Cheshire to Decide Local Meals Tax

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
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CHESHIRE, Mass. — Votes may see the failed local meals tax article return this year on the annual town meeting warrant, this time with more information. 
 
Last year, town meeting rejected a proposal for a surcharge that would have added an additional 0.75 percent — equivalent to 75 cents for every $100 spent — on all food sold by vendors and merchants. This is in addition to the state's 6.25 percent tax.
 
The decision likely stemmed from a misunderstanding of the proposal, Selectman Raymond Killeen
said. 
 
Voters thought the tax would be on the business itself; when in fact, that tax is being applied to specific products, such as sandwiches and drinks at restaurants, he said, and most of the municipalities in Berkshire County have this tax, and people don't even notice it.
 
Although residents patronize these restaurants, the tax will also help the town generate revenue from tourists dining at local establishments like Whitney's Farm Market, which visitors frequent. 
 
"Towns [are] a business, and you have to support the business. You've got to raise revenue through taxation. So, either we can get it through this source, where the majority of people are from out of town, they're not locals, or we're going to have to take it out of locals' pockets. It's going to be one or the other. This is an easier source," Killeen said. 
 
When you go to a restaurant in areas with this tax and look at your receipt, you will see two tax sections, one is the state's tax and the other is the local tax, he explained. 
 
The Dunkin Donuts located in the Shell gas station, 173 North St., is already charging patrons this tax, but the funds are going to North Adams, not Cheshire, he said.  
 
If you look at the receipt from that Dunkin Donuts, North Adams is listed as the city receiving the monies from the local sales tax, Selectwoman Michelle Francesconi agreed. 
 
If voters approve this tax, the town can be added to the TaxConnect app used by the merchant. The state Department of Revenue will then distribute the collected taxes to the town specified by the merchant, allowing the town to begin collecting those taxes, Killeen said. 

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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.
 
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