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The Select Board was making phone calls for advice on how to ensure a proper process for voting on the public safety building articles. The meeting was continued to Tuesday at 11 a.m. to approve the special town meeting warrant.

Lanesborough to Vote on Public Safety Building in Two Weeks

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Residents will vote on the new public safety building's location at a special meeting on March 1.

Police Station Building Committee Chair Kristen Tool told the Select Board on Monday that it is important to have the special meeting at this time to secure funding for the nearly $6 million build at 405 South Main St.

The window for grant opportunities closes in March and that could extend the search for funding into another year if missed, Tool reported.

"The USDA Loan Program, the interest rate of 3.7 percent, which all of our presentation numbers were based on, the tax burden numbers are based on, that most likely will go up on March 31 so it's really important to keep the special meeting for these votes in order to keep the cost down as low as possible," she said.

"We don't want to risk losing the funds that we have that are low right now and I think it's really important that we keep it on the special [meeting] and I understand there's always going to be somebody who's not happy about it being on the special [meeting,] there's probably people who will be unhappy about it being on the annual meeting, too. I think everybody's got to do the best they can to get to the meeting and vote. It is very important. It's a big project."

Public hearings will be held on Tuesday, Feb. 21, at 6 p.m. over Zoom, Saturday, Feb. 25, at 1 p.m. at Town Hall, and a tentative meeting on Feb. 28 at 1 p.m. with the Council on Aging at Town Hall. In order to have the warrant sent out two weeks before the special meeting, the Select Board continued its meeting until Tuesday at 11 a.m. so that it can vote on the articles.

All of the project's details are compiled into a nearly 45-minute slideshow that was posted 11 days ago.  The proposed site formerly housed the Skyline Country Club's driving range and is owned by Pittsfield's Mill Town Capital.

After several months of negotiation, Tool told the Select Board last week that the 9-acre parcel will require approval at a special town meeting.

Tool has since learned that a warrant is not needed to accept a $150,000 gift from the Baker Hill Road District but is needed to approve the property's purchase, to transfer $236,000 from free cash to pay for the first year of the loan burden and to approve the $5.9 million project cost.

Since free cash was just certified, the $236,000 ask may not make it the final warrant. The average home would see an annual tax bill increase between $46 and $183.

"The largest article is to raise appropriate, transfer, raise funds for the full cost of the project so that we can have the money that's been awarded through the state released to the town and we can seek other grants and other funds to be able to cover costs and lower the tax burden," Tool explained.



The state has promised $1 million for the build, bringing the maximum taxpayer burden to $4.9 million.

There has been some concern about the timing of the special meeting, with some feeling that it is rushed.

Tool said the fully compiled information has been public for almost two weeks and some of the information was released late last year when the building plans were received.

"I understand that this is a big project and there's a lot of fear about it but the information has been available for quite a long time for people to review," she said.

There was some procedural question on how to get the warrant articles OK'd by Wednesday. The selectmen wound up calling an emergency meeting on Tuesday after making a few phone calls to ask for advice.

At the beginning of the meeting, former Selectman Gordon Hubbard was remembered during a moment of silence. Hubbard, 54, died unexpectedly earlier this month while working as a ski patrol member at Bousquet.

In the town's last election, Timothy Sorrell ran against Hubbard for the third seat on the board and won.  Sorrell said Hubbard was a pleasure to work with.

"He was a very good man, pleasant to work with here," John Goerlach said. "It's a sad loss for our community."

Michael Murphy said he always enjoyed working with Hubbard and that he had a great sense of humor.

"He had a love for Lanesborough," he said. "And the thing I admired about him most was, especially when we disagreed, he did it in a very professional and respectful way that I admire."

 

Editor's note: the full cost of the public safety building was give erroneously one time in the article and has been fixed. The amount is $5.9 million.


Tags: Lanesborough Police Station,   

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Classical Beat: Enjoy Great Music at Tanglewood, Sevenars Festivals

By Stephen DanknerSpecial to iBerkshires

As Tanglewood enters its fourth week, stellar performances will take center stage in Ozawa Hall and in the Koussevitsky Shed.

Why go? To experience world-class instrumental soloists, such as the stellar piano virtuoso Yuja Wang. Also not to be missed are the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra, as well as visiting guest ensembles and BSO and TMC soloists as they perform chamber and orchestral masterworks by iconic composers Purcell, Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, Wagner, Prokofiev, Richard Strauss, Vaughan Williams and Ives.

In addition to Tanglewood, there are also outstanding performances to be enjoyed at the Sevenars Music Festival in South Worthington. Both venues present great music performed in acoustically resonant venues by marvelous performers.

Read below for the details for concerts from Wednesday, July 17-Tuesday, July 22.

Tanglewood

• Wednesday, July 17, 8 p.m. in Ozawa Hall • Recital Series: The phenomenal world-class piano virtuoso Yuja Wang presents a piano recital in Ozawa Hall.

• Thursday July 18, 8 p.m. in Ozawa Hall • Recital SeriesLes Arts Florissants, William Christie, Director and Mourad Merzouki, Choreographer presents a performance of Henry Purcell's ‘semi-opera'/Restoration Drama "The Fairy Queen."

• Friday, July 19, 8 p.m. in the Shed: Maestro Dima Slobodeniouk leads the Boston Symphony Orchestra in a program of Leonard Bernstein (the deeply moving, jazz-tinged Symphony No. 2 ("Age of Anxiety") and Brahms' glorious Symphony No. 3.

• Saturday, July 20, 8 p.m. in the Shed: BSO Maestro Andris Nelsons leads the Orchestra in a concert version of Richard Wagner's thrilling concluding music drama from his "Ring" cycle-tetralogy, "Götterdämmerung." The stellar vocal soloists include sopranos Christine Goerke and Amanda Majeske, tenor Michael Weinius, baritone James Rutherford, bass Morris Robinson and Rhine maidens Diana Newman, Renée Tatum and Annie Rosen.

• Sunday, July 21, 2:30 p.m. in the Shed: Maestro Nelsons leads the Tanglewood Music Center Orchestra (TMCO) in a program of Ives (the amazingly evocative "Three Places in New England"), Beethoven (the powerful Piano Concerto No. 3 with soloist Emanuel Ax) and Richard Strauss ("Also sprach Zarathustra" — you'll recognize its iconic "sunrise" opening).

• Tuesday, July 22, 7:00 p.m. in the Shed • Popular Artist Series: Beck, with the Boston Pops, Edwin Outwater, conductor.

For tickets to all Tanglewood events, call 888-266-1200, or go to tanglewood.org.

Sevenars Music Festival

Founded in 1968, Sevenars Concerts, Inc., presents its 56th anniversary season of six summer concerts, held at the Academy in South Worthington, located at 15 Ireland St., just off Route 112.

• Sunday, July 21, at 4 p.m.: Sevenars is delighted to present violist Ron Gorevic, returning to Sevenars after his stunning Bach recital in 2023. This year, Gorevic will offer a groundbreaking program including music of Kenji Bunch, Sal Macchia, Larry Wallach, and Tasia Wu, the latter three composing especially for him. In addition, he'll offer Bach's magnificent Chaconne in D minor and Max Reger's 3rd Suite.

Hailed by The New York Times, Gorevic continues a long and distinguished career as a performer on both violin and viola. Along with solo recitals, he has toured the United States, Germany, Japan, Korea, and Australia, performing most of the quartet repertoire. In London, he gave the British premieres of pieces by Donald Erb and Ned Rorem. He has recorded for Centaur Records as soloist and member of the Prometheus Piano Quartet, and for Koch Records as a member of the Chester String Quartet.

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