Brian Cole of the Williamstown Agricultural Commission speaks Wednesday to the commissioners of the Hoosac Water Quality District about composting sludge.
HQWD Rescinds Proposed FY25 Budget Over Sludge Disposal Changes
The commissioners also heard from David Irwin Jr., right, on the fiscal 2024 annual audit.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Contaminated sludge is off the table for the Hoosac Water Quality District.
The HWQD's board on Wednesday voted to rescind its approved $1.5 million budget after Casella Waste Management withdrew its option to truck untreated residential sewage from other communities to the Williamstown facility and then distribute the composted product elsewhere.
Secondly, said Bradley O. Furlon, district manager, the state has extended the wastewater district's ability to compost its own sludge by two years.
"With these two changing developments ... I feel that it's not feasible to go with any of the Casella options. It's not feasible with budgeting to go with either of the Synagro options," said Furlon. "Right at this moment, it's most feasible to continue to compost our own sludge, as we've been operating for the past four years at the district."
Processed human solid waste has been found to contain perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, which have been linked to cancer. The district's budget had included an option to take possibly contaminated waste from Casella, which would then sell it elsewhere, with an estimated savings of $500,000.
The Williamstown Finance Committee had unanimously endorsed the budget, with the Casella option, but the Select Board voted two weeks ago against recommending it to the annual town meeting. The city of North Adams is the other partner in the wastewater district.
The new developments were a relief to the 30 or so attendees at Wednesday's meeting, held in City Council Chambers because of the expected audience. But they also expected more to be done to prevent the dispersion of PFAS.
"I'm very glad to hear the updates from Casella, I think the most challenging option is off the table. But I do want us to really consider moving to landfill operations as soon as possible," said Stephanie Boyd, one of the Williamstown Select Board members who voted to reject the budget. "I understand that you as the board are representing us, but I think this is also time for us to reflect on what does our community really want? I also think we should think about our community a little broader than just us here."
Brian Cole, on behalf of the Williamstown Agricultural Commission, stated that commission was against land application of biosolid-based compost fertilizer because of concerns around the dangerous PFAs and other contaminated found the material. The commission is in support of landfill disposal.
On his own behalf, Cole said he would like to see the costs of landfill disposal start being built into the sewer rates.
"Because I think options for getting rid of the composted sludge are going to continue to diminish," he said. "I think that PFAs in the sludge that being land-applied is going to prove to be more and more problematic as we learn more and more about the problem."
Furlon agreed, saying companies are anticipating disposal prices for sludge to rocket 500 percent in the coming years as more state begin to restrict where it can be used.
"The minimal amount that the district had for a proposal at this time was $540,000 to ship out the sludge to a landfill in Western New York," he said. "To run our composting facility, it cost us about half of that."
The composted sludge is not sold or recommended as fertilizer, Furlon said, but rather as a soil additive for lawns and horticulture. But he acknowledged the wastewater district has no control what it's used for once someone buys it — or where it ends up when it rains.
"This stuff will be here forever. It will never go away. The only way I see the deal with something like this is, unfortunately, something like landfill and concentrating the stuff so that maybe it can be handled later, or at least limit the dispersion," said Rye Howard, a member of the North Adams Planning Board and a toxicologist who has worked on PFAS.
"The only way I see the deal with something like this is, unfortunately, something like landfill and concentrating the stuff so that maybe it can be handled later, or at least limit the dispersion."
The waste district manager said the problem is that PFAS are in every product people use on a daily basis and there's only three ways to get rid of sludge — landfill, incineration or composting.
"The general public is the problem with PFAs. It's 10s of 1000s of products that this material index is in. There's 42,000 compounds to this chemical," said Furlon. "Once you start to get into the science of it, when you start talking about the long chains and the short chains, how they break down. It gets very complicated. ...
"It's almost impossible for the district or any one of us as a district to inform the general public."
Another member of the audience countered that it's not the public, but the producers that dispersing the contaminants.
"It's the manufacturers that are putting it out. The general public has no control over this except to be aware and to be educated and to seek out and demand of the producers that they get rid of these materials," she said, while acknowledging, "and that is a huge education campaign, as some of us have been working on for a while."
Commissioner Timothy Lescarbeau moved to rescind the budget; Chair Hugh Daley said the commission would set a meeting to review an updated budget.
On Thursday, Daley said he expected to meet some time in early June once Furlon had budget scenarios to review. He believed the water rates presented for the Williamstown annual town meeting next week should cover the HWQD budget for fiscal 2026.
"If we continue to compost, it will definitely cover next year's costs. If we don't continue to compost, it will most likely cover next year's operating costs," he responded by email. "There will be a little bit of risk around the how we pay for the removal of the existing compost pile, but we may be able to do that over a couple years."
In other business, David Irwin Jr. of Adelson & Co. presented the annual audit for fiscal 2024.
"We issued a clean opinion, unmodified. So everything was in accordance with the common principles, generally accepted in the United States, no material weaknesses, no significant deficiencies, and it actually accurately represents your financial position," said Irwin.
The district ended the fiscal year on June 30, 2024, with cash at the end of the year, at a minimum of $368,000. It also recently joined the North Adams Retirement System and showed a proportionate liability of $525,000; its percentage in the system is 3.48 percent for its nine employees.
It ended the year with $10.2 million in assets and liabilities of $5.7 million. It met all its debt obligations, paying down $740,000 plus the interest on $4.2 million in debt.
Irwin also noted that District Administrator Kristy Williams had shifted to QuickBooks online and "everything went very smooth with that."
"Kristy does a very good job with the accounting," he said. "So did a very good job. So I think that that's pretty much it. Good, clean opinion."
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Adams Fire District Voters Reject Full-Time Chief, Appointed Positions
By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff
Fire District officials have been recommending a full-time paid fire chief for seven years. Egremont last week voted to hire two firefighters and set a salary of $100,000 for a full-time chief.
ADAMS, Mass. — Voters in the Fire District for the second time rejected a proposal for a full-time paid fire chief.
Article 3 failed 81-85 on the election ballot, as did companion questions for appointing the assistant engineers and the clerk/treasurer. They will remain elected positions.
Fire Chief John Pansecchi expressed his disappointment with the vote. The chief and the Prudential Committee had outlined their reasons for making changes at an information meeting last month.
"Anyone could be elected assistant engineer, anyone could be elected chief," said Pansecchi. "They don't have to be qualified and I can't make them take the courses to get the qualifications."
The town of Egremont at its town meeting last week voted to hire a full-time chief as well as two full-time firefighters.
"Towns smaller than Adams realize the need," said Pansecchi, adding that the responsibilities that fall to fire chiefs continues to climb and that it will be harder to fill the position.
The chief, who has a full-time job in addition to the fire chief post, said he plans to talk to his family on whether to continue when his term ends. He was elected to his first three-year term as chief in 2017.
The three articles on the district meeting warrant related to appointing the positions overwhelmingly passed but their failure at the ballot box precluded their enactment. Article 23, which would call for the bylaws to be amended, was voted down at the recommendation of the Prudential Committee as it was rendered moot by the ballot vote.
The HWQD's board on Wednesday voted to rescind its approved $1.5 million budget after Casella Waste Management withdrew its option to truck untreated residential sewage from other communities to the Williamstown facility and then distribute the composted product elsewhere.
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Article 3 failed 81-85, as did companion questions for appointing the assistant engineers and the clerk/treasurer. They will remain elected positions.
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Pittsfield High's Matt Dupuis and Lee's Devyn Fillio Sunday won the boys and girls individual high school bowling State Championships at Spare Time.
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