ADAMS, Mass. — The Board of Selectmen on Monday named a former Dalton town manager as part-time interim administrator.
The vote to appoint Kenneth Walto was 3-0, with Selectman Joseph Nowak abstaining and Selectman Richard Blanchard absent.
He will step in for Jay Green, who has been hired as the new town manager in Lenox. Green starts his new job on Jan. 15, 2025. Walto begins on Thursday with Green aiding in the transition over the next month.
The appointment came after two executive sessions on contract negotiations. The board had expected to finalize his contract last Monday, according to that meeting's agenda.
"We have with us here attorney Corey Higgins [of Mirick O'Connell], who has helped the Board of Selectmen with the development of the agreement between the town of Adams and Mr. Kenneth Walto, who has been selected to serve as the interim town administrator," said Selectwoman Christine Hoyt at the special meeting. "We did just wrap up an executive session and had successful negotiations."
Walto will be paid a salary of $1,800 per week (with the first week pro-rated) until such time as a permanent town administrator is hired; there are provisions in the contract for either he or the board to terminate that contract.
He retired from Dalton in 2020 after 19 years; prior to that, he had worked in the Pittsfield Community Development Office for nearly 20 years and as operations manager for the Brien Center.
This is the first time he's stepped into another community as an interim though he's worked part-time for the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission the past two years.
Walto said Hoyt had called him to have coffee and talk about the post. "I found her persuasive," he said.
He was one of four applicants for the interim post but the other three dropped out before being identified.
Hoyt also informed the board on the next step for hiring a new town administrator. She said she would have the request for quotes for a search consultant available by Friday in their mailboxes and asked if that was enough time to review by next Wednesday's meeting. They agreed it was.
In other business, the board referred an Open Meeting Law complaint from resident Catherine Foster dated Dec. 3 to town counsel.
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Adams Town Meeting Rejects Petition for Greylock Glen Commission
By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
ADAMS, Mass. — Town meeting members on Tuesday resoundingly rejected a citizen's petition pushing the creation of a Greylock Glen Commission.
The question was the only article to fail at the special town meeting attended by 91 town meeting members. The overwhelmingly passed several bylaws, a special tax assessment for the Adams Theater and authorized the Selectmen to sell the Memorial Building and enter into an agreement for solar carports at the Glen.
Article 8 on the warrant would have authorized the Selectmen to resubmit to the Legislature language created in 2019 to establish a nonprofit commission with oversight and financial authority over the glen.
The petitioners said the commission was long overdue, citing the taxpayer funds that had gone to the development of the recently opened Outdoor Center and the infrastructure to support it.
"I want to say that what I heard was that people were irate at the amount of taxpayer money that's being spent at the Greylock Outdoor Center even now without any significant revenue return to the town of Adams," said Diane Parsons, a town meeting member and one of the leaders of the petition that garnered 146 signatures to be placed on the warrant.
Town officials, however, said it would mean handing over all the hard work and investment over the past few years with no return to the town. The taxpayers won't see any funding coming back from tenant contracts for a food vendor, campground and Mass Audubon programming that are in the midst of negotiations, they said.
"We need the economic money to come into our coffers, and this is how we're going to do it," said Selectmen Chair John Duval. "This commission is approved, we walk away, the Select Board walks away, and where's all this money going to now?
Cheshire was one of three North Berkshire communities on Sunday that marked the beginning of the holiday season with tree lightings and events.
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Lucas Solak, an 8-year-old boy battling leukemia, received a $5,000 check from Cops for Kids with Cancer on Tuesday, bringing support to his family during a challenging time. click for more