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Dalton Budget 'Worse-Case Scenario' Could Mean Staffing Cuts

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — In the worst-case scenario, the town could be forced to reduce staff if projected increases in the school budget, health insurance, and other uncontrollable costs occur.
 
Town Manager Eric Anderson presented the "grim" budget to the Select Board on Monday, showcasing the anticipated major driver in the fiscal year 2027 budget. 
 
"The first thing I want to say is the first cut of the budget always looks hopeless. I mean it always does. This is, in many ways, what we should probably think of as the worst case scenario," Anderson said. 
 
"The goal here has got to be to make this budget better and more reasonable overall because this one talks about doing some fairly drastic things."
 
Currently, the town estimates an operating budget of $12,015,278, a $1,121,684 or 10.3 percent increase, but a lot of data is still unavailable, so this is expected to decrease. 
 
The town's single-family tax bill is significantly higher than the rest of the Berkshires but lower than the state. The tax bill as a percentage of household income is also significantly higher than the rest of the Berkshires on average, Anderson said. 
 
"About 14 percent of the average, the median household's income in Dalton is going to pay town taxes. So that's a pretty significant number. In Berkshire County as a whole, it's about 12 percent," he said. 
 
"So, we're about 17 percent higher than Berkshire County on average. We're certainly not the highest, not by far, but there's a lot more that are less than us overall." 
 
At the end of this budget year, the town will be under its levy limit by about $350,000, and if the town were to max its limit, which is not recommended, fiscal year 2027's budgeted tax could increase by approximately $810,000. 
 
"It's probably much smarter to try to stay at least $100,000 to $150,000 under the levy limit so you have a little cushion if something goes better in the next year," Anderson said. 
 
Although it is still early in the process and these projections may change, preliminary numbers indicate the Central Berkshire Regional School District forecast a nearly 10 percent budget increase.
 
"To keep under the levy limit if the school budget remains as it is, the funding for the town has to decrease by at least $200,000 to even make the levy limit and that's going to be brutal," Anderson said. 
 
"The regional school district is going to have to address that number. If we got that number down to a 4 percent increase, we could live with that at the town and we could get through with no staff cuts and some trimming, and a little bit of hardship, but nothing crazy. The question is can they really do that and what they're going to come in as a final number." 
 
Anderson said he spoke to Gregory Boino, the district's director of finance and operations, on Friday, and was told that the individual levies for the towns is between 8 and 14 percent. 
 
"They're more than half of our budget. So, a 9.9 percent increase in half of our budget translates into at least a 4.5 percent increase in our overall town budget if we have the exact same spending next year as this year," Anderson said. 
 
Officials from Central Berkshire Regional School District will be presenting the budgets rational and updated numbers during a future Finance Committee and Select Board meeting. 
 
Additionally, overall state aid as a percentage of town budgets has dropped by 50 percent since the 2007 recession.
 
There are also planned sewer bill increases because of Pittsfield's sewer treatment plan upgrades. More information here. 
 
The budget builds in cost-of-living and step increases for more employees by 3.75 percent, which also drives up Medicare costs by the same percentage. The town has a total of 41 employees across the town hall, police and dispatch, library, senior center, and public works department. 
 
Contributing to the budget challenges the town does not have a lot of capital reserves considering the amount of deferred maintenance needed, including the roads, sewer, water, public safety facility, and making the town hall handicap accessible, Anderson said. 
 
There is only so much the town can trim from without having to make staff cuts because the majority of the budget for most departments is salaries, he said. 
 
If the worse case scenario comes to fruition, Anderson presented several options including 
  • a Proposition 2 1/2 override, which is unlikely given likely strong opinion from residents
  • staff cuts, which has a substantial ripple effect such as reducing town services and lowering moral
  • Decreasing the cost-of-living allowance, which is currently 2 percent. However, due to various contracts, this would be applied unevenly and not recommended. 
  • Exclude certain town debt above the levy limit to free up levy capacity. 
  • Adjusting the tax rate from a single rate to a split tax rate, which would assign a higher rate to businesses. 
  • Adjusting the tax rate would not affect the proposition 2 and a half or spending, rather determines how tax is appropriated. 
If the board were to adopt a split rate, Anderson would suggest doing so gradually over a four-year period, increasing by a 1.5 multiplier. 
 
He also presented a three-year projection based on anticipated budget strains and where it aligns with the levy limit including,
  • how the core inflation is running between 2.5-and-3 percent, 
  • the need for capital spending due to deferred maintenance, 
  • government operations becoming more complex with increasing state reporting requirements, 
  • And state procurement process and prevailing wage laws make capital projects more expensive, further straining the town's budget. 

Tags: Dalton_budget,   fiscal 2027,   

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BCC 40 Under 40 Winners to be Honored

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Community College (BCC), together with partners 1Berkshire and Mill Town Foundation, will honor the winners of its annual 40 Under Forty Awards on Wednesday, March 18 at 5 p.m. in the Robert Boland Theater, located on the main campus at 1350 West Street.
 
Tickets are $40 per person (free for award winners and one guest per winner) and may be purchased online at www.berkshirecc.edu/40-tix. Proceeds benefit support Workforce and Community Education programs at BCC, addressing immediate needs and helping to build a lasting endowment. 
 
According to a press release:
 
40 Under Forty celebrates talented people in the Berkshires, under the age of 40, who have a deep dedication to improving the quality of life for those living and working in our community. Nominees, who hail from throughout Berkshire County, are eligible for the award through their professional work and how it makes a difference, their personal commitment to their community, or other efforts to improve the quality of life for those living and working the Berkshires. 
 
Mill Town Foundation will promote purposeful giving by funding each 40 Under Forty Award winner with $1,000 to re-grant to an eligible Berkshire-based nonprofit organization. 
 
The winners, along with their non-profit of choice to receive the $1,000 funding, are: 
  • Lilia Baker, Volunteers in Medicine, donating to ViM Berkshires 
  • Jillian Bamford, On Pointe Barre & Fitness Studio, donating to No Paws Left Behind 
  • Haley Barbieri, Ventfort Hall Gilded Age Mansion and Museum / Shakespeare & Company, donating to Lenox Library Association 
  • Patrick Becker, General Dynamics Mission Systems, donating to Craneville Elementary - PTO 
  • Deirdre Bird, Dri Umbrellas, donating to The Denise Kaley Fund for Berkshire County Women with Cancer at BTCF 
  • Miranda Bona, Fuss & O'Neill, Inc., donating to Jacks Galore 
  • Amanda Carpenter, Guardian Life Insurance Company of America, donating to Youth Center Inc. 
  • Lindsay Cornwell, Second Street Second Chances, Inc. / Berkshire County Sheriff's Office, donating to Elizabeth Freeman Center 
  • AJ Cote, Food Pantries of the Capital District, donating to Roots & Dreams and Mustard Seeds Inc. 
  • Charlotte (Linden) Crane, Berkshire Community College, donating to CBRSD - Wahconah Regional High School CPR program  
  • Jessie Downer, Lamacchia Realty, donating to Strong Little Souls 
  • Michael Duffy, Pittsfield Public Schools – Taconic, donating to Temple Anshe Amunim 
  • Devan Gardner, Greylock Federal Credit Union, donating to Berkshire Lyric 
  • Christa Gariepy, Berkshire Health Systems, donating Boys & Girls Club of the Berkshires (the Seed Room) 
  • Alexander Hernandez, Berkshire Medical Center, Somos Berkshires, donating to Katunemo Arts and Healing (Downtown Pittsfield, Inc. as its fiscal sponsor) 
  • Hilary Houldsworth, Elder Services of Berkshire County, Inc., donating to Elder Services of Berkshire County, Inc. 
  • Keytoria Jenkins, United States Postal Service and Keys with Keytoria, donating to Choices Mentoring Initiative 
  • Tom Jorgenson, Berkshire Athenaeum, donating to Literacy Volunteers of Berkshire County 
  • Amanda Lardizabal, Berkshire Community College, donating to Berkshire Humane Society 
  • Emma Lenski, Berkshire Pride / Collaborative Endeavors, LLC / Indie Readery & Records, donating to Berkshire Pride 
  • Molly Lovejoy, Railroad Street Youth Project, donating to Railroad Street Youth Project 
  • Kaitlyn Maloy, Berkshire Medical Center, donating to Berkshire Health Systems Nursing Residency 
  • Sheetal Manerkar, Berkshire Medical Center, donating to Elder Services of Berkshire County, Inc. 
  • Zachary Marcotte, Berkshire Money Management, donating to Berkshire Humane Society (Community Cat Program) 
  • Stephanie Maselli, Berkshire Arts & Technology Charter Public School, donating to Williamstown Youth Center 
  • Charell McFarland, Community First Therapy and Consulting, LLC, donating to R.O.P.E (Rites of Passage & Empowerment Inc) 
  • Molly Merrihew, WAM Theatre, donating to Latinas413 
  • Travis Mille, ConvenientMD Urgent Care, donating to BFAIR 
  • Octavio Miranda Nallin, Amici Berkshires, donating to Litnet 
  • Kaitlyn Moresi, BFAIR, donating to Love of T Foundation 
  • Kaci Nowicki, Greylock Federal Credit Union, donating to Berkshire Coalition for Suicide Prevention 
  • Katherine Oberwager, Baystate Medical Center, donating to Pediatric Developmental Center 
  • Erik Ray, MountainOne Bank, donating to Youth Center Inc. 
  • Nicholas Russo, Berkshire Regional Planning Commission, donating to Zion Lutheran Church 
  • Brianna Sabato, Pittsfield Public Schools, donating to Berkshire Running Foundation 
  • Alyssa Sakowski, Berkshire County Head Start, donating to Berkshire County Head Start 
  • Sierra Shehemi, Guardian Life Insurance Company of America, donating to MS Support Foundation 
  • Brittany Sumner, Berkshire ABA, donating to Families Like Ours (FLO) 
  • Austin White, County Ambulance, donating to Emergency Medical Service Committee of Berkshire County 
  • Emily Zelenovic, Law Office of Emily Zelenovic, donating to Construct Inc. 
 
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