ADAMS, Mass — The Board of Health issued a new emergency order on Monday that imposes new COVID-19 restrictions.
The emergency order, which was the main topic at the board's Wednesday meeting, encourages businesses, clubs and special public events to have distancing and masking restrictions. Additionally, the order requires these entities to directly notify the board of COVID-19 cases and conduct cleaning afterward.
"The rationale is, basically, information for us to reduce the spread of COVID," said board Chair David Rhoads.
Rhoads said because the state will soon no longer be offering contact tracing, having businesses report this information directly to the board will be helpful. As part of explaining the reasoning behind the order, Rhoads shared his COVID-19 report.
He reported that 90 Hoosac Valley Elementary School children attended the school's Nov. 15 vaccine clinic, with another 600 receiving inoculations at Northern Berkshire Pediatrics. Adams had 43 new reported COVID-19 cases between Oct. 24 and Nov. 6, accounting for 7.43 percent of the cases in Berkshire County.
One statistic in particular that Rhoads said was alarming was the 14-day incident rate per 100,000 residents in Adams was 37.3 between Oct. 24 and Nov. 6, compared to 32.7 for Berkshire County and 18.2 for the state.
"It is a disturbing trend," he said. "But I do wish to note you can see the numbers do go up and down. When numbers go down, it is not time to relax."
Town Counsel Edmund St. John IV said he took some issue with the wording of the order that makes it hard to enforce.
"Much of the order uses the wording 'encouraged' or 'strongly encouraged,'" he said. "That type of language is not mandatory language. And it's not enforceable language. First of all, how do you determine what is encouraging? How do you measure a strong encouragement?"
Board Vice Chair Joyce Brewer said she was worried about businesses and the community following the non-mandatory parts of the order, such as encouraging social distancing and mask-wearing.
"Regardless of whether we have COVID, people are going to start gathering to these kinds of locations. That's the one thing I was thinking about," she said. "If it were the middle of the summer, it'd be one thing. But it's coming into a closed buildings holiday season, where people are going to be definitely trying to do some of those normal things that we did before COVID."
After concerns from audience members about giving the personal information of employees, Code Enforcement Officer Mark Blaisdell clarified that entities impacted by this order only need to inform the board of the COVID-19 case and nothing else.
"This is medical information, and therefore, it is protected," he said. "Very rarely will we ever get a person's name unless they're calling us leaving a message. But even in that case, it doesn't get disseminated out to the public. That's all protected information."
Also discussed at the meeting, the board briefly mentioned the discharge of calcium carbonate into the Hoosic River on Tuesday. Rhoads read a statement from the Northern Berkshire Regional Emergency Planning Committee, which said calcium carbonate is not toxic to humans, and Specialty Minerals is working to fix the issue.
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Adams Starting Administrator Search in New Year
By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
ADAMS, Mass. — Town officials hope to start the search for a new town administrator by January.
Vice Chair Christine Hoyt said last week that she was preparing a request for quotes for consultants to aid in the search.
"The chairman did appoint me to put together a request for quotes to hire a consultant for our upcoming town administrator search," she said at Wednesday's meeting. "I've received a number of different RFQs from a number of communities who have just done this in the last year, and I'm just writing it up so that is tailored to the town of Adams."
She expected to have the document ready this week to distribute to the board in advance of the regular Nov. 20 meeting. The goal is to get it approved and posted by Nov. 22, and review any responses prior to the Dec. 18 meeting.
"Which would give us the opportunity to post the job for the town administrator in the month of January, which lines up with the MMA's Connect 351 conference," Hoyt said. "I think it would be to our best interest to have something in place in regard to a posting by that conference rolls around."
The Massachusetts Municipal Association's annual conference takes place on Jan. 23-25. Hundreds of elected officials and administrators attend the gathering.
Officials anticipate some time before getting a new administrator in place. Current administrator Jay Green, was selected as the new Lenox town manager, replacing Christopher Ketchen.
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