McCann Tech Roof, New Monument Mountain High School OK'd by Voters

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com
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ADAMS, Mass. — By wide margins, school infrastructure projects were approved by voters at both ends of the county on Tuesday.
 
In Adams, the question of whether to allow a Proposition 2-1/2 debt exclusion to enable McCann Tech’s roof and window replacement project received a resounding yes by a margin of 553-169.
 
In South County, the three member towns in the Berkshire Hills Regional School District all approved a $152 million project to build a new Monument Mountain Regional High School, according to the Berkshire Edge.
 
Up north, Adams was the last town to weigh in on the $16.8 million project at McCann Tech.
 
It was one of only two communities in the nine-municipality district to put the question to a general vote. On Oct. 1, a special town meeting in Savoy saw a unanimous vote in favor of the project proposed by the Northern Berkshire Vocational Regional School District.
 
All eight towns in the district and the City of North Adams had to take action before a 60-day window closed in order to object to the McCann Tech project, 64 percent of which will be paid for by the Massachusetts School Building Authority.
 
Savoy's Select Board opted to call a special town meeting to make the final decision, a route that was considered and rejected by other member towns.
 
Had any of the nine member communities rejected the project, it would have failed, McCann Tech Superintendent James Brosnan said.
 
On Tuesday, 10.4 percent of Adams' 6,907 registered voters went to the polls to decide whether the its share of the local cost for the McCann Tech project could be exempted from the provisions of Proposition 2 1/2, the 1980 law that limits the amount of money that can be raised in property taxes.
 
Seventy-seven percent of Adams voters who went to the polls voted in favor of the school project.
 
With the final yes vote in place, school officials hope the current second-generation roof and original windows at McCann Tech will be replaced this summer. The school reworked its academic calendar to ensure that classes will end earlier than usual in order to maximize the construction season.
 
The time horizon for the new Monument Mountain is a bit longer, and the stakes were higher when voters went to the polls in Great Barrington, Stockbridge and West Stockbridge on Tuesday.
 
According to the Berkshire Edge the new high school project won by margins of 1,218-357 in Great Barrington, 636-112 in Stockbridge and 462-131 in West Stockbridge.
 
The question needed to pass in all three towns in order to move forward. The aggregate vote of the district's voters was 2,316-600, meaning that 79 percent of voters in the three towns voted yes.
 
The local share of the new Monument Mountain, after contribution from the MSBA, is $89 million.
 
If all stays on schedule, construction on the new high school is set to begin in spring 2027 with completion in summer 2029.

Tags: debt exclusion,   McCann,   Monument Mountain,   MSBA,   

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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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