Monday, January 27, 2014
Rental Permit Bylaw: Halfway Home
Building Commissioner Rob Morra reported to the Amherst Select Board this evening that the town's new Rental Registration process is going well, with 741 applications received out of a total of 1,570 (47%) properties that need to register.
The new law went into effect January 1st and requires all landlords to pay $100 annual fee for a permit. The process includes submitting a parking plan and completing a self certification checklist acknowledging basic zoning and health & safety concerns. But the process can all be easily accomplished on the town website.
Also neighbors or concerned citizens can file complaints about rental properties with the town or find the name and contact information for a rental property owner to take it up with them first.
A map with color coded pins (red for "open" and green for "closed") shows all the complaints received dating back to April, even before the law went into effect.
Unfortunately the Code Violations and Complaints Map does not currently show properties cited by the Amherst Police Department for noise or nuisance complaints, a glaring oversight.
Commissioner Morra did say he would be working with Police Chief Livingstone in the near future to make that valuable data available on the website.
"Unforeseen Circumstances"

ARHS
UPDATE 2:00 PM
According to a source close to the investigation police ascertained the identity of the Anon poster with the vaguely threatening Facebook "confession" around 3:30 this morning.A State Police bomb squad vehicle screamed through Amherst town center around 11:30 this morning heading North.
Original Post 8:00 AM
Amherst Regional High School is closed today due to "unforeseen circumstance."
Back before that darn Internet if you wanted to cause chaos at your local school you picked up the phone (or better yet used a pay phone) to call in a bomb threat.
Nowadays it's even easier. Although this Facebook posting is a tad less direct. School officials have confirmed they were made aware of the "threat" over the weekend but the robo call to parents on Monday morning gave no indication of why the sudden closure, leading to rampant speculation.
Amherst School Committee Vice Chair Rick Hood also confirmed this morning that the Amherst School Committee was not giving a heads up prior to closing down the school.
The number appearing to the left of the post is simply the ongoing count of Anon posts published on the site. Interestingly if someone responds with a comment they are not anonymous.
Labels:
amherst school committee,
N-word
Sunday, January 26, 2014
Another Snoozer Local Election?
Amherst Town Hall: pretty in snow
As usual the interest in serving as a venerable member of Amherst Town Meeting -- that bastion of pure democracy -- is minimal at best. Yes, this in a town that prides itself on being vocal.
Out of 80 three-years seats up for grabs, spread out over 10 precincts, so far only 37 candidates have bothered to take out or file papers. And considering it only takes one signature to get on the ballot (your own counts) it's not like there's much of a barrier to entry.
The election is March 25 and the deadline for returning papers to the Town Clerk is February 4.
On the "townwide" front, two more candidates have taken out papers for Select Board the highest office in town government, bringing the total to six potential candidates (for two open seats).
New entrants include John Boothroyd who helped lead a bitter battle against subsidized HAP housing in his neighborhood a few years ago; and Matthew E. Cunningham-Cook a, gasp, UMass Graduate Student who majors in "Labor Studies."
Every few years a Umass student enters the race for Select Board and at the very least livens up the debate somewhat, but since UMass students avoid the ballot box like an 8:00 AM Monday morning math class, no significant vote tally ever results.
The Amherst School Committee will also see a race as Viraphanh Douangmany has already filed her papers with the requisite 50 signatures. Incumbent Katherine Appy has announced she's running for reelection but thus far has not turned in her papers.
And she does seem to have a problem with routine paperwork.
Mexican Stand Off
One of the many benefits of living in a "college town" is the youthful demographic is a prime target for national franchises to set up shop. Great for consumers of all ages, but not so great for local mom and pops trying to survive in the same zip code.
Take nearby Hadley for instance, a town smart enough to allow commercial development all along busy Rt. 9 even before the University of Massachusetts became such an overpowering presence.
A decade ago Chili's set up shop almost on the Amherst/Hadley border and it did not take long for Applebee's to come a calling directly across the busy street. Just as a generation ago McDonald's and Burger King opened for business even before the busy Hampshire Mall was constructed.
Now withing a burger throw of both we have a Chipotle that opened recently and soon enough a "Moe's". Our little corner of the Happy Valley is becoming all Mexican all of the time.
Which may not be a welcome development for local Amherst restaurants serving southwest cuisine: Bueno Y Sano and La Veracruzana in the downtown and The Mission Cantina and El Comalito in South Amherst.
October 27, 2013
Because mom and pops are nothing if not resilient.
Friday, January 24, 2014
Calling All Consultants!
$60,000 town/gown consultant contract up for grabs
Hear ye, hear ye: The joint UMass town of Amherst Request For Proposals, a consultant contract worth $60,000, has just hit the Internet.
The large Town Gown Steering (super) Committee -- made up of heavy hitters from both UMass and the town, hashed out the legal contract over four meetings.
The cost of the consultant is also shared 50/50 by the two superpowers, although the University handled all the final edits and legal issues that go along with issuing a 15 page public document.
The main focus for the consultant will be double edged problems, probably endemic to "college towns": housing and economic development.
Two recent town sponsored housing studies have concluded the lack of student housing drives up prices making it difficult for middle income families -- and impossible for low income families -- to find shelter.
Plus Amherst has an overwhelmingly skewed tax base, as the housing market represents 90% of the total tax base and the commercial sector a pitiful 10%.
With the recent loss of 204 affordable units at Rolling Green Apartment complex the town has now fallen below the magic 10% threshold for Subsidized Housing Inventory and could be (within the next year) subject to a Chapter 40B mega development.
Labels:
Town Gown Steering Committee,
Umass
Thursday, January 23, 2014
Hit The Road

Gottago Taxi packing them in
The Amherst Select Board on Monday night will consider a "Recommendation to NOT approve a taxi license -- GottaGo taxi." But fear not, 15 minutes later they will vote on a "New Taxi Business License Application: Funky Cab."
So the net number of taxi cab companies licensed to do business in the town of Amherst will in all likelihood remain the same (9).
The Selectboard renewed all the taxi licenses back in December, but that was "subject to outstanding documentation" including the positive recommendation of Police Chief Scott Livingstone. GottaGo Taxi was the only company he did not recommend.
The Chief's memo will appear in the Selectboard packet tomorrow, but until then this incident should provide a little background. The owner will have the right to respond to the Chief's recommendation (or lack thereof) at the Monday night Select Board meeting.
He may not want to drive one of his cabs to the meeting.
#AmherstMA Police Chief recommends NO GO for GottaGo tax business. Selectboard decides Monday to pull permit. http://t.co/6KHDHbqV3X
— Larry Kelley (@amherstac) January 24, 2014
Labels:
Downtown Amherst,
small business
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Who Guards The Guardians?
Umass is looking for a "Director of Communications" to add to their luxurious stable of Public Relations folks, namely the Office of News & Media Relations (with a staff of 10).
This gaggle of course does not include Nancy Buffone, Director of "University Relations," with a staff of three; or John Kennedy, Vice Chancellor for University Relations.
UMass also has "Newswise" which seems to be just another name for News & Media Relations, although I notice former high-ranking editor at the (Springfield) Republican Larry Rivais now shows up as an "Associate News Editor" after retiring from the Republican on January 1st.
The retreat of journos into public relations jobs is certainly nothing new, but it has become worse over the past ten years or so with the decimation of traditional print media by that darn Internet.
In 1980 for instance Amherst hosted four weekly news publications, and now we're down to just one. And that one -- The Amherst Bulletin -- had a full time staff of 13 stationed in Amherst back in 1980 (not to mention 15-20 part-timers), and now they are down to just two.
In 1980 the ratio of PR flacks to journalists was 1.2 to one, but by 2010 had climbed to an alarming 4 to one. And they are better paid and better equipped than the beleaguered journos who try to cover their employer.
So who keeps a discerning eye and a flashlight on UMass, our flagship University and the town's #1 employer? Hello? Hello? Is anyone out there?
UPDATE 5:00 PM
Nancy Buffone's response regarding the "Director of Communications" position.
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