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Adams Conservation Commission Approves Route 8 Plans

By Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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The commissioners approved the project with conditions.
ADAMS, Mass. — The Conservation Commission has approved plans to make improvements to a section of Route 8 next year.
 
"When I looked at this I was very impressed by the detail and quality of the design so I feel comfortable with the engineering," William Lattrell, an ecologist and wetlands scientist who acts as consultant to the commission, said on Thursday.
 
The state Department of Transportation project will target about a mile of Route 8 from the Liberty Street intersection to where the bridge on Grove Street crosses over the Ashuwillticook Rail Trail.
 
The road will be resurfaced and narrowed. Pedestrian and bicycle markings will be added and drainage will be improved.
 
The commissioners actually saw the plans earlier this month but did not have a quorum. The approval came quickly because many of their questions were already answered, however, the commission did pause about the proposed stormwater management system.
 
The state Department of Environmental Protection flagged the system because it did not completely comply with state standards. Representatives from VHB, who presented the design, said it was a creative solution uniquely designed to the road.
 
"It is very hard to -- especially in this corridor -- putting in detention basins or infiltration basins where you have front yards," VHB wetlands scientists Gene Crouch said. "You would be taking out people's parking areas and we want to avoid doing that."
 
The system employs 13 bioretention planters that catch water. Water filters down through a special sand mix where it gets picked up by a perforated pipe. The water is then carried out to the drainage system.
 
Lattrell and Crouch agreed that DEP's remark was correct and the project cannot claim credit for the system because it is not specified in the stormwater "cookbook." Crouch said the system is still an improvement and is essentially a tree-box filter without a tree.  
 
Lattrell added that this "stormwater cookbook" has not been updated in 10 years.
 
"It is 10 years old and there has been a lot of new technology since then that needs to be put in it," he said. "There have been many improvements in storm water control."
 
The commission generally felt the system was a good fit and agreed if the DEP really had major concerns they could appeal the project. 
 
The planters will need to be maintained by the town and the commission added a condition that at the conclusion of construction the town is trained in how the system works and how to clean it.
 
Crouch also clarified that the project is a redevelopment rather than a development project and goes beyond the 66,000 square feet of degraded paved area stated. He said the entire project is about 70,000 square feet of work in the riverfront.
 
"We already have a degraded area we are working in and under the regulations we don't really have to worry about that," he said. "If we were just working within the footprint of the pavement and doing nothing else we wouldn't even have to file."
 
Lattrell said with redevelopment projects improvements need to be made and he cited three: less impervious area, improved filtration, and new deep sumps.
 
Lattrell spoke to another DEP concern that the project was so close to a resource area. He recommended that erosion control is monitored. 
 
Crouch said MassDOT typically has a monitor on site but the commission made a condition that a monitor be on site and reports to the board every two weeks or after a rain event resulting in two or more inches of precipitation.
 
The project will likely go out to bid in March with work possibly starting in the fall.

Tags: conservation commission,   MassDOT,   road project,   route 8,   

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Housing Secretary Makes Adams Housing Authority No. 40 on List of Visits

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Executive Director William Schrade invited Secretary Edward Augustus to the rededication of the Housing Authority's Community Room, providing a chance for the secretary to hear about the authority's successes and challenges. 
ADAMS, Mass. — The state's new secretary of housing got a bit of a rock-star welcome on Wednesday morning as Adams Housing Authority residents, board members and staff lined up to get their picture taken with him. 
 
Edward Augustus Jr. was invited to join the Adams Housing Authority in the rededication of its renovated community room, named for James P. McAndrews, the authority's first executive director. 
 
Executive Director William Schrade said he was surprised that the secretary had taken up the invitation but Augustus said he's on a mission — to visit every housing authority in the state. 
 
"The next logical question is how many housing authorities are there in Massachusetts? There's 242 of them so I get a lot of driving left to do," he laughed. "This is number 40. You're in the first tier I've been able to visit but to me, it's one way for me to understand what's actually going on."
 
The former state senator and Worcester city manager was appointed secretary of housing and livable communities — the first cabinet level housing chief in 30 years — by Gov. Maura Healey last year as part of her answer to the state's housing crisis. 
 
He's been leading the charge for the governor's $4 billion Affordable Homes Act that looks to invest $1.6 billion in repairing and modernizing the state's 43,000 public housing units that house some 70,000 low-income, disabled and senior residents, as well as families. 
 
Massachusetts has the most public housing units and is one of only a few states that support public housing. Numbers range from Boston's tens of thousands of units to Sutton's 40. Adams has 64 one-bedroom units in the Columbia Valley facility and 24 single and multiple-bedroom units scattered through the community.
 
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