Dalton Green Committee Selects Greenhouse Gas Inventory Platform

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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DALTON, Mass. — The Green Committee has voted to use the Metropolitan Area Planning Council Greenhouse Gas Inventory Platform. 
 
At its August meeting, the board was presented with three options: ClearPath, an MAPC model, and an in-house Excel model. 
 
After reviewing each platform, the committee selected the MAPC model because of its consistency and comparability with the state, user-friendliness, and sources included.
 
The platform is completely free and was built by the Metropolitan Area Planning Council in Massachusetts, said Cisco Tomasino, BlueStrike climate and events manager.
 
Since it was built in Massachusetts for Massachusetts, it is the most popular model used by many towns in the state, he said. 
 
Committee Chair David Wasielewski said MAPC is his initial preference as it will allow the town to compare its data with other towns. 
 
The state can "more or less control that kind of information" and the town has to keep monitoring the, Wasielewski said. The committee unanimously agreed 
 
"I thought the MAPC was a user-friendly format, too. I had no problem understanding it," Committee member Laurie Martinelli added. 
 
The ClearPath platform is the most premium model that is used across the country by towns, cities, counties, but is also the only one of the options that cost money, at $1,200 per year, Tomasino said. 
 
It is an online platform and has nice graphics, he said. 
 
The final option would have been for BlueStrike's own in-house Excel model, which is internally developed and very customizable. 
 
In other news: 
 
The committee directed BlueStrike to provide ranking of the survey questions to shorten it and make it less complex. 
 
Committee members expressed concerns regarding the surveys length and wanted to narrow it down to encourage participation from residents. 
 
"This is the sort of survey where, in the commercial world, you would offer to pay people to take," committee member Todd Logan said. 
 
"This is not something people voluntarily take, or if they do, they do the first page, the second page, and then they lose interest." 
 
Tomasino from will rank the questions by importance, categorizing them as vital, helpful but not vital, or unimportant, and will follow up with the committee by Friday. 
 
The committee wants to have the survey done by its Oct. 13 education event, and plans to finalize the survey questions at their next meeting in 2 weeks
 
The committee also mentioned the possibility having the survey online to improve accessibility but were concerned with receiving spam from people from other areas. 
 
"Certainly, we could ask for a street address for a numerical representation. Obviously, that sort of brings up other sort of transparency issues." said Rich Swanson, Blue Strike Climate and Energy Director.
 
"[Tomasino] had an interesting idea, though, that we can also compare identical responses so that if, for example, we see 10 identical responses across all questions that would certainly raise a flag. We can talk about how to deal with outliers like that." 

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Hinsdale OKs Police Department Audit After Fatal Shooting

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

HINSDALE, Mass. — The town has approved $25,000 for an administrative review of the police department, more than two months after police fatally shot 27-year-old Biagio Kauvil during a mental health crisis. 

Town Administrator Robert Graves said the shooting on Jan. 7 is not the only focus of the audit, and it will be several months before the Select Board receives a final report. 

During a special town meeting on March 11, an article appropriating $25,000 from free cash for an independent consultant to conduct a professional evaluation and audit of the Town's Police Department was approved. The audit includes a review of the department's policies, protocols, operations, and procedures, and concludes with a written report. 

"The Berkshire County District Attorney's Office and Massachusetts State Police are investigating the shooting, and we await their conclusions.  As we look to move forward, the International Association of Chiefs of Police, our insurance company (MIIA/Cabot Risk), and our legal counsel have recommended that the town hire an independent law enforcement consultant or firm to conduct a comprehensive administrative review of our police operation," Graves wrote in an email to iBerkshires on Friday. 

"This event is not their focus; they will assess the overall operation. We want a written assessment of our police operation's strengths and weaknesses to help Hinsdale make future changes and improvements." 

He said after completing the procurement process and signing a contract with a reputable consultant or business, it will most likely be several months before the Select Board receives the final report. 

"Still, it will help the town and police department move forward," Graves wrote. 

Last weekend, family and friends of Kauvil stood in Park Square asking for justice. A flier for the standout reads "Biagio was killed by police while experiencing a mental health crisis. Now, over seven weeks later, authorities have not yet provided any updates.

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