PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Sears at the Berkshire Mall is slated for closure.
The company announced on Thursday the pending closure of 18 Sears stores and 45 Kmarts. The Berkshire Mall's location had been spared from earlier rounds of store closures by Sears Holdings but is part of the latest.
"Sears Holdings continues its strategic assessment of the productivity of our Kmart and Sears store base and will continue to right size our store footprint in number and size. In the process, as previously announced we will continue to close some unprofitable stores as we transform our business model so that our physical store footprint and our digital capabilities match the needs and preferences of our members," reads a statement from the Sears Holdings.
"The company on Thursday, November 2 informed associates at 45 Kmart stores and 18 Sears stores that we will be closing these stores in late January 2018. It's important to note that these stores will remain open to serve members during the holiday season."
Sears said eligible employees will receive severance packages and the opportunity to apply to other Sears and Kmart stores. Liquidation sales at the stores will begin as early as Nov. 9. The auto center is set to close in December with the rest of the store following it in January.
The closure is yet another massive blow to the struggling Berkshire Mall. In 2015 it lost its first anchor in Best Buy. The following year Macy's closed and then earlier this year J.C. Penney closed. The closures leave only Target as an anchor, and Target owns its location separately. None of the vacant spaces have been re-filled yet.
The mall was sold to new owners a little more than a year ago. Kohan Retail Investment Group purchased it for $3.5 million in September of 2016. Kohan had said he hoped to revitalize it. But, since the purchase bills have piled up.
Ownership fell behind on nearly a quarter of a million in taxes. The company falls behind and then pays a large chunk of what it owes at once. And then a few civil lawsuits were taken out, with the largest being Petricca Construction being awarded $240,000 after the company failed to pay the snowplowing bills.
Meanwhile, the assessed value of the mall has dropped. It was valued at $60.4 million in 2008 and is now valued at $19.5 million, taking a large chunk of revenue from town coffers.
The culmination of losing anchors, unpaid bills, and dropping value triggered alarms among town officials. The Baker Hill Road District is seeking legislative approval to take over ownership of the mall and redevelopment it. The road district is currently tasked with managing the Connector Road and wants approval to take over the property and work with a developer to bring something new there.
That bill, filed by the late state Rep. Gailanne Cariddi, has passed the House of Representatives and is now before the Senate. The Senate's Rules Committee is now awaiting a report from the Senate Council on the matter, and the council is awaiting a report from the Department of Revenue's Division of Local Services. State Sen. Adam Hinds has taken over ushering it through the Senate.
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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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