Dalton Board to Discuss Storage Container Bylaw

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Planning Board will be reviewing a proposed bylaw that would require a special permit for storage containers in a residential zone. 
 
The board briefly discussed the proposed bylaw that is in the very early stages. More in-depth discussions will take place during future meetings. 
 
During the development of proposed bylaws, the board holds public hearings to gather input from the community. Then it goes to town meeting for a vote. 
 
"There's currently a number of storage containers in town which are not permitted. This would basically require getting a permit and restrict the time that the container could be kept," said Dennis Croughwell, Planning Board clerk. 
 
This bylaw is specifically targeting shipping containers that are used as storage, he said. 
 
If approved, the building inspector would be tasked to issue a permit to allow the applicant to temporarily have a storage container on their property.  
 
The container is restricted to a maximum of 20-by-10-by-10 feet and may not be maintained on wheels. Applicants are restricted to one unit, unless otherwise authorized by the building inspector, for no longer than four months, with one two-month extension.
 
In cases where there are more than one storage containers, each unit is separately permitted. 
 
Select Board member Jarred Mongeon and resident Jimbo Doucette expressed concerns surrounding situations where a resident may need one or two storage containers for long periods of time to address emergencies, such as flooding or an oil spill in the basement. 
 
Croughwell explained that the bylaw doesn’t restrict people from having storage containers; rather just requires they have a permit.
 
Board member Donald Davis Jr. also questioned whether this bylaw would affect those who purchase storage containers and add siding to match the architecture of the main building. 
 
Croughwell said the bylaw would not restrict that but would require the resident to get a permit, which would be renewed annually.
 
Davis said he is not a fan of requiring that the permit be renewed annually for those who apply for the permit to have a shed. 
 
He believed that in cases like this, the homeowner would only have the unit approved once and not to require a renewal. 
 
According to the proposal the purpose of this bylaw would be to standardize, reusable, portable, or transferable, enclosed metal units which are placed separately from the main structure to provide storage space for permitted uses. 
 
The fee for the storage container would be set by the Select Board or their designee. 
 
The containers would also have to abide by the town’s zoning bylaws, including the setbacks. 
 
Additionally, it must not occupy or hinder active parking or traffic circulation areas and be located in areas not visible from roadways. The units also have to be properly maintained to not create an eyesore.
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Wahconah Park Skating Rink Under Construction

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The outdoor ice skating rink in front of Wahconah Park is taking shape, and the city plans to open it early next week. 

If you pass by the historic park this weekend, you will notice a pop-up ice skating rink under construction on the property between Hudpucker's Pub and Grill and Thrive Diner. City officials hope for a soft launch early next week and have secured state funds for programmatic expenses and skate rentals. 

Parks, Open Space, and Natural Resources Manager James McGrath on Friday said it will take several days to build the ice.  The community will be notified through a social media post and a press release. 

Community members are asked to stay off the ice until given the OK from the city. 

Earlier this week, the City Council accepted $10,000 from the Massachusetts Office of Outdoor Recreation for programming opportunities at the 50-by-100-foot refrigerated rink. This will be used for staffing, youth assistants, adaptive skate aids, equipment rentals, bus vouchers, and other associated costs for public events. 

McGrath pointed out that Pittsfield owns the system and will know how to assemble, operate, and then disassemble it for the next year. 

"We're sort of at an interesting time here because it's kind of late in the winter, admittedly, but we're going to get some ice time out of the rink, and then we're going to pack it up, put it away, and we're going to bring it back out in subsequent years," he said. 

"And we own this system, so looking at the horizon, we'll be able to have this portable system in place at that site on Wahconah Street for many, many years to come, and certainly, the whole idea is that this rink is intimately coordinated with the site planning for the new Wahconah Park and all the civil work that we're doing down there." 

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