Dalton Water District Gets Lead Service Line Project Update

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Water Department has been working with Tighe & Bond on collecting data for the Lead Service Line Inventory Project. 
 
The engineering consultants have been building a database using the GIS (Geographical Information System) and developed a mailer that will be sent to water customers, Water Superintendent Bob Benlien said. 
 
Customers will be able to take a photo of their service line coming in and using a QR code they will be able to submit it along with information so the Water Department can get that information from their houses. 
 
The department has already paid one installment on the grant for approximately $9,000. 
 
The next steps for the project will be to transfer the draft inventory into the GIS database, and identify and address inconsistencies with the GIS location and assessors information. 
 
Following that, they will be adding building age, use code, and other information from the GIS available data to the inventory. 
 
The Water district has old "tickertapes" from when it did the center of town in the 1960s and '70s that showed each connection from the main to the curb was made of copper not lead. It showed how many feet of copper was used to connect to the water main. 
 
Tighe & Bond will be adding this information to the GIS.
 
Tighe & Bond also held a kick-off meeting with Blue Conduit, the company providing modeling services, 
 
"They do the predictive modeling which has been, I guess, approved by the [Environmental Protection Agency] and through their computer program, they can predict how many lead service lines we do have in town," Benlien said.
 
Based on what Benlien has run into in the the last 20 years, he has not seen any lead service lines, but that does not mean the town doesn't have any. 
 
"Any galvanized line that is downstream of what could have been a lead service line would have to be replaced," Benlien said. 
 
"And if you can't prove that there weren't, they just assume that there are. So this program is supposed to take care of all that."
 
District Treasurer and Clerk Melanie Roucoulet and Benlien have also been working with Tighe & Bond to review customer billing and data and identify missing information. 
 
Thus far Tighe & Bond has also worked on developing the mailers that will inform customers of the process of uploading their photos and information, prepared public information handout examples, and initiated the development of the GIS LSL mapping database. 
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Pittsfield Cannabis Cultivator Plans Dispensary

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD. Mass. — A cannabis cultivator and manufacturer has opted to sell its products on site in Downing Parkway. 

The Zoning Board of Appeals this month approved a special permit for J-B.A.M. Inc. to operate a dispensary out of its existing grow facility. There will only be changes to the interior of 71 Downing Parkway, as there will be less than 500 square feet of retail space in the 20,000-square-foot building. 

"My only concern would be the impact, and really would be traffic, which I don't think is excessive, the odor, if there was one, but that doesn't seem to be an issue, and I think it's a good location for a marijuana facility," board member Thomas Goggins said. 

The company's indoor cultivation site plan was approved in 2019, an amendment to add manufacturing and processing in 2021, and on the prior day, a new site plan to add a retail dispensary was approved by the Community Development Board. 

J-B.A.M. cannabis products are available in local dispensaries. 

The interior of the facility will be divided to accommodate an enclosed check-in area, front entrance, retail lobby, secure storage room, offices, and two bathrooms. There are 27 parking spaces for the facility, which is sufficient for the use. 

No medical or recreational cannabis uses are permitted within 500 feet of a school or daycare, a setback that is met, and the space is within an industrial park at the end of a cul-de-sac. 

"The applicant desires the restructuring of the business to be more competitive in the industry with the ability to grow and sell their own cannabis products so they have more financial stability," Chair Albert Ingegni III, read from the application. 

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