don't see a problem with it," McCarthy said. "And when I went down there and pulled into the driveway, I thought, 'Maybe they could do some pruning [instead].'
"But when I walked around it, on the backside of the tree, it had a huge split. I said, 'This is going to be a problem not only for the three-phase line. If it goes, it's going to take part of your house."
He said, hypothetically, some trees slated for removal could be addressed through pruning. But that would be a stopgap measure that could add a couple of years to the tree's life. Then, when it ultimately comes down, it would be the town's or homeowner's responsibility.
McCarthy notes that extended power losses can be a public safety issue (home respirators, refrigeration for medication) and points to events as momentous as the Great Barrington tornado of 1995 and as recent as last summer's thunderstorm in North County that knocked out power and caused extensive tree damage in Williamstown.
"What [National Grid is] trying to do is be proactive rather than reactive," McCarthy said. "So when they get a major storm, a lot of these trees that would have been a major problem won't be a problem.
"I understand people's feelings [about trees]. I've seen people who don't want to cut one single limb. But, under the law, [National Grid] has a right to prune within so many feet of high tension lines. They have to protect the utility in ice storms and things like that."
One solution that has been suggested by a Facebook user would be to bury transmission lines. In 2023, electrical provider Eversource told a Boston TV station the company estimates it would cost between $2 million and $6 million per mile to convert overhead lines to underground. Back in 2011, then-Gov. Deval Patrick suggested statewide conversion to underground transmission lines would cost $1 trillion (more than $1.4 trillion in today's dollars).
State law requires that tree removal from town-owned land be discussed in a public hearing. McCarthy said usually at such hearings, he is like the "Maytag repair man," sitting in the meeting room at Town Hall for an hour waiting to see if anyone will come. But, given the scope of this proposal, he said he will not be surprised if there is more interest for the Tuesday, 7 p.m. hearing.
He said that at the hearing, he will listen to residents' concerns and explain the reasoning behind specific trees' inclusion on the removal list. And he said he would be happy, after the hearing, to arrange a time to visit the tree with a resident who continues to have objections to see if they can't come to an agreement.
Ultimately, anyone who still objects can make their case in writing to the Select Board, which would hold its own public hearing and have the final say, under state law.
"I've never had it happen that the [Select Board] goes against my recommendation," MCarthy said. "They're not tree experts. They're everyday people who run for public office."
In his ideal world, the town would have capacity to address problem trees on its own, but it costs between $3,000 and $4,000 to remove a tree, and with a budget of $50,000 per year, there is only so much the tree department can do.
"We don't have the money to do what we'd like to do, but we're doing our damndest to ensure public safety and preserve the natural beauty of the town," McCarthy said.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
Your Comments
iBerkshires.com welcomes critical, respectful dialogue. Name-calling, personal attacks, libel, slander or foul language is not allowed. All comments are reviewed before posting and will be deleted or edited as necessary.
No Comments
Students Show Effects of Climate Change in Art Show
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
Students from 10 area high schools are showing works that reflect on climate change at the Clark Art this week. The exhibit will move to Pittsfield and Sheffield later.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Students got to showcase their art at the Clark Art Institute depicting their relationship with the Earth in the time of climate change.
"How Shall We Live," a juried art exhibit, was on display Saturday in the Clark's Hunter Studio at Stone Hill. Students from 10 high schools participated.
Climate educational organization Cooler Communities has hosted this show for the past couple of years at different venues across the Berkshires. This year, it was approached by the Clark to host the show and is co-organizing with Living the Change Berkshires.
This was the first year Cooler Communities, a program of the Harold Grinspoon Charitable Foundation, changed its prompt to make it more personal for the students in hopes to start a conversation in the classrooms on climate change.
"In our work with Cooler Communities, we want to really make conversations about climate change normal, so it doesn't just happen in high school science or in activist circles, but for everyone to feel like they have a role to play, and for everyone to explore what it means for them," said Executive Director Uli Nagel.
"And so that's why the work of classrooms rather than after-school programs, but actually have it in the classroom and then bring it to the community and connect it to solutions. That's why the community is here, and so we always try to actually make it real, but also give kids the opportunity to explore their own emotions and interior experiences through art."
The Clark wanted to expand on its Sensing Nature Program and give students a higher impact experience instead of just the program tour that could help fit the criteria for the students’ portrait of a graduate.
The show had 74 displays as well as an iPad that showed other students’ art that was not showcased in the show, which was around 180 submissions.
Students were asked to respond to one or more elements in the following prompt:
What does nature provide?
What are the Earth's needs?
What matters most?
What is resilience?
Where do you find guidance and inspiration?
Pittsfield High student Stella Carnevale, 16, made her artwork out of newspaper, Mod Podge, chalk, and watercolors. She drew three sardines showing the effect polluted water had on them and wrote in her artist's note that she wants people to pause and feel empathy while also recognizing their role in protecting the natural world.
"Fish are vital to our world. They balance ecosystems, feed communities, and remind us how deeply connected life on Earth is. When our waters are polluted, fish are often the first to suffer, and their disappearance signals a greater loss that affects us all," she wrote. "Pollution doesn't just damage rivers and oceans; it threatens food sources, cultures, and the health of the planet itself. I make art to bring attention to what is quietly being taken away."
She said it was really cool to see her art hanging in the Clark and never thought it would happen.
Wahconah Regional High student, Alexandra Rougeau, 18, painted a jellyfish in acrylics.
"I started off making a different painting that was very depressing, obviously, because it's climate change, and I got really annoyed because everything was so negative," she said. "And although climate change is a really negative part of the world right now, I want to try to show that there is some hope in it. And that we do have some hope in saving our environment. So the jellyfish is meant to depict fire, global warming, but it's in the ocean and it's rising up, and there is some hope, hopefully at the top, in the surface."
Rougeau said it is an honor to be chosen to have her art here and to see all the other depictions from other students.
Monument Mountain High sophomore Siddy Culbreth painted a landscape in oil pastels and said he was inspired by his grandfather who is a landscaper and wanted to depict "what we should save."
"I was picturing this as a quintessential, it's kind of like epitome of what a nice landscape should be like," he said. "And so in terms of climate change, like how that is kind of shifting, or what our idea of like the world is shifting. And I feel like it's really important to preserve what, like, almost not a perfect world, but, what the world should be like."
Some students from Pittsfield High in Colleen Quinn's ceramics class created a microscopic look of what they thought PCBs looked like and wanted to depict how the polychlorinated biphenyls might have affected them at Allendale Elementary, near disposal site Hill 37.
Quinn said she is very proud of all her students.
The show is at the Clark until April 26 and is free and open to the public. It will be moved to Pittsfield City Hall to run from May 1 through June 8, and then to Sheffield's Dewey Hall from June 12 through 21.
It is made possible with support from the Feigenbaum Foundation, Lee Bank, and Greylock Federal Credit Union.
Students got to showcase their art at the Clark Art Institute depicting their relationship with the Earth in the time of climate change. click for more
The 100th annual meeting will be held on March 10, 2027, the Community Chest's birthday (there will be cake, he promised) and a gala will be held at the Clark Art Institute on Sept. 25, 2027.
click for more
Bergeron answered that officials in both member towns told the district they did not want Mount Greylock using taxpayers' money to build their reserves. click for more