Lanesborough Annual Town Meeting Preview

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Tuesday's annual town meeting includes a $12.5 million operating budget, the acquisition of Old Williamstown Road, and some free cash appropriations. 

Voters will gather at the Lanesborough Elementary School on Tuesday at 6 p.m. to decide on 24 warrant articles. 

The proposed $12,589,512 budget for fiscal year 2026 is a 5.6 percent increase from the previous year.  It includes a $6,863,585 Mount Greylock Regional School District assessment and a $317,109 vocational regional assessment. More details can be found here.

At the end of May, the Select Board voted to include a proposed $100,000 free cash appropriation for the ambulance department's temporary station lease, including the purchase of furniture and renovations, and reduce the budget by $50,000. 

The EMS department has been asked to leave the fire station at 180 South Main St., which is owned by the Fire Association, because of insufficient space. 

"There had been a recommendation from the Finance Committee that the amount that's currently earmarked in the operating budget, which was $50,000, potentially be put into a warrant article as a separate out of free cash so that it wasn't coming out of the operating budget," Town Administrator Gina Dario explained to the Select Board on May 27. 

"So there is some potential for us to do that. However, there is a bit of risk, and we wanted to have a discussion about how we could approach that." 

She said they have the option to maintain that money in the operating budget or put it in a warrant article, which has the potential of not passing, adding, "If the warrant article doesn't pass and we strip it out of the operating budget, then we're left without anything that would enable the ambulance to have an option for a premises." 

EMS Director Jen Weber said a rental space would be more than $50,000, revealing, "We have a higher number for a potential location." 

"I like the idea of being transparent about where that money was going," she said. 

"I also can tell you if something happened where you weren't able to go back and amend the budget, I wouldn't just go spend the $50,000, it would go back to free cash." 


The $50,000 made Weber nervous, as it wouldn't be enough to cover rent, let alone outfit the space to be usable for the department. The board, with Selectwoman Deborah Maynard absent, agreed that $100,000 from free cash would be a more reasonable amount. 

"We know something has to be done," Chair Michael Murphy said. 

"That's the selling point at the annual town meeting to the voters, so coming up with the least impactful to the tax rate and the bottom line." 

Dario reported that the town would still have $460,000 in free cash, "Which is it still higher than it was after last year's town meeting." 

Also on the warrant is a proposed $45,000 transfer from the stabilization fund for the redesign of the new public safety building. Earlier this year, the Select Board voted to advance a $7.3 million combined police/emergency medical services facility, discarding the option for a $6.5 million separate build. 

The same design, then priced at $5.9 million, was shot down in 2023. This warrant does not include a vote on the building. 

But it does include the acceptance of a portion of Old Williamstown Road by gift from the state. It is a 0.72 mile parcel from the south end of the road, starting about 220 feet north of the center of the bridge and proceeding north to about 65 feet south of the bridge at the north end of the road. 

Conversation about Old Williamstown Road began in late 2024 when neighbors asked that it be restored for pedestrian use. It had been closed to vehicles for decades but used for pedestrians, horseback riders, bicyclists, etc., and a couple of months prior, the state blocked it with jersey barriers.

Access was restored in January, and the Select Board discussed the town potentially taking ownership of the parcel, as it is a non-active part of the state's portfolio. 

Other free cash proposals include $250,000 for the replacement of a 2012 highway front-end loader, $50,000 for air conditioner replacements and wiring/relays for the heating system in Town Hall, and $5,000 for basketball court resurfacing at Narragansett Park. 

There are also two citizens petitions: A proposed amendment to the zoning bylaw that stipulates no structure along the shoreline of Pontoosuc Lake exceeds 26 feet without a special permit, and an article asking to adopt a state statute for a full tax exemption for surviving parents of military personnel who went missing in action during active duty and presumed to have died or military personnel or veterans who died as a proximate result of injuries during active duty. 


Tags: annual town meeting,   lanesborough_budget,   town meeting 2025,   

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Companion Corner: Fox at Berkshire Humane Society

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — There's a sweet and energetic dog at the Berkshire Humane Society waiting for his new family.

iBerkshire's Companion Corner is a weekly series spotlighting an animal in our local shelters that is ready to find a home.

Fox is a 3-year-old Pomeranian who has been at the shelter for about a month.

Canine caregiver and adoption counselor Simone Olivieri told us about Fox. 

"He's a bundle of joy. He would love a family who's home with him a lot, because he's just, he's very social and wants to be with his people a lot. And he would be fun to bring out and about, bring a lot of places, because he's very happy to go anywhere," she said.

When Fox enters the room he is immediately a puffball of energy that goes around and around the room.

He came to the shelter after his former owner could not take care of him anymore. 

"The owner was just not able to care for him anymore. Had he came in with another dog, Wolf, and she already did find her forever home just last week," said Olivieri. "The two of them were left with a friend of the original owner, and the owner did not come back to pick them up, and the friend had too many animals in the house, and too much going on, and she just couldn't continue to look after them, so they did end up coming to us."

Fox can go home with cats and children but is not recommended to go home with other dogs as he gets too excited.

"He would love a home where people are home quite a bit to give him all the attention that he so desires. He loves kids. He absolutely adores children. So he would like a home with kids to play with. He could live with cats. We are saying that he should not live with other dogs. The only reason is that he gets very humpy, and he does not leave the other dogs alone," she said.

With his energy it is recommended he goes to a home that can keep him active whether walks or hikes and even fetch in the yard.

Fox does need to learn more about walking on a leash and has a tendency to mark in the house but he was recently neutered. Olivieri said belly bands will be sent home with whoever adopts him to help prevent marking and managing it.

"He would like an active home. He really does like to go for walks daily. He likes to run around in the yard. He does need a little work on leash walking. He sometimes gets a little tangled still under your feet, and he's learning how to walk on a leash," she said. "So, someone who's got some patience and some time to work on some training with him."

"He also is not fully potty trained, so he does know to go potty outside. However, he will still mark, urinate in the house sometimes, and he might poop here and there in the house."

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