School Building Authority to Visit Mount Greylock Regional

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The state School Building Authority is sending a team next week to review much-needed repairs at Mount Greylock Regional High School.

The school district is looking at hundreds of thousands to repair a collapsed ceiling in the girls' locker room and other poorly constructed ceilings in the 1968 addition. Added to that is the cost of replacing an aging boiler system.

While state funding may come through, the Mount Greylock School Committee on Tuesday night decided to move forward with bonding the projects rather than wait for months or more for state money or grants.

With winter approaching and school about to start, it was important that both projects get started as soon as possible, said committee members. 

Andrew Hogeland, chairman of the building committee, said there were four funding options: bonding, the School Building Authority, grants through the Green Communities Act and the possibility of partnerhip with private contractor installing alternative heating systems.

Applications are not yet available for Green Communities funding and there would unlikely be enough energy produced in an alternative system to make it worth a private entity's investment, he said.

SBA funds would be welcome but would also likely slow the project down because of a multiple approval process, he said.

School Committee Chairman David Archibald said the four towns in the regional school district — Hancock, New Ashford, Lanesborough and Williamstown — needed to be informed of the bonding. Several conversations have been had with Williamstown, including Hogeland giving the Selectmen an update earlier this month. School Committee member Robert Ericson had meet with the Hancock officials earlier in the evening.


It was unclear whether the towns would have to hold town meetings; the school's counsel was reviewing the process. The bonding language will take into account the possibility of grants down the line and that the full cost of the projects is not yet kown.

After some discussion, the board endorsed putting out a request for proposals for the ceiling project rather than combining it with the boiler replacement. The draft for the ceiling repair is ready to go, said Hogeland, while the engineering report for the boilers is not expected until Friday at the earliest.

Ericson suggested waiting and combining the proposals as a way to cut costs and have better quality control under the assumption that one contractor would bid for the entire package. Archibald said it was preferable to get the project moving as fast as possible and that he didn't see a lot of overlap in two plans.

The RFP for the ceilings will include notice of the boiler project and the likelihood that the winning bidder will have to coordinate with the project.

The School Committee is hoping to get some legislative support by inviting local lawmakers to the high school for next Thursday's visit by the SBA. Hogeland suggested that while the entire school board might be too much, several representatives and members of the building committee should be on hand.

Superintendent William Travis said a School Committee meeting will be posted in case a quorum is reached or if the committee needs to meet that evening to take action on any matters arising from the visit.

The exact time of the visit was unknown Tuesday but the SBA team was expected to tour Hancock Scchool the same day.
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Lanesborough Elm Tree Named Largest in State

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — King Elmer is living up to his name, now deemed the largest American Elm in the state.

Jim Neureuther, chair of the Tree and Forrest Committee, happily reported this to the Select Board on Monday.  The Department of Conservation and Recreation released an updated Champion Trees list on May 4 with the town's over 100-foot tall elm at the top.

"It's official, King Elmer is the largest American Elm tree in Massachusetts," Neureuther said.

Located at the corner of Route 7 and Summer St., the king is believed to be over 250 years old and is 107 feet tall with an average canopy spread of 95.5 feet.  It scored 331.88 points with the state based on a 201-inch circumference, which is a 64-inch diameter (5'4 through the middle of the tree.)

King Elmer dethroned the former champion elm in Old Deerfield Village that has been cut down.  In 2019, Neureuther traveled to Franklin County to see it only to find a stump, prompting him to submit the Lanesborough tree's official measurements.

He thought, "Wait a minute, we're moving up the ranks now."

The second-place elm scored 320 points, giving King Elmer a lead in the race barring the loss of a limb.

Earlier this year, the town was notified by the Arbor Day Foundation that it had been recognized as Tree City USA for 2023, a long-held designation.  

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