Berkshire Village Owners Owes Cheshire Back Taxes

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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CHESHIRE, Mass. — In addition to residents complaints about Berkshire Village's deteriorating condition, the mobile home park also owes the town roughly $21,000 in back taxes.  
 
Town Administrator Jennifer Morse told the Board of Selectmen last week that she discovered tenants are paying $12 per month in personal property tax, which the ownership has not paid to the town for the past 18 months. 
 
"According to the email that I was given, Berkshire Village only owes 18 months. Prior ownership was paying," Morse said. 
 
The park's owners applied for a lodging permit with the health inspector, but Morse directed the inspector not to issue the permit until the town received payment.
 
"I have contacted ownership. I was able to get an email address and contacted ownership and let him know that this outstanding tax is due and that we need to have payment along with the $750 for their lodging permits as well," Morse said. 
 
The owners are supposed to turn in a sheet showing tenancy and amounts to the tax collector and Board of Health monthly "instead of yearly, or however it's been billed in the past. I'm really not sure," she said. 
 
"So, I did share that with him as well, and explained in my email what the process was, and asked him to call him so we could discuss, I have not heard from him yet." 
 
In February, several Berkshire Village residents attended a board meeting to express their frustration with the mobile home park's unsafe conditions, citing issues with the septic system, outdated electric service, and unmaintained roads. More information here
 
On Tuesday, Morse informed the board that she had met with the Attorney General's Office a couple of times because the office had received a resident complaint. 
 
Additionally, the health inspector will work with the Board of Health and the state Department of Environmental Protection on the septic issues. 
 
However, they can not do anything until the snow melts so they can get to the tanks and leach field to see what the status is, Morse said. 
 
The wiring inspector has spoken with the management company's facilities person, and they will also visit in the spring because they will not be able to access the poles and electrical boxes until some of the snow melts, she said. 
 
"I did get a petition today from the residents of Berkshire village. I just need to go over it with them again because it didn't have everything that it needed," Morse said. 
 
Morse said Berkshire Village's tenants' association meeting was to hold its first meeting.
 
The residents have been coordinating with the Massachusetts Federation of Manufactured Home Communities in establishing the association. 

Tags: mobile home park,   property taxes,   

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Hoosac Valley Seeks to Prevent 'Volatile' Assessments

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
ADAMS, Mass.— The "volatile" shifts in Hoosac Valley Regional School District's town assessments year to year is hard for smaller towns to absorb; however, a proposed change to the regional agreement would fix that. 
 
During the Select Board meeting last week, Superintendent Aaron Dean presented the proposed change to the regional agreement that would set assessments based on a five-year rolling average rather than the annual student enrollment.
 
"The long-term goal is to make the assessment process a little bit more viable for people from year-to-year," he said. 
 
An ad hoc committee was convened to review the district's agreement, during which concerns arose about the rapid fluctuations in assessments.
 
"I think you have to look short term, and you have to look long term. The goal is to kind of level it off and make planning easier and flatten that curve in terms of how it's going to impact both communities," Dean said. 
 
Every year, it is a little more difficult for one community because they are feeling disproportionately impacted compared to the other, he said. 
 
"The transient nature of this population right now is like nothing I've ever seen," Dean said. 
 
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