Meeting Prompts Cheshire Treasurer to Retire

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
Print Story | Email Story
CHESHIRE, Mass. — The town has a temporary town treasurer after longtime Treasurer/Collector Rebecca Herzog abruptly retired last week. 
 
Ben Gelb, part-time treasurer for Rowe, was appointed on Friday during a special meeting of the Board of Selectmen
 
Herzog's departure after 28 years was in response to an executive session scheduled last Tuesday  "to consider the discipline or dismissal of a public employee and/or to hear complaints or charges brought against a public employee."
 
The board had three issues with her office: failure to payout accrued time and benefits for a laid-off employee, concerns over bonding documents for the new fire truck and for not responding in a timely manner to requests from the board and the town administrator. 
 
Herzog blamed vacation and sick time accrual mistakes on the town's software system and said she'd been following the schedule for the bonding process and didn't see anything unusual.
 
She proffered her retirement letter to the Selectmen after requesting an open session. 
 
"I am retiring effective tonight. I'm done. You know, what a shame that this is the way my career ends over a mistake," she said, adding she had assumed she was being fired. "It was just to humiliate me."
 
Board members said that was not the intent of the session but rather to speak with her about problems that have surfaced in her office. 
 
Herzog was notified of the layoff of an employee on Nov. 22, 2024; however, the vacation payout did not take place until a month ago, board members said. This resulted in a demand letter being sent to the town with a claim of violations of state wage law. 
 
"This pending litigation may result in treble damages as well as litigation costs and legal fees," the hearing letter says. 
 
Herzog said the term "laid off" threw her at first, and she assumed "somebody would be called back at some time."
 
"I never gave it a second thought. It was not done intentionally. It was a mistake," Herzog said. 
 
The board also raised concerns surrounding ongoing problems with employee accruals and vacation time. One board member claimed the issue has been going on for over a year. 
 
The biggest issue with accruals is that "you want them to accrue on July 1, which is fine for personal and sick, but for vacation, we're doing it based on hire date," Herzog said. "I noticed that everybody that I fixed on July 1 as soon as their hire date came around. The system changed it." 
 
Selectwoman Michelle Francesconi said it seemed like a lot of manhours are being put into a software that is not working for the town.
 
"In the grand scheme of things, the town of Cheshire does not have that many benefited employees. When you compare it to other other there's a much larger organizations, much larger cities and towns that also deal with municipal payroll and and so I feel like there has to be something out there, a company that can provide a product that could allow this to function more smoothly," she said. 
 
Herzog said her office attempted to solve the issue numerous times with the system's customer service team but was unsuccessful. 
 
She expressed her frustration with the lack of direct communication between her and the individuals who say their time is off and claimed there has been a hostile work environment directed at her. 
 
A couple of board members said the reason they had Town Administrator Jennifer Morse address the issue with her was that staff members felt uncomfortable continuing a conversation that had not reached a resolution.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Adams-Cheshire Tops Great Barrington Behind Strong Pitching in Little League Opener

By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com Sports
DALTON, Mass. — Adams-Cheshire leaned on a dominant pitching performance and capitalized on its scoring opportunities to defeat Great Barrington 3-1 in a Don Gleason District 1 12U All-Star Tournament matchup on Wednesday.
 
The game opened as a pitchers’ duel, with both teams held scoreless through the first two innings. Great Barrington starter Julian Winters struck out the first two batters he faced before working around a two-out baserunner in the opening inning. Adams-Cheshire starter Maddox Milesi matched him with a clean first, retiring the side in order on a groundout and a pair of fly balls.
 
Adams-Cheshire threatened first in the second inning. Nate Mallet and Avry Decker worked walks before Danny Collins reached on a fielder’s choice and Lukas Benson drew another walk to load the bases. Great Barrington escaped the jam thanks to a heads-up defensive play from catcher Satchel Fisher, who threw out a runner attempting to score to end the inning and preserve the scoreless tie.
 
Great Barrington had an opportunity of its own in the bottom half after Hunter Havens singled and Ezekiel McLaughlin reached safely. With runners aboard, Milesi kept his composure and recorded the final out of the inning, ensuring neither team could capitalize through two frames.
 
The breakthrough came in the third. After Caleb Gladu was retired and Justin Mayotte Jr. struck out, Caden Stump extended the inning with a walk. Lador Lawson then drove a ball into the gap for an RBI triple, putting Adams-Cheshire on the board. Mason Kucka followed immediately with an RBI single to left, giving the visitors a 2-0 advantage heading into the bottom half.
 
Lawson took over on the mound in the third and quickly established control. The right-hander struck out the side in his first inning of relief and continued to keep Great Barrington hitters off balance with a steady mix of strikes and soft contact. He allowed just one run over the final four innings while piling up nine strikeouts to preserve the lead.
 
Great Barrington broke through in the fourth. Ivey Weller led off with a single before showcasing some speed by stealing both second and third. A throw on the play skipped away, allowing Weller to score and trim the deficit to 2-1. Harlan Kohler later singled to keep the inning alive, but Lawson stranded the runner to maintain Adams-Cheshire’s one-run edge.
 
View Full Story

More Adams Stories