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Adams Jordan Street Parking Fix Causes Neighborhood Tension

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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ADAMS, Mass. — The years-old culvert collapse on Jordan Street that has displaced residential parking in the winter is creating tension amongst neighbors. 
 
While most residents on the narrow, one-way street have access to private parking, a select few were left with no legal options during the winter months.  
 
 
The permit allows overnight parking from the North Side of Jordan Street, opposite 17 to 31 Jordan St., where the culvert impacted private parking. 
 
Owner of the duplex located at 16 Jordan St., Christopher Martindill, attended the board meeting to request a permit for his tenants because of an ongoing dispute with a neighbor in the multi-family home at 17-31 Jordan St. 
 
Martindill explained that for the last decade his tenants have parked on the street in front of the duplex without issue, until the parking fix.
 
"You were kind of collateral damage here because we made a decision to section of Jordan street parking … and it's part of your house, is where we ended up putting the residents of the impacted individuals from 17 to 31 Jordan St.," Chair John Duval said. 
 
It was explained that overnight parking is restricted townwide during the winter. 
 
Martindill said he works diligently to maintain parking spaces outside his apartments. He clears snow not only in front of his own duplex but also from adjacent areas, including in front of 18 Jordan, to create space for multiple cars.
 
Since he clears these spots, disputes sometimes arise among neighbors over who has the right to park there, Martindill said. 
 
Additionally, he clears part of the yard to ensure all his tenants can park off-street during the winter parking ban, since the duplex has only one driveway.
 
If the town does permit parking only in front of Martindill's duplex, his tenants do not qualify because they are not one of the residents impacted by the culvert. 
 
"I don't care that [the neighbors are] in front of my house, per se, because obviously I don't own the street… I was just trying to get two parking passes [for my tenants] so they can park comfortably without worrying about getting a ticket," he said. 
 
Martindill said shifting the parking fix closer to Mill Street may help because no one parks in front of the four houses past his house in that direction, even in the summertime. 
 
The board said it could extend the permitted parking area for the entire Jordan Street. However interim Police Chief Timothy Sorrell cautioned against that as it would make it harder for the Highway Department when plowing. 
 
Having a fixed area for permitted parking ensures that the plows only have to avoid that section, he said. 
 
The board did not reach a resolution during the meeting. Instead, members approved a recommendation to install permit parking-only signs in locations to be determined at Sorrell's discretion.
 
Sorrell said he will collaborate with Martindill to find a solution to the situation and will present it to the board before the signs are placed. 
 
When the winter season ends, and there is no longer an overnight parking ban this will no longer be as much of an issue, Sorrell said. 
 
The only way this will get rectified is by fixing the culvert which the town has been working towards the last five years, Selectman Joseph Nowak said. 
 
 
The culvert carries Miller Brook into Tophet Brook behind 17 Jordan. The new culvert is designed to be 2 feet wider and a foot deeper, and will be moved away from problem areas, including the parking lot it currently runs underneath.
 
The town first heard about the failing culvert by its public works staff but when the town hired a preliminary engineer to do an assessment, it was discovered the project was going to be very complex and expensive. 
 
The town reached out to the state Emergency Management Agency, MEMA, to see if they could provide some assistance and was directed to FEMA's Hazard Mitigation Grant Program and was approved by both FEMA and MEMA to begin engineering in 2021. 
 
Adams was awarded $1.7 million of the then $2.2 million in two obligations, with the town picking up $572,000.
 
It was said in September that the town has asked for a budget amendment after the construction costs swelled from the original $2.2 million.
 
The Community Development Director Donna Cesan previously noted that MEMA will not enter into a formal agreement until funding is fully secured. 
 
Nowak said the town received an extension, however, he was at a meeting where he found out the federal funding isn't going to come. 
 
"The money from the feds aren't coming. Matter of fact, everything that we send now that normally goes to Boston for FEMA is going directly to Washington, D.C., because they want to micromanage everything. We're a Democratic state, and unfortunately, we're getting the short end of the stick," he said. 
 
The board will be given an update on the culvert situation in the spring. 

Tags: culvert,   parking,   

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Adams Treasurer's Retirement Prompts Talks on Making Post Appointed

By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
ADAMS, Mass. — The Selectmen last week appointed an interim treasurer/collector for the next year as the town determines whether to keep the post elected. 
 
Treasurer Kelly Rice tendered her retirement effective May 4, the day before the annual town election. The board voted to appoint her assistant, Christine Satko, to fill the post starting May 5. 
 
The board had a few options, outlined by Town Administrator Nicholas Caccamo at Thursday's special meeting: place the post on the town election ballot for this year, appoint a temporary treasurer (the assistant treasurer), or go through the process of changing the elected position to an appointed one via town meeting and ballot votes. 
 
Selectwoman Christine Hoyt said it was no secret that she has been an advocate for changing the elected post to an appointed one. 
 
Rice's retirement offered a good time to make that move, she said, pointing out that the state Department of Revenue back in 2017 had recommended the change, as well as for the town assessor.
 
"We have the general government review study ... put forward a recommendation in August of 2023 to make that position of treasurer/tax collector to be appointed," she said. "And then you have an article from the [Division of Local Services] regarding this change that has taken place in the state of moving from an elected treasurer/collector position to appointed."
 
She noted that there were 84 treasurer/collectors across the state still being elected as of 2014; that number is now 36. These changes were more recently made in Clarksburg and Savoy; the Adams Fire District is trying to again to move to an appointed treasurer, but Hancock rejected the idea. 
 
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