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Williamstown FY25 Tax Bills Up Slightly, Tax Rate Falls Again

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The median property tax bill for fiscal year 2025 is expected to see its lowest year-to-year increase since 2019, the Select Board learned on Monday night.
 
Assessor Christopher Lamarre laid out the tax ramifications of the FY25 town budget at the board's annual tax classification hearing.
 
The tax levy, the total property tax collected by the town, is up just 1.3 percent from FY24. The levy is what the town needs to raise to cover the budget approved at the spring's annual town meeting.
 
In FY24, the fiscal year that ended on June 30, the levy was $20.3 million; for FY25, that number is up to $20.6 million, the smallest year-to-year increase since 2021, when it rose by just .02 percent from the year before.
 
The last three fiscal years, the levy rose by 3.6 percent (FY22), 4.35 percent (FY23) and 4.11 percent (FY24).
 
The 1.3 percent increase for the fiscal year that began on July 1 will be generated largely from an increase in the town's property value.
 
The anticipated tax rate for town appropriations (which needs to be certified by the Department of Revenue) is $13.80 per $1,000 of assessed value, the fourth straight year the tax rate has gone down and a drop of $1.35 from the FY24 tax rate of $15.15/$1,000.
 
Despite the drop in rate, tax bills will go up for most property owners — just not as much as in recent years.
 
That is because the median value of a single family home — the point at which half the homes in town are assessed higher and half are assessed lower — is $439,100 in FY25, a jump of $44,000, or 11.1 percent, from the median assessed value of $395,100 in FY24.
 
The tax bill on that hypothetical median assessed home is expected to be $6,060, or $74 more than last year's $5,986 tax bill — an increase of 1.2 percent. Six years ago, in FY19, the median tax bill went up by $31 from the year before.
 
Part of the difference between the rise in the levy (1.3 percent) and the rise in the median tax bill (1.2 percent) is due to new growth in the tax base.
 
Home construction, renovations, etc., accounted for a $17.8 million increase in the town's tax base and $266,793 in new tax revenue from FY24 to FY25, according to numbers Lamarre presented on Monday.
 
The total FY25 tax base is $1.5 billion (residential, commercial, industrial and personal property). Counting new growth and reassessments, that's an increase of $151 million, or 11.2 percent, from FY24.
 
"That's a big number," Lamarre said of the total tax base. "Those increases came about as a result of the sale prices outstripping the assessed values [from prior years]. We're required by the commonwealth to do an assessment to sale ratio study, where we compare the sale prices to the assessed values.
 
"If folks follow sale prices of homes in this community, a lot of them raise eyebrows when the sale prices come through, and they do with me, too. When that happens, we have to adjust what is called the cost tables in our assessing system. Those cost tables have to be adjusted so that the median assessment is within 90 percent of the median sale price of a particular class of property. In other words, if things are selling for $100,000, and I determine the assessment is $80,000, I have to adjust the cost table so the assessment goes up to at least $90,000 but not more than $110,000."
 
As always, the tax rate is determined by relatively simple math — factoring the size of the levy against the size of the tax base to determine what percentage of property value owners must pay so the town can pay its bills.
 
The modest increase in the levy from FY24 to FY25 is the result of a push by elected officials last winter to control costs.
 
"Thank you to [Town Manager Robert Menicocci] and the Fin Comm for keeping things as flat as possible," said Select Board member Randal Fippinger, who attended last winter and spring's Finance Committee meetings as an observer.
 
Another piece of good news for the town to come out of Monday's report was the status of the town's excess levy capacity, the difference between what it collects in property taxes in a given year and what it could collect without needing a Proposition 2 1/2 override like the one that failed in Cheshire on Monday as the Williamstown board sat.
 
The excess capacity stands at just more than $3.3 million for FY25, Lamarre reported.
 
"A lot of towns have no levy capacity," said Select Board member Andrew Hogeland, who also has served as president of the Massachusetts Select Board Association. "I'm not urging that we spend it, but it's remarkable that we have that capacity if we need it."
 
The business for the Select Board at the classification hearing — besides hearing a report on the town's FY25 financials — was to make decisions on whether to use four mechanisms the state allows to redistribute the tax levy: the open space discount, residential exemption, small commercial exemption and splitting the tax rate between residential and commercial properties.
 
As it has traditionally, the Select Board opted against all four of those mechanisms, this year with no discussion. Last year, Stephanie Boyd argued that the residential exemption, in particular, would be a way to make property taxation slightly less regressive for the town.
 
In other business on Monday, the Select Board:
 
Decided that it will appoint a volunteer to serve in a seat being vacated by Hogeland until the final year of his term can be decided at May's annual town election.
 
Heard from Hogeland that he continues to seek clarity from state officials about whether the town needs signoff from Boston to allow off-leash dog areas in the Spruces Park — which includes priority habitats designated by MassWildlife's Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program.
 
And decided not to address concerns in the "guidebook" the board drafted in 2021 and, instead, replace it on the town's website with links to the handbook drafted by the Massachusetts Municipal Association.

Tags: fiscal 2025,   property taxes,   tax classification,   tax rate,   

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Puppets Teach Resilience at Lanesborough Elementary School

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff

The kids learned from puppets Ollie and a hermit crab.

LANESBOROUGH, Mass. — Vermont Family Network's Puppets in Education visited the elementary school recently to teach kids about being resilient.

Puppets in Education has been engaging with young students with interactive puppets for 45 years.  

The group partnered again with Bedard Brothers Chevrolet, which sponsored the visit. 

Classes filtered through the music class Thursday to learn about how to be resilient and kind, deal with change and anxiety, and more.

"This program is this beautiful blending of other programs we have, which is our anxiety program, our bullying prevention and friendship program, but is teaching children the power of yet and how to be able to feel empowered and strong when times are challenging and tough," said program manager Sarah Vogelsang-Card.

The kids got to engage with a "bounce back" song, move around, and listen to a hermit crab deal with the change of needing a new shell.

"A crab that is too small or too big for its shell, so trying to problem solve, having a plan A, B and C, because it's a really tough time," Vogelsang-Card said. "It's like moving, it's like divorce of parents, it's changing schools. It's things that children would be going through, even on a day to day basis, that are just things they need to be resilient, that they feel strong and they feel empowered to be able to make these choices for themselves."

The resiliency program is new and formatted little differently to each of the age groups.

"For the older kids. We age it up a bit, so we talk about harassment and bullying and even setting the scene with the beach is a little bit different kind of language, something that they feel like they can buy into," she said. "For the younger kids, it's a little bit more playful, and we don't touch about harassment. We just talk about making friends and being kind. So that's where we're learning as we're growing this program, is to find the different kinds of messaging that's appropriate for each development level."

This programming affirms themes that are already being discussed in the elementary school, said school psychologist Christy Viall. She thinks this is a fun way for the children to continue learning. 

"We have programs here at the school called community building, and that's really good. So they go through all of these strategies already," she said. "But having that repetition is really important, and finding it in a different way, like the puppets coming in and sharing it with them is a fun way that they can really connect to, I think, and it might, get in a little more deeply for them.

Vogelsang-Card said its another space for them to be safe and discuss what's going on in their life. Some children are afraid because maybe their parents are getting divorced, or they're being bullied, but with the puppets, they might open up and disclose what's bothering them because they feel safe, even in a larger crowd. 

"When we do sexual abuse awareness that program alone, over five years, we had 87 disclosures of abuse that were followed up and reported," she said. "And children feel safe with the puppets. It makes them feel valued, heard, and we hope that in our short time that we're together, that they at least leave knowing that they're not alone."

Bedard Brothers also gave the school five new puppets to use. Viall said the puppets are a great help for the students in her classroom, especially in the younger grades. 

"Every year, I've been giving the puppets to the students. And I also have a few of the puppets in my classroom, and the students use them in small groups to practice out the strategies with each other, which is really helpful," she said. "Sometimes the older students, like sixth graders, will put on a puppet show. They'll come up with a whole theme and a whole little situation, and they'll act it out with the strategies for the younger students. It's really cute, they've done it with kindergarteners, and the kids really like it."

Vogelsang-Card said there are 130 schools in Vermont that are on the waiting list for them to come in. Lanesborough Elementary has been the only Massachusetts school they have visited, thanks to Bedard Brothers. 

"These programs are so critical and life-changing for children in such a short amount of time, and we are the only program in the United States that does what we do, which is create this content in this enjoyable, fun, engaging way with oftentimes difficult subjects," she said. "Vermont is our home base, but we would love to be able to bring this to more schools, and we can't do this without the support of community, business funders or donors, and it really makes a difference for children."

The fourth-grade students were the first class to engage with the puppets and a lot of them really connected with the show.

"I learned to never give-up and if you have to move houses, be nervous, but it still helps," said William Larios.

"I learned to always add the word 'yet' at the end," said Sierra Kellogg, because even if she can't do something now, she will be able to at some point.

Samuel Casucci was struck by what one of the puppets talked about. "He said some people make fun of him if he dresses different, come from different place, brings home lunch, it doesn't matter," Samuel continued. "We're all kind of the same. We're all kind of different, like we have different hairstyles, different clothes. We're all the same because we're all human."

"I learned how to be more positive about myself and like, say, I can't do this yet, it's positive and helpful," said Liam Flaherty.

The students got to take home stickers at the end of the day with contact information of the organization.

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