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Springside Pond is being refurbished using the city's ARPA funds. Above, the old wading pond is cleaned out.
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Springside Pond in its heyday as a winter skating rink.
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The pond was so filled with weeds last year it looked like a meadow.

New Springside Pond on the Horizon

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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Construction equipment and materials at Springside Pond. Below, diagram of the pond. 
 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The long-awaited rehabilitation of Springside Pond has begun and is expected to wrap up in the fall.

Construction vehicles and piles of materials can be seen on the southern portion of the 237-acre park next to the pavilion. Plans include sediment removal, dam repair, and increased accessibility.

"Really since year 2000, the city has been thinking about the restoration of Springside Pond," Park, Open Space, and Natural Resource Program Manager James McGrath told the Parks Commission last year.

Before McGrath's tenure, the city received a grant from the state's lake and pond program to do a feasibility study that articulated a complete restoration. A handful of years ago, the city began working with SK Design Group on permitting for the project because there were "heavy duty" permits involved due to the thresholds crossed for sediment removal.

The $577,500 cost is covered by American Rescue Plan Act funding and William J. Keller from Castleton-on-Hudson, N.Y., is the contractor. Completion is staged for early October.

The pond is about 35,000 square feet and is fed by an intermittent stream channel that comes from the upland portions of the park. It was created "many years ago" when a stone retaining wall was constructed along a majority of the waterbody, damming the stream so that it could be used for swimming in the summer and as an ice rink in the winter.

These days are long past, as the pond had been neglected for some time.

Before work began, the concrete bottom section that formerly housed a chlorinated wading pool was a far cry from its glory days. After years of lacking maintenance, what used to be open water was replaced with sediment, vegetation, and invasive species. Structural components were also in disrepair.

Currently, the pond is drained and concrete elements that laid beneath the surface for decades can be seen.



McGrath has explained that this portion of the park is not accessible for those with mobility challenges "So we really felt it was an important component to make certain that people can get from the sidewalk on Springside Ave to the pond."

When the pond bottom and bank are completed, a new boardwalk will be installed across the pond with a gazebo and fishing pier for passive recreation. A paved path will lead people to and from the pond along the east side.

There are several components to the restoration, a notice of intent filing from 2019 explains.

About 250 linear feet of stone wall around a portion of the perimeter will be removed and restored and the bank will be graded at a 3:1 slope vegetated with seed mix and plantings. Along the bank will be several areas for viewing and sitting.

A portion of the pond will be restored to open water about 3 to 4 feet deep after the wading pool concrete and sediment are removed. For frost protection, a small retaining wall will be poured along the southern edge of the excavation against the portion of the concrete pond to remain.

The northern portion will remain in its current state to provide a diversity of habitats and the area north of the proposed gazebo will be maintained similar to a sediment pond.

The project includes several resource area alterations: bordering vegetated wetland, bank, land under waterbodies and waterways, and the buffer zone. It required state and federal permits, including a review or permit from the Army Corps of Engineers for work in the waters of the commonwealth, a 401 Water Quality Certification for a dredge of more than 100 cubic yards, and a review from the Massachusetts Historical Commission because Springside Park is on the National Historic Registry.


Tags: Springside Park,   

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Lanesborough Prepares Free Cash Articles for Town Meeting

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — The Select Board last week discussed the key points of the fiscal 2027 budget that will be voted on at the annual town meeting.

Town Administrator Gina Dario gave a presentation to remind residents where they are at in the process and what the budget is expected to look like currently.

The proposed spending plan has an increase of a little over 10 percent. Some of the main budget increases are the Mount Greylock Regional School District and McCann Technical School: the McCann assessment is up more than 30 percent based on factors including enrollment and the renovation project, and Mount Greylock's is up 11 percent.

Another notable increase was in the life and health insurance department showing an increase of about 26 percent.

The ambulance department is also requesting an increase in its budget to provide 24-hour service for the town with the overall budget for EMS and Ambulance department increasing around $217,000.

The Police Department and Department of Public Works lines formerly covered by the Baker Hill Road District have been consolidated into their regular operating budgets. But road district is expected provide one half the cost of a police cruiser, $40,000, and put $50,000 toward a new fire truck estimated to cost $871,000. The town has not yet received those funds. 

The DPW is also looking for a new dump truck that would be $330,000 but the town was able to move that payment of a little over $50,000 into the free cash warrant articles.

"We've had to make adjustments on the potential dissolution of the Baker Hill Road District ... with that assumption, we have consolidated the police and DPW departments that had previously been supported through funding with Baker Hill Road District," Dario said. "Additionally, Baker Hill Road District has contracts with the town for support public safety vehicles, fire trucks, and we've looked at pulling those out, those gaps, out of our operating operating budget, and pulled them also into free cash, so that the impact isn't on the net tax rate.

"Again, if the project with the mall owners goes forward with a potential developer, there is an amount of money that would be put in escrow funds, those would not be accessed by the town until that legislation is [approved] by the Attorney General."

Dareio said the town should be receiving escrow funds from Berkshire Mall owners JMJ of around $1 million in exchange for dissolving the district. The district had been created to oversee Connector Road maintenance and emergency services for the former Berkshire Mall, which closed in 2019. The new owners have been in dispute with the district over payments they say are no longer reasonable.

The Council on Aging budget was able to be reduced as well as the DPW director salary.

Dario mentioned they were able to remove the McCann capital expense [for the school renovation] and the DPW dump truck payments to the free cash warrant articles along with several small increases in other departments.

The free cash Articles 6 to 17 to be proposed at the June 9 annual town meeting are as follows:

  • Prior Year invoice: $941.27
  • Transfer to Other Post Employment Benefits (OPEB): $50,000
  • Transfer to stabilization: $50,000
  • Transfer to capital stabilization: $20,000
  • McCann Tech roof and window replacement capital expense: $16,298.48
  • Replace fire truck engine: $200,000
  • Replace highway storage shed roof: $42,000
  • 2025 International dump truck annual payment: $49,524.43
  • Replace DPW 2015 International dump truck: $53,274.85
  • Replace police vehicle: $80,000
  • Assessors WebPro online property search: $3,200
  • Reduce FY2027 tax rate: $200,000

The current free cash balance is $1,367,239, if the above articles are approved that would leave $601,999.97.

The annual town meeting is Tuesday, June 9, at Lanesborough Elementary School at 6 p.m. The election will take place June 16 at Town Hall with polls open noon until 8 p.m.

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