NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Local officials say the proposed rate hike by Berkshire Gas could cost the city more than $40,000 extra just in heating its three schools, and be a burden to its residents, many of whom already rely on fuel assistance.
"This proposed rate hike would have a major impact on our residents, our government and our businesses," Councilor Lillian Zavastky read from a letter to be submitted to the state Department of Public Utilities. "Please consider the real human cost this would have on residents who already depend on benefits to make ends meet."
The City Council on Tuesday unanimously endorsed the letter [published below] written by the Public Services Committee, joining officials from Greenfield and Pittsfield, as well as the Berkshire delegation, attorney general and governor in opposing the increase.
The utility is asking the DPU for a base distribution increase to generate some $22.2 million in additional revenue because it says the current rates don't cover the annual operating costs for gas distribution service or for capital expenditures.
This will result in about a 22 percent increase expected to cost the average consumer who heats their home with natural gas another $54 a month.
"I myself got up and spoke and talked about the effects that it would have on our population and our school district," said Councilor Marie McCarron. "I was listening to a lot of people talk about how it affects them personally. ... [one woman] doesn't know how she's going to make ends meet because of the utility. Just listening to just regular people trying to make ends meet, was heartbreaking in itself."
Councilor Peter Breen, chair of the committee, noted that he's on a fixed income as a retiree, and his cost-of-living increase was $32 — the rate increase will be nearly twice that.
His biggest concern was that Berkshire Gas is no longer a local company, it's now a subsidiary of energy giant Iberdrola Group that is headquartered in Spain and took in $1.1 billion in profits last year.
"So our only recourse is to go to the Public Utilities Commission and say, 'we cannot afford this,'" he said. "We're 4,000 miles away from where the cash is going. Any support that we could get would be greatly appreciated."
Zavastky said some of her readings, and hearing from the Berkshire delegation, was that some of the capital spending wasn't "necessary or prudent," but rather "shooting for the moon" with costly replacements over judicious repairs.
Councilor Bryan Sapienza said he could see more than a 3 or 4 percent increase to keep pace with costs.
"We are a poor community, and there's no there's no doubt we don't have resources that a lot of the larger, more successful communities do and and 20 percent, 18 percent would be devastating, in my opinion," he said. "If we can keep it to 3 or 4 percent, even a level of 5 or 6 percent may mean the difference between somebody going without a meal or going without certain other necessities to be able to stay warm. And as we all know, it's cold nine months out of the year in this area."
Breen said it was a smart move by President Ashley Shade to fold utilities into the Public Services Committee's purview. The committee held two workshops, testified at the hearing and developed the letter. Shade said she was glad they'd taken those actions and provided the letter to start the conversation.
"This is so important for us to talk about because this affects everybody. It affects our businesses. It affects our residents, it affects our schools. It affects everything," she said. "The Department of Public Utilities can absolutely tell them no, and the Department of Public Utilities should absolutely tell them no, because this is not a proposal to raise raise money for an infrastructure project.
"This is specifically a proposal to raise revenue. That means profits."
Councilor Lisa Blackmer asked it be clarified that the council as a body was affirming the letter and signing it. Breen said they would modify the letter and extend it to members to put their names on it.
The motion passed unanimously with the intent to submit the letter prior to the Feb. 27 deadline. Shade noted that the councilors could file letters of their own, as she had. Her letter is also posted as a letter to the editor.
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Keene SwampBats Down North Adams
By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com Sports
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. -- The SteepleCats battled back from an early deficit and pulled within one run midway through Saturday night’s contest, but a late offensive push by the Keene Swamp Bats resulted in an 8-4 defeat in New England Collegiate Baseball League action at Joe Wolfe Field.
Keene struck first in the opening inning. Jackson Smith led off with a single and later scored on an RBI double by Jackson Marshall. Eli Stephens followed with an RBI single to put the Swamp Bats ahead 2-0.
The SteepleCats answered in the second inning. After Matthew Colella lined a double into the gap, Parker Camelo delivered an RBI single to score Colella and cut the deficit to one.
North Adams’ defense kept the game close over the next two innings. A great catch at third base robbed Michael O’Brien of extra bases in the second, while center field and left field each came up with impressive grabs during a scoreless third inning.
The Swamp Bats added to their lead in the fourth. Consecutive singles put runners on second and third before an error allowed both to score, extending the advantage to 4-1.
The SteepleCats quickly responded in the bottom half of the inning. Nelphie Lopez opened the frame with a double before Sean Stephenson singled to put runners at the corners. Sebastian Rose followed with an RBI single, and after Stephenson aggressively advanced around the bases, Colella drove in another run with a groundout to trim the deficit to 4-3.
Richie Kerstetter provided a strong inning out of the bullpen in the fifth, retiring three of the four hitters he faced after issuing a leadoff walk. Steven Sams entered in the sixth and struck out one, though Nico Senese led off the inning with a solo home run that pushed Keene’s lead to 5-3.
Northern Berkshire Community Coalition celebrated a community hero, its 40th anniversary and kicked off its $10 million campaign drive for a new home on Thursday.
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The college community bid farewell to President Jamie Birge last week as he ended his 10-year tenure at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. click for more
The School Building Committee was updated on the progress on Tuesday night by Todd Ashford, project manager with Collier's International, the city's owner's project manager.
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The Finance Committee in the last two weeks reviewed Public Safety, auditor, Zoning Board of Appeals, City Council, election and registration, Office of Community Development, city solicitor, License Commission, information technology, Planning Board, and vital statistics. click for more