8 comments


  1. 11. Lack of a commercial/industrial sector – corollary to 2. High Taxes and 13 below.

    12. Downtown development struggles – controversy for new development, minimizing vacancy (e.g., Judie’s space, Hazel’s Blue Lagoon, 1st floor mixed-use challenges), supporting new establishments (White Lion, Amherst Burger)

    13. Feeling of disconnect between Town (struggling) and gown (UMass-Amherst & Amherst College prospering)

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  2. To say that “the elementary and regional budgets keep going up despite the fact that the number of students keeps declining” is an oversimplification of the situation that insinuates that our schools are wasting money.  In fact, education costs are rising across Massachusetts. Over the last ten years for which data is available (2012-2022) costs per pupil in Massachusetts rose at a faster rate (48%) than in the Amherst Schools (47%) or especially the Amherst-Pelham Regional Schools (34%). 

    And while the overall municipal budget may have stayed within the 4% guideline, many individual departments had rising costs well beyond the 6% the schools are asking for (Facilities Management: 12.5%, HR: 14.4%, Senior Center: 9.8%, Conservation and Development Planning: 9.5%. DEI: 9.5%, Town Clerk’s office: 8.2%, Finance Department: 7.6%, Public Works Administration: 7.6%, Communications Center: 7.1%, Police: 6.1%).  This demonstrates how hard it is for any personnel-dependent budget to stay within a 4% annual increase.

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  3. I have three words for this, Amherst Historical Commission. If you add up all the demolition delays that failed after one year, we would have a very different picture. They are unelected and unaccountable with no fiduciary duty. Only in “the city called the town of Amherst”.

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  4. Thank you Nick for the excellent distillation of these ten, providing a conversation starter (and a good prompt for contributions to a longer list). In our proudly un-silent town where tolerance seems to have ebbed away, an irony of the tribalism (4) and incivility (6) that you point out is that people in Amherst do seem to agree wholeheartedly on one thing: that we must recover our ability for respectful community dialog.

    The Current and Indy may seem to some to be silos of likeminded readership – perhaps due to the minority commentariat at each – but I suspect the readership is broader and broader-minded. The recent agreement by these two publications to trade and syndicate articles is a superb move toward better common understanding and I hope it will continue.

    Thank you for cuing up and rounding out these discussions.

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  5. I think a lot of our problems stem from the fact that large groups of active or formerly active residents simply don’t speak to each other any more, which means that they don’t hear or understand each other. And I think a lot of that comes from the repeated disappointment of having initiatives we care about being stuffed back in our faces, as if there was something wrong with us for having wanted them. So the grudges and disgruntlement get carried along from year to year, and the silences get longer and longer. The overall problem is compounded because the tribalism oddly coheres from one issue to the next, from school program to charter reform to library renovation/expansion plan. The group memberships stick together across time with remarkable consistency. What the overall philosophy or world view of municipal government that keeps some people together and regularly alienated from others remains fairly mysterious.

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  6. Good summary of the big issues. The town also faces what to do with the Wildwood School site; as you wrote in an earlier column, it would be a good place for reasonably priced high density housing for local families, but like nearly everything in Amherst these days, it might be hard to accomplish without considerable acrimony.

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  7. Thank you Nick for your clear. well researched and understandable writing. Having always relied until recently on the Gazette and what I learned from (and still do) the candidates’ electioneering, the Current is a great bounty of information that is feeding my need to understand more about our wonderful town. And…the comments are also thoughtful and informative.

    PS i also appreciate the ease in making a comment by just hitting “reply”.

    Pete Rogers

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