LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — The Berkshire Mall bills are piling up.
The mall owner, Kohan Retail Investment Group, under Berkshire Mail Realty Holdings, owes close to a half million in taxes to the town and to the Baker Hill Road District — $230,000 for the road district and $209,000 to the town.
"The Baker Hill Road District is moving aggressively to communicate with the mall about the failure to pay taxes," Town Manager Paul Sieloff recently told the Finance Committee. "They have not paid the road district in many months."
Also in recent months, the court awarded another quarter-million dollars to companies that filed lawsuits against Kohan Retail Investment after not being paid for service.
In March, Petricca Construction filed a lawsuit in Superior Court to collect close to $240,000 in unpaid snow removal bills.
"On or around October 26, 2016, Berkshire Realty and PCC entered into an agreement concerning the provision of services at the Berkshire Mall. According to the agreement, Petricca Construction Company agreed to provide snow removal services as well as services incidental to snow removal, including salting, at a property operated by Berkshire Realty known as the Berkshire Mall," reads the docket filed in Berkshire Superior Court.
The court ruled that Kohan failed to pay $237,491.37 for snow removal and awarded judgment in May. That still hasn't been paid. A month later, the court ordered an execution of judgment to retrieve the $244,629.36, which is the total plus interest, owed.
On Thursday, Maintenance Man Inc. was awarded judgment in district small claims court worth another $3,399.18. In that case, the award was made after no one from ownership appeared in court. It will be back in court in August for a payment review.
In 2011, a court ruled that the Woodville Mall in Northwood, Ohio, then owned by Kohan, was to be demolished because the mall had fallen into disrepair and posed a public safety hazard.
This year, the Lincoln Mall in Illinois faced the wrecking ball. That stemmed from the village of Matteson suing Kohan for failing to resolve dangerous conditions.
Earlier this year, Kohan paid back taxes from 2014 on the Orchards Mall in Michigan, but still owed 2015 and 2016. That mall was on the brink of foreclosure and Kohan's payment was just enough to push the process back a year. In May, a mall he owns in North Carolina, the Mayberry Mall, had a store been deemed "unsafe" because of water damage after the roof failed. That mall, too, has seen a loss of stores.
Despite the pile up of bills, Kohan Retail Investment continues to buy malls.
According to the company website, Kohan Retail Investment owns 22 malls, including the Berkshire Mall. Kohan's specialty is buying distressed malls and he bought the Berkshire Mall for $3.5 million in September.
The unpaid bills at the Berkshire Mall have caused alarm town officials. The Baker Hill Road District, which manages the Connector Road, is awaiting state authorization to be able purchase property with the intent of acquiring the mall, which could be done through tax taking. The group wants to turn the mall around because, as of now, town officials don't see Kohan doing much to keep it afloat.
"They are very aware and alert to the idea that they have a fiscal situation that cannot continue as it is. They are moving forward with demanding payment of taxes, they are moving forward with the legislation with the state, and they are moving forward with the concept of other revenues such as borrowing," Sieloff has said.
"At this point [the road district] they have kept their bills paid to the town so it is not an issue. But it is on our radar, too."
The mall has been losing tenants, including Macy's, Best Buy, and J.C. Penney. With that, the mall's tax assessment has dropped significantly, from being as high as $60.4 million a few years ago to just $19.5 million. Sieloff expects that to decrease even more.
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Lanesborough Administrator Gives Update on Snow Plowing
By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
LANESBOROUGH, Mass.— Five staff members plow about 50 miles of town roads during the winter.
On Monday, Town Administrator Gina Dario updated the Select Board on snow plowing. The county began to see snow around Thanksgiving and had a significant storm last week.
"I just think it's good for transparency for people to understand sort of some of the process of how they approach plowing of roads," she said.
Fifty miles of roadway is covered by five staff members, often starting at 8 p.m. with staggered shifts until the morning.
"They always start on the main roads, including Route 7, Route 8, the Connector Road, Bull Hill Road, Balance Rock (Road,) and Narragansett (Avenue.) There is cascading, kind of— as you imagine, the arms of the town that go out there isn't a set routine. Sometimes it depends on which person is starting on which shift and where they're going to cover first," Dario explained.
"There are some ensuring that the school is appropriately covered and obviously they do Town Hall and they give Town Hall notice to make sure that we're clear to the public so that we can avoid people slipping and falling."
She added that dirt roads are harder to plow earlier in the season before they freeze 'Or sometimes they can't plow at all because that will damage the mud that is on the dirt roads at that point."
During a light snowstorm, plowers will try to get blacktop roads salted first so they can be maintained quickly.
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