Thank you!
Your support is sustaining the future of local news in our communities.

From Sharon, new ideas on transfer station

SALISBURY — The Salisbury-Sharon Transfer Station Building Committee heard from Sharon resident Howard Randall and considered a list of possible cost savings from Sharon’s Mike Dignacco at the regularly scheduled meeting at Salisbury Town Hall on Wednesday, Nov. 18.

Randall has come up with an alternative plan for the new Salisbury-Sharon transfer station.

Unfortunately, the materials he sent for consideration were for a different proposal.

After considerable back and forth, the committee agreed to look at Randall’s proposal during their December meeting.

Dignacco, an engineer, did not attend the meeting, but did submit a detailed list of construction cost savings, including fewer parking spaces, less paving, a different storm water collection system, and using less expensive materials for retaining walls.

Kevin Grindle of Anchor Engineering said Dignacco’s list was professional and feasible. “I can’t dispute any of these items.”

Both Grindle and committee members noted that the items on the list had been discussed and decided upon by the committee over the last three and a half years.

Co-chair Charlie Kelley of Salisbury opened the meeting by saying, “I am a very unhappy man.

“We’ve been working on this for three and a half years.” 

He added that the meetings are public and anybody could have come to present different ideas at any time.

“Nobody did.”

Several other committee members expressed similar sentiments.

There have been two public information meetings on the transfer station plan — one on Oct. 23 in Salisbury, and another in Sharon on Oct. 30.

The Salisbury meeting was uneventful, with residents asking for clarity on one or two points, but offering no substantial dissent.

The reaction at the Sharon meeting, however, was quite different, with several residents balking at the price tag — $3.75 million, to be split evenly between the towns.

At the building committee meeting, Sharon First Selectman Brent Colley said, “When the cost came out people came out of the woodwork.

“We need to listen to them.”

Grindle said he would come back in December with cost estimates for some of Dignacco’s suggestions including: a reduction in parking spaces; modular concrete retaining walls; and eliminating some landscaping features.

Latest News

Fallen tree downs power lines, blocks Route 112

Eversource crews work to repair damaged power lines after a tree fell near onto Route 112 just north of the Interlaken Inn on Monday, June 22.

Photo by Nathan Miller

LAKEVILLE — A tree fell on Route 112 Monday, June 22, downing power lines and blocking traffic north of Route 41 near the Hotchkiss Four Corners.

Eversource crews on scene at 4:45 p.m. said power lines were being repaired and utility service had been restored to customers in the area.

Keep ReadingShow less

Francis Lynehan

Francis Lynehan

DOVER PLAINS — Francis “Butch” Lynehan, 75, a twenty-year resident of Dover Plains, New York, formerly of Sharon, passed away unexpectedly on Thursday, May 7, 2026 at Vassar Bros. Medical Center in Poughkeepsie, New York.

Born Aug. 29, 1950, in Sharon, he was the son of the late William W. and Nellie (Kluun) Lynehan.

Keep ReadingShow less

Richard McGriff

Richard McGriff

TACONIC — Richard McGriff died unexpectedly on May 16, 2026. This is a collection of loving reminiscences.

With a smile like that and a laugh like that and a soul like that, how could you not love him? Macey Levin and Gloria Miller

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

Juneteenth graduation celebrates Berkshire’s next generation of leaders

Cohort 2026 members Abigail Horace, Adam Liccardi, Adrian Lynch, Cameo Brown, Chauncey Dozier, Claudette Grant, Erline Saintilet, Harmony Edwards, Kamayue Gomes, Mackenzie Colvin, Otis West, Shadre Domingo, TJ West and Tyeesha Keele-Kedroe and Blackshires’ leadership team John Lewis, Patrick Danahey, Dubois Thomas and Julie Haagenson gather at the Blackshires City Hall Fishbowl alongside Mayor Peter Marchetti and city officials Michael Obasohan, Brandon Gill, Katherine VanBramer, Heather Brazeau, Justine Dodds and Jesse Tobin McCauley.

Provided

When designer Abigail Horace joined the Blackshires Leadership Accelerator, she was looking for support for her business, Casa Marcelo, which was founded in Salisbury in 2019. Through the Accelerator, she created the Black Berkshires Social Club, which creates culturally grounded social spaces for Black and BIPOC residents in the region. Throughout her experience, Horace found a community of peers invested in one another’s success.

“Finding Blackshires has been transformative,” Horace said. “Being a BIPOC founder in this region can feel isolating, and this community has changed that. They see my work, champion my business and have opened doors I couldn’t have opened alone.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Forged by curiosity: Art, craftsmanship and big fun with Izzy Fitch

Izzy Fitch at Battle Hill Forge in Wassaic.

Madi Long
I’m not really inventing anything new. I just tweak it a little bit.— Izzy Fitch

A steel praying mantis stands among garden accents at Battle Hill Forge in Wassaic, its folded forelegs ready for prayer and mischief in equal measure.

“She’s very nice,” said blacksmith, sculptor and Battle Hill Forge owner Izzy Fitch, patting the giant insect affectionately. Then he added, “Just don’t go out to dinner with her.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Unexpected subjects, familiar beauty in new Kent exhibits
Millerton-based artist Alexis England with her flamingo and mandrill portraits at Peggy Mercury in Kent.
D.H. Callahan

Kent Barns was alive with art on Saturday, June 13, as three new shows opened at Peggy Mercury and Kenise Barnes Fine Art, featuring a variety of fascinating paintings and drawings from four local artists.

Peggy Mercury, which in just two years has earned a reputation for curating remarkable collections of fine beauty products and accessories, continues to find exciting art to complement its offerings. The new show, “Portraits,” features four pairs of paintings by Millerton-based artist Alexis England. The “portraits” she paints, however, feature some pretty unexpected sitters.

Keep ReadingShow less
google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.

google preferred source

Want more of our stories on Google? Click here to make us a Preferred Source.