Greylock Project Proponents, Opponents Getting Message Out

iBerkshires StaffPrint Story | Email Story
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Proponents and opponents have been busy on social media and mailers in getting out their messages on which way to vote on the Greylock School project.
 
Voters will head to the polls on Tuesday, Oct. 8, to decide a debt exclusion for borrowing on the $65 million project that will include the demolition of the 70-year-old current Greylock School. The city will be responsible for just under $20 million over the next 30 years.
 
School officials have held a number of informational forums at both Brayton and Greylock schools and at smaller venues. Two groups have emerged on opposite sides of the question and have created Facebook pages and sent out mailers to voters. Both have filed with the city clerk's office as required by state law. 
 
Save Brayton North Adams filed with the clerk on Sept. 22. It lists the chair as Joseph Smith and treasurer as Marie Harpin, a former city councilor. This group is campaigning against the project. The Committee for a New Greylock School Building with Chair Karen Bond and Treasurer David Bond, former School Committee and councilor, respectively, is a proponent of the project. They filed on July 12. 
 
As of Wednesday, Save Brayton had raised $950 and spent $550, with outstanding liabilities of $2,388.61, all for printing. These expenditures are presumably for the lawn signs dotting properties around the city and for mailings.
 
A recent mailing listed reasons to vote no as being against demolition of the now closed Greylock, the cost of the project and its effect on taxpayers, that Brayton can be maintained rather than decommissioned, and that the area's declining student enrollment makes the spending "reckless."
 
The Committee for a New Greylock has raised 10 times more at $9,525. It has spent $7,714.85 for a billboard, postage, lawn signs and mailers and has an outstanding liability of $1,095 for a second billboard. 
 
The committee's largest donation is $5,000 from Suzy and John Wadsworth, owner of Porches Inn and a significant investor in the area; the second largest is $2,500 from the Tom Bernard Committee, Bernard's mayoral campaign fund. He was mayor when the project was initially developed. 
 
This group's mailer points to the decade in work to get to this point and the endorsement of the Massachusetts School Building Authority, which will pick up $42 million of the cost. Renovating Brayton, they say, will cost more with no recompense from the state while the new school will provide a healthier, modern and more educationally appropriate facility.  
 

Tags: brayton/greylock project,   debt exclusion,   

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North Adams Man Guilty of Murder

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A North Adams man was convicted Friday of murdering his wife, Charli Gould Cook, in 2019. 
 
A Berkshire Superior Court jury found Michael Cook Sr., 47, guilty of murder in the second degree, assault and armed assault with intent to murder, and assault and battery by means of a dangerous weapon causing serious bodily injury and assault and battery on a family or household member.
 
Cook had broken into the Chase Avenue home of his estranged wife on July 11, 2019. The 41-year-old woman was in her bed when Cook hit on the back side of her head with a hammer. The assault resulted in significant injury to her skull causing traumatic brain injury. Emergency personnel found her unresponsive when called to the home approximately 1 a.m. that morning.
 
She passed away approximately five months after the assault at Baystate Medical Center. The medical examiner ruled her cause of death as a direct result of the brain injury from the July 11th assault. Cook was arrested on assault charges and indicted in 2020 of murder. He had been detained without the right to bail since that time after being determined a danger to the community.  
 
Charli Cook was a native of North Adams who attended McCann Technical School and had worked as a certified nursing assistant.
 
Sentencing will take place on Thursday, Oct. 10, at Berkshire Superior Court. 
 
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