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The bridge on East Housatonic Street has been reduced to one lane after being found structurally deficient.

East Housatonic Bridge Restricted to One-Lane

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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The town is considering making it one-way and detouring traffic. 
DALTON, Mass. — Structural concerns have closed one side of the bridge on East Housatonic Street, making that section of the busy road limited to one lane. 
 
The 25.5-foot-long girder bridge is considered structurally deficient, with a poor deck condition, although the superstructure is rated fair. It was built in 1941. 
 
The department has been patching the holes in the bridge twice a week, Edward "Bud" Hall, Department of Public Works superintendent, said. 
 
There are currently eight barriers spanning 80 feet; the town owns two and borrowed the remaining six from the state.
 
However, the state requires barriers to cover 175 feet because of the high traffic volume on the road.
 
As a result, the town must either rent or purchase additional barriers. The question remains — which option is more cost-effective in the long term.
 
State Highway District 1 recommended that the town implement a temporary traffic signal or allow only one direction through the bridge while detouring others. 
 
Depending on how long it will take to address the bridge's condition, it may be cheaper to purchase barriers. 
 
According to quotes from the Northeast Traffic Technologies LLC, renting the two needed portable traffic signals will cost $3,250 a month while the barriers are $45 a month each. 
 
Purchasing barriers is $530 each. The quote is for 17 barriers for a total of $9,010, however, the town may not need that many. 
 
It is unclear how long the town will need to restrict traffic in the area. The engineers need to wait until the "freeze and thaw happens" to assess the condition, Hall said. 
 
Hall said they could consider purchasing half a dozen barriers. The Finance Committee is considering using funds out of the reserve account after referring with other town officials. 

Tags: bridge work,   road closure,   

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Dalton Select Board to Hold Q&A Session on DCTV

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — Time and again residents have asked for more transparency from town government and now, thanks to a new series on Dalton Community Television, they will have just that. 
 
At a recent Select Board meeting, Chair Robert Bishop pitched that the town hold question-and-answer sessions to be filmed by the public broadcasting channel. 
 
The item, at the time not on the agenda so could not be discussed, was approved last Monday. 
 
"A lot of times on social media or wherever, even by word of mouth, things don't always come out the way they should do, and people get confused," Bishop said. 
 
"I would welcome any kind of questions pertaining to Select Board matters that we can answer." 
 
To comply with open meeting law, each episode will include no more than two members, and discussions will be limited to answering questions — no deliberation will occur. 
 
The show will begin airing once the town has received enough questions to fill a 30-minute segment. After that, it will continue bi-weekly on a schedule to be announced.
 
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