No Contested Elections in Williamstown this May

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — There are no contested elections this spring in town.
 
Tuesday was the last day for potential candidates to return nomination papers with the required number of signatures.
 
On Wednesday morning, Town Clerk Nicole Beverly reported that four of the five positions on the May 14 ballot will have candidates.
 
Jeffrey Johnson has a spot on the ballot to run for another three-year term on the five-person Select Board.
 
Two other incumbents also will be on the ballot: Anna Halpin-Healy for the Milne Library Board of Trustees and Laila Boucher for the Northern Berkshire Vocational Regional School District (McCann Technical) School Committee.
 
Newcomer Samantha Page is the lone candidate for a five-year seat on the Planning Board. Page would replace Ben Greenfield, who was elected last May to fill the final year on an unexpired term on the five-person board.
 
Beverly reported that no one took out nomination papers to run for a vacant spot on the Housing Authority board.
 
The secretary of state's website has a page dedicated to the process of mounting a write-in campaign.
 
If the seat continues to go unfilled after the election, Massachusetts General Law calls for the remaining members of the board to name an appointee in a joint meeting with the Select Board.
 
All the signatures on the four sets of submitted nomination papers have been certified, Beverly said.
 
The town election is scheduled for Tuesday, May 14, from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. at Williamstown Elementary School.

Tags: election 2024,   town elections,   

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Williamstown Residents Question Plan to Use Herbicide Near Green River

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Residents are asking the Conservation Commission to reconsider a 2023 decision that allowed the use of an herbicide that studies have linked to cancer, while its unclear if the group with permission to treat a parcel near the Green River will follow through on the plan.
 
At issue is a 4.3-acre riverfront parcel owned by the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation off Woodlawn Drive near the site of the town's new fire station.
 
In late 2023, Con Comm OK'd a management plan for the area that included, "a combination of forestry mowing, cut/paint and foliar spray herbicide application," to address the out-of-control growth of invasive exotic plants on the site.
 
But WRLF never recorded the commission's order of conditions with the Registry of Deeds, a step it would need to complete in order to implement the plan. The town's conservation agent told the commission at its March 12 meeting that because of budgetary concerns, Rural Lands had not embarked on the planned ecological restoration, but it might want to revive that plan.
 
The commission's order of conditions expires three years after it was issued in December 2023.
 
"There was a seasonal plan in that [2023] application of cutting at a certain time of year … and then herbicide application in certain times of year to line up with the seasonality of certain plant and animal communities," Community Development Director Andrew Groff told the Con Comm. "They'll have to amend some of that schedule moving forward.
 
"I think we'll see [Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation's Dan Gura] and his contractor in the spring for an amendment to that schedule later in the spring, maybe early summer, and, likely, an extension."
 
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