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Currently, the school is expanding parking to make up for the spots it will lose with the new HVAC building.

Planning Board Approves McCann HVAC Building

Jack GuerinoiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The Planning Board approved McCann Technical School's special permit request to build a new structure to house its incoming HVAC program.
 
With the approval, Superintendent James Brosnan told the Planning Board Monday that he hopes to be able to break ground in August.
 
"Everyone is busy, everyone is underfunded, everyone is understaffed, but I think we have a good project," he said. "I think we have done our homework, and the package we have going out is a good one. And the project isn't overwhelming."
 
The school received a $3.1 million state Skills Capital Grant to provide training HVAC. This will cover the construction of the building and the development of the program.  
 
The school is in an R-4 zone. An engineer with Foresight said the school has already received approval from the Conservation Commission.
 
The separate building will mostly be built on an existing parking lot. The 5,600-square-foot building will be gray in color and have a green roof, matching the rest of the building.
 
Work has already begun on a parking expansion project to make up for the lost parking spots.
 
The Planning Board did ask if Brosnan considered attaching the new building to the school, but Brosnan said it was just not a feasible project. 
 
"I don’t have the land for it," he said. "…We can add to the building but once we open up the envelope it becomes a whole different project. Thi just seems to be a better fit."
 
He said during shop week, students will mostly be in the new building.
 
He added that McCann has hired an instructor to run the program and has started an HVAC exploratory program. Brosnan said he hopes to have students in the new building this year.
 
Before closing the Planning Board approved new signage for Wallasauce located at 77 Main Street. Signage will remain red and gold as it has been for years on the former  J. J. Newberry storefront.
 

Tags: HVAC,   McCann,   

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Clarksburg OKs $5.1M Budget; Moves CPA Adoption Forward

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

Newly elected Moderator Seth Alexander kept the meeting moving. 
CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The annual town meeting sped through most of the warrant on Wednesday night, swiftly passing a total budget of $5.1 million for fiscal 2025 with no comments. 
 
Close to 70 voters at Clarksburg School also moved adoption of the state's Community Preservation Act to the November ballot after a lot of questions in trying to understand the scope of the act. 
 
The town operating budget is $1,767,759, down $113,995 largely because of debt falling off. Major increases include insurance, utilities and supplies; the addition of a full-time laborer in the Department of Public Works and an additional eight hours a week for the accountant.
 
The school budget is at $2,967,609, up $129,192 or 4 percent over this year. Clarksburg's assessment to the Northern Berkshire Vocational School District is $363,220.
 
Approved was delaying the swearing in of new officers until after town meeting; extending the one-year terms of moderator and tree warden to three years beginning with the 2025 election; switching the licensing of dogs beginning in January and enacting a bylaw ordering dog owners to pick up after their pets. This last was amended to include the words "and wheelchair-bound" after the exemption for owners who are blind. 
 
The town more recently established an Agricultural Committee and on Wednesday approved a right-to-farm bylaw to protect agriculture. 
 
Larry Beach of River Road asked why anyone would be against and what the downside would be. Select Board Chair Robert Norcross said neighbors of farmers can complain about smells and livestock like chickens. 
 
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