Letter: Show North Adams Children They Are Valued on Oct. 8

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To the Editor:

A lot has been said for and against building a new Greylock School in the city of North Adams. The rhetoric is getting heated over the cost, over the impact on property taxes, over the need for a new school building faced with a declining student population. These are all good points for discussion and the cost to the city and further to the taxpayer should not be ignored.

As former mayor, city councilor, School Committee member and School Building Committee member, I have certainly had my share of whether or not things are needed and affordable. Managing a city and a school district are full of choices based not only on need but on funding. Today as a city and a school district, a very important choice needs to be made.

The Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA) has put the city through a long and thorough process to see if in fact we need this school. Having been through that process with the building of Colegrove Park Elementary, I can assure you that the MSBA does not simply give based on want, but totally on need. Their process assures that the community is in need of a school building and that funding will only come if all criteria are met …. including student-projected populations.

I believe we sometimes think that because we aren't as prosperous as other cities, we are not deserving of the best. Well we are, and our kid's are. Do our kids deserve a building built to meet the standards of today's educational and safety requirements? Do they deserve a physical environment that leads to increased social and emotional growth and health? Do they deserve the same physical learning environment of other kids in the state? Do our teachers deserve to instruct in an environment that is built to keep kids happy and focused on learning? I would answer "yes" to all.

I have said many times that our kids are our most precious asset and our responsibility to them as a city is that we provide them the best education possible. We have an opportunity to secure the infrastructure of elementary education in the city for many years to come. And most importantly, we have an obligation to tell the children of North Adams that they are valued.

Please vote "Yes" with me on Oct. 8.

Richard Alcombright
North Adams, Mass.

 

 

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Clarksburg Sees One Race for War Memorial Trustee

CLARKSBURG, Mass. — The annual town election is Tuesday, May 13, from noon to 7 p.m. at the Community Center.
 
Mail in ballots/absentee are now available. Application for mail-in ballots must be submitted to the town clerk's office no later than noon on the fifth business day before the election, which is Monday, May 5. 
 
Applications are available on the town website, or call the town clerk at 413-663-8255. Absentee ballots are available until noon May 13.
 
The only contested race on the ballot is a three-year term for War Memorial trustee between incumbent Edward Denault and newcomer Michael Rivers.
 
Seth Lewis Alexander is running unopposed for a three-year term on the Select Board. He ran unsuccessfully for the board last year but was elected a moderator, for which he also is running unopposed.
 
Other offices that are unopposed are Michael Rivers for Board of Health, Richard Bernardi for McCann School Committee, Mary Giron for Clarksburg School Committee and Kyle Hurlbut for tree warden. All of the candidates are incumbents and the offices are three-year terms. 
 
A three-year seat and a five-year seat on the Planning Board have no candidates.
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