Cheshire Eliminated Harbormaster Post

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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CHESHIRE, Mass. — The Select Board last week voted to eliminate the post of harbormaster and turn the boat over the Fire Department at the request of both the police and fire chiefs.
 
Interim Police Chief Tim Garner gave the board a history of the post and how it came to fall under the Police Department.
 
"The vote was received by the Police Department as part of our grant. I think it was in development in 2009, maybe as part of community policing-type grant that we got, and it was specifically designated for fire and police, and decided on a patrol and rescue," he said. "So basically, if something happened on the lake, we'd be able to have a boat that would get access to go out and do what we got to do."
 
He said the first harbormaster would patrol Hoosac Lake only to educate and advise as they were not allowed to enforce laws.
 
"He would go out on the lake periodically and not enforcing, because it's not our lake, he would go and do PR work and just advise people about life jackets or give them a safe boating book or something like that. Just basically PR work," he said.
 
Select Board member Michelle Francesconi said this was because it could lead to trouble if they were attempted to enforce rules.
 
"I think one of the issues that we were running into, even with the harbormaster position, and I can remember with the vote in general, was the perception that it was an enforcement vote, and it would put somebody in a precarious situation, or could potentially put the harbor master in a bad situation, just if they were perceived as a law enforcement officer, because you don't know what you're going to come up on, either be drunks or drugs, or any other crimes on the water, too," she said.
 
When Harbormaster Paul Maloney retired, it was taken over by a resident who later died, said Garner, and since then it has been Adam Healey, a Police Department employee. The chief said no one really wanted the position and thought it should be eliminated and the boat transferred to the Fire Department.
 
"We never had a harbormaster, nor do I think we need one. That lake's not ours, it belongs to the state. If the state wants to patrol it, let them go out and patrol it," he said. "Therefore, what we're requesting is the harbormaster position as we know it, go away, and the boat gets turned over to the fire chief, in which he can use it for training."
 
The boat could also be used for educating boaters and PR, Garner continued, but "the enforcement part of it is not us, it's the state."
 
Fire Chief Thomas Francesconi said it would be great to use the boat for water rescue and that his department would take over its maintenance.
 
"We obviously have no objection to it, because we use it for water rescue," he said. "We would then be responsible for, obviously, winterizing it and taking it on the lake and that kind of thing."
 
They discussed the Fourth of July patrolling, as that is one of the busiest days on the lake, and suggested having a conversation with the Environmental Police if they will be out there that day.
 
Francesconi will have one of his captains who is an avid boater be the point of contact and help train and choose who will take the boat out as well as share with the Police Department so they can still patrol once in a while. Whoever uses it has to have completed the boater safety course.
 
Board said someone would have to do dock permitting, though Town Administrator Jennifer Morse said it's rare they get an application.
 
In other business, the fire chief asked for reserve funds to cover a clerical error in the clerks office regarding the payments on the new fire truck. The town was charged a total of $13,906.94 in fees, which was about $7,000 per month for insurance and loan payments, while the truck sat in North Attleboro. That was paid out of the department's expense account, which significantly reduced the operating budget.
 
He said he also has two sets of turnout gear that are ripped and unserviceable and must be replaced immediately, not deferred until the new fiscal year. Just to get the pants and a coat he said is more than $4,000. He is asking for the fee reimbursement to put toward a repair bill and the gear.
 
He also had to replace a fire hose that had failed inspection because it was filled with holes at a cost of more than $18,000 out of his $62,000 budget. He was also hit with almost $44,000 for certifications and repairs, too, with some of that coming out of the emergency medical services budget.
 
"I got hit pretty hard this year with stuff breaking. Kind of, we roll the dice and we fix as much as we can in house, but there's only so much we can do in house that without paying out on it," Francesconi said. "So those were the kind of the big-ticket items. I understand I'm kind of giving you a 30,000- foot view of my issue, but this is why I'm back today asking for a reserve fund transfer to cover me just on the turnout gear and the repair and then I'm going to put everything else on hold and keep my fingers crossed that nothing breaks."
 
The Finance Committee did not have a quorum so expected to vote on the transfer this week. 

Tags: lakes, ponds,   

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Cheshire Board OKs Draft Warrant, Compensates Town Clerk

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

CHESHIRE, Mass. — The Board of Selectmen endorsed the draft warrant for the annual town meeting and voted to transfer funds to compensate the town clerk for election work.

Following a public comment from its last meeting, board members discussed compensating Town Clerk Whitney Flynn for her hours during elections as they exceed her regular hours.

"Yes, election days are long, prior to elections there's set up. There's also state-mandated 9 to 5 hours on Fridays or Saturdays, where you have to be at the office to accept anyone who should choose to register to vote, and that's in addition to regular hours," Flynn said. "And then there's also state-mandated hours from Elections Commission for numerous days. And you know, there's multiple emails from the secretary of the commonwealth notifying that you must be in office to complete the certification of signatures during a lot of different days, just depending on how many elections are within that year. So they're mandatory hours by the state as well."

She kept track of her extra hours for the board to see. She has used other options to help pay poll workers.

"But what I would say is that there are opportunities with the [state] Division of Local Mandates to be reimbursed for a lot of those election costs," she said. "So essentially, I go through after elections, and I put in all of the vote-by-mail costs associated with that, I put in the like the poll workers hours if election workers come for early voting in office, which is mandatory for state and federal elections."

The Selectmen decided to move $2,500 from the book repair line into the elections line to cover for the extra hours but she cannot exceed that and will communicate her office hours around it.

The board voted to recommend the 31 warrant articles for the annual town meeting scheduled Monday, June 8.

Among the questions to be posed to voters is the operating budget, Article 8, to raise and appropriate $1,642,481 and Article 9, to approve the Hoosac Valley Regional School District's assessment of $3,402,982, an increase of $196,900, or about 6 percent. The budget was approved the School Committee in March.

Article 10 is to approve the Northern Berkshire Vocational Regional School assessment of $595,431 and Article 23 asks to use free cash of $14,137 for the town's portion of McCann Technical School's roof and window project.

Article 12 is towould appropriate $403,000 to the Police Department. This includes an increased police chief salary to help attract a potential candidate as well as three full-time officers.

Article 13 would appropriate $131,805 to support the Fire Department and Article 14 is to transfer $18,726 from the radio stabilization account for emergency radio communications.

Voters will also be asked to raise and appropriate $20,000 to the reserve fund and $42,488 for the building department.

Article 28, the room occupancy excise tax, would be capped at 6 percent as that is what most communities do.

In other news:

Following a walkthrough with engineers, the fire station's meeting/training room remains closed

Department of Public Works Director Corey McGrath informed the board in April that the fire station needs to have a geotechnical study done because of the chance of a subsurface issue.

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