The Volvo may have hit a utility pole before crashing into large rocks
Amherst Police are currently searching for the driver -- a college aged male -- who fled the scene of this one car motor vehicle accident on Triangle Street just on the outskirts of town center about an hour ago.
Witnesses say the driver was drunk. The car is registered to a UMass student.
Yesterday town employees breached a beaver dam in South Amherst
While both cute and hard working, beavers can be a nightmare for property owners within proximity to their latest project. Like this project on Plum Brook, running under West Street (Rt. 116) in South Amherst.
According to Assistant Town Manager (and still Director of Conservation) Dave Ziomek, "Beavers have dammed the Plum
Brook in multiple places east of Rt. 116 and the backed up water (on
both public and private land) is
now causing some problems."
The current plan, approved by the Conservation Commission, is to lower the water levels by breaching the dams over the next week. In addition flow devices known as "beaver deceivers" may also be used.
Although Mr. Ziomek warned, "These situations are never easy."
“A Start of Summer Block Party Celebrating Human Rights and the Juneteenth Holiday"
The "Juneteenth Holiday" commemorating the June 19, 1865 date the final Confederate state abolished slavery attracted a diverse crowd to the Amherst Town Common this evening.
Reynolds Winslow, retired Chair Amherst Human Rights Commission
Reynolds Winslow, always a powerful speaker, accepted an award for his many years as Chair of the Amherst Human Rights Commission.
Although I was sad to hear him start his brief speech with the revelation that he has stepped down from the Commission, having recently moved to the city of Chicopee. Amherst was fortunate to have his thoughtful input for as long as we did.
Longtime town resident Allan Carpenter went before the Pubic Works Committee two weeks ago to lobby in behalf of all the residents living on his street.
His modest single family home was built in 1914, four years after the town constructed Farview Way, and he and his wife purchased it in 1952.
This road has not a major renovation since LBJ was President. For you non-history majors that was in 1964.
Currently, in addition to Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter 17 other single family homes are sprinkled all along Farview Way with a combined assessed value of a little over $5 million, generating $100,000 in property tax revenues paid to the Town annually.
The Public Works Committee was attentive and polite to Mr. Carpenter but offered no hope on the horizon for repaving Farview Way.
Sure the Governor recently cut in half Chapter 90 (road repair) monies, sending many DPW chiefs into a paroxysm of disbelief. Amherst was originally promised $1.2 million back when the weather was
still cold; although fortunately, we only budgeted for $500,000.
Still,
we will end up receiving $618,000.
And since President Obama declared Massachusetts a "disaster area" after the monster snow stormlast February, the town should also be seeing an extra $100,000 or so in federal monies.
Either way, not much consolation for residents of Farview Way.
In his May 15 appearance before Amherst Town Meeting to pitch the joint town/gown study on coexisting in harmony, Chancellor Kumble Subbaswamy proactively addressed the #1 criticism leveled at UMass/Amherst: build more housing to keep students on campus.
The Chancellor clearly pointed out that this fall, when Commonwealth College Residential housing goes on line (1,500 beds), UMass/Amherst will be #3 in the nation for housing students on campus.
The relatively recent construction of "North Residential" also added 800 beds.
North Residential housing complex
And when Commonwealth College dorms come on line they, like North Residential, will not pay property taxes, even though both will be protected by the Amherst Fire Department.
This year AFD cost taxpayers just over $4 million to fund yet they spend 23% of their time dealing with UMass.
Graph courtesy Amherst Firefighters Local 1764
Umass is scheduled to grow over a ten year period at only 300 students per year. Had the Gateway Project not been scuttled by noisy NIMBYs that alone would handled a couple of years worth of growth.
And of course The Retreat, a taxpaying student development in northeast
Amherst would also absorb a couple of years worth of UMass growth. If it
ever gets built.
Or, if provincial Amherst Town Meeting had only approved Form Based Zoning in village centers last year we would already be seeing mixed use buildings going up in North Amherst to greatly stimulate both commercial and residential stock.
The torrential rains that postponed the opening of the 22nd Annual Taste of Amherst last Thursday also primed conditions for that other byproduct of a successful public event on the town common: turf damage.
Yes the town common is public space freely used by the general public. But large events like the Taste of Amherst, Pot Rally and Town Fair do more than their share of damage, that has to be repaired at public expense.
Northeast side of town common
The town should simply enact a fee for large events IF they end up causing damage, much like landlords collect a security deposit prior to leasing an apartment.
11:05 AM, Town Manager's office:4 of 5 Amherst SB members attended
Perhaps the reason the state calls it "Executive Session" is because it mimics a private boardroom meeting between a CEO and a corporation's Board of Directors. In other words, by invite only.
Although in the case of a public body like the Amherst Select Board, they still have to convene in open session (hence allowing miscreants like me to take a photo) before retreating into private conversation. Or in this case, evicting the general public.
The meeting was posted to start at 11:00 AM and finish by 11:59 AM (somebody must have been worried about lunch). Actual start time was 11:06, as SB member Alisa Brewer was her usual few minutes late. And I'm told by SB Chair Stephanie O'Keeffe the meeting adjourned at 12:39 PM.
The reason for the secret meeting was a discussion of Cowls Cushman properties (154 acres) that are currently under a Purchase& Sale agreement with Landmark Properties for $6.5 million.
The town can either invoke the "right of first refusal" and match any legitimate offer on the table for the property, or can simply take it by eminent domain via a simple majority vote of the Select Board.
Although the draconian use of eminent domain also requires Town Meeting authorization for monetary backing.
The town would then be liable to pay W.D.Cowls, Inc the "highest and best use" for the property, which obviously is not that of its current condition, a tree farm.