Selectmen's meeting - New SSRRA members; road safety

SALISBURY — The Board of Selectmen appointed new members to the Salisbury-Sharon Resource Recovery Authority during the regular monthly meeting Tuesday, Sept. 8.

The three selectmen — Jim Dresser, Bob Riva and First Selectmen Curtis Rand — were the initial members of the new entity, which will oversee the new transfer station. But Dresser and Riva made it clear when they were appointed that they regarded their role as placeholders until the authority was established.

Speaking to Riva, Rand quipped, “You were thinking in terms of weeks, not months.�

Members of the current committee, called the Salisbury-Sharon Transfer Station Recycling Advisory Committee, expressed interest in serving on the SSRRA. Charlie Kelley and Bob Palmer were appointed to fill Riva and Dresser’s seats. Ed Reagan is the new alternate member.

Rand said later he was “happy to stay on.� During the process of setting up the partnership with Sharon, Rand said he felt it was important to have a representative from each town’s board of selectmen on the SSRRA.

Probate court decision

Probate Judge Charlie Vail stopped in to the meeting to thank the selectmen for their support in what he termed “a victory for small towns� — the announcement that the new probate court district will not combine Salisbury, Sharon, Norfolk, North Canaan, Falls Village and Cornwall into a larger district including Winchester and Torrington, as proposed earlier.

Instead, the towns join Kent, Warren, Harwinton, Litchfield, Morris and Thomaston.

Vail said he expects the North Canaan office will remain open four days a week.

The decision of the Probate Redistricting Commission, he added, was in large part due to the public stance taken by officials of the Northwest Council of Governments.

The legislature convenes a special session in October to approve the redistricting proposal, and Vail asked the selectmen to reiterate their support with state Representative Roberta Willis (D-64) and state Senator Andrew Roraback (R-30).

“Tell them, ‘Please, do not change it,’� said Vail.

Fatal crash on Wild Cat Hollow

Rand reported on the response from the state Department of Transportation (DOT) to a letter he sent after a fatal crash on Route 44 near Wild Cat Hollow Road on July 31.

The 16-year-old driver, Stephanie Murphy of Amenia was driving west on Route 44 (a state road) at about 7:54 p.m., and lost control on wet pavement at the curve in the road. The 1998 VW Passat she was driving went off the right side  and hit a large tree. She was pronounced dead that evening at Sharon Hospital.

Rand said the DOT is conducting a review of that stretch of the road, as requested, and has already concluded that “existing warning signs could be upgraded.�

New curbs planned with fed funds

The selectmen set Tuesday, Sept. 29, 6 p.m. at Town Hall as the date of a public hearing on the Salisbury curbing project (part of the federal stimulus plan).

The selectmen’s meeting, postponed a day because of the Labor Day holiday, also began an hour early, at 3 p.m. rather than 4 p.m. to accomodate Dresser’s schedule. The business of the meeting concluded, Rand and Riva kept the meeting open until 4:10 p.m. as an opportunity for residents of White Hollow Road, scheduled for repaving, to meet with the selectmen to discuss any concerns. Nobody came, and the meeting was adjourned.

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