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Votes are counted at Monday's annual town meeting in Adams.

Adams Town Meeting OKs Budget, Nixes Citizens' Petitions

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires.com
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The annual town report was dedicated to retired Police Chief Richard Tarsa, above. 
ADAMS, Mass. — Town meeting members approved 23 of the 25 articles on the annual town meeting warrant. 
 
The gymnasium in the Memorial Building was filled with 104 town meeting members who voted to approve the authorization for a number of spending articles making up a budget of approximately $21 million during a meeting that lasted 50 minutes. 
 
Of that, members approved, Article 5, an operations budget of $10,650,057, of which $8,074,370 is made up of personnel and $2,642,107 for operating expenses. 
 
"This is a level of services budget from one year ago," Town Administrator Nicholas Caccamo said. 
 
The amounts budgeted are reflective of what it takes for an organization, pay employees, provide health insurance, and all the ancillary costs, he said. 
 
The town has not yet finalized union contract negotiations with the police and clerical unions and still has open positions. So, there will be a special town meeting in late September or early October to adjust the budget based on the salaries and health insurance.
 
The positions have been conservatively budgeted at previous rates, maintaining each staff member's prior step or grade, as if the roles were filled full time. 
 
Health insurance for these roles have also been budgeted assuming the new personnel picks the family plan, ensuring the funds are available.
 
The most controversial items on the warrant were two citizens' petitions to include non-binding referendum questions on the general election ballot. 
 
Prior to failing, the items were amended, changing "general election" to annual election because items like this are not allowed on a general election ballot. 
 
The first question asked for voters to indicate the type of access route to the summit of Mount Greylock they would want: a surface roadway, aerial passenger tramway, or no build option. The article failed 55-38. 
 
Although the item is a non-binding referendum, the question was characterized as misleading because the master lease agreement the town has with the state does not allow for a tramway to be constructed based on a 1966 court decision, town meeting member Christine Hoyt said. 
 
The sister article, 24, also failed. It requested voters indicate whether they would like the town to withdraw from the Greylock Glen project. The town was designated by the state as the developer in 2006 after several failed projects in the 1,000-acre parcel at the foot of Mount Greylock.
 
Opponents of the article worried that raising this question could deter future developers — whether for campgrounds, lodging, or restaurants. Even if the measure failed at the ballot, it might signal the town isn't serious and undermine the progress made on the project so far.
 
"I really think that would be a shame with all the effort and beautiful building we have up there now," said meeting member Timothy Burdick. 
 
It was also mentioned that a question like this on the ballot could confuse voters because although the referendum is non-binding, some might interpret it as having a more definitive outcome, said Andrew Przystanski, town meeting member. 
 
Town meeting members also approved the appropriation of $333,006 from free cash for capital infrastructure and equipment for the Town Hall, Police Department, and Department of Public Works.
 
The article was held but passed after clarification on the purpose of the replacement of one police vehicle for the amount of $40,000. The interim Police Chief Timothy Sorrell explained that this is replacing a detective vehicle that was purchased with drug-seizure funds. 
 
The current vehicle has severe rot in its undercarriage and rocker panel and has about 70,000 miles on it. The replacement is a Hyundai Tucson, which was chosen from a state bid list and was $10,000 cheaper than the alternative, a Chevrolet Traverse. 
 
All other items passed with no discussion or following clarification. 
 
This year the town report was dedicated to retired Police Chief Richard Tarsa, who was recognized for his invaluable civic leadership" and was described as being a "steadfast contributor to the town's safety and well-being." 

Tags: annual town meeting,   fiscal 2027,   town meeting 2026,   

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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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