BRPC Looks to Kick Start Mountain Biking ProjectBy Andy McKeever, iBerkshires Staff 01:14AM / Monday, January 07, 2019 | |
BRPC's executive committee gave the approval on Thursday to apply for a Mass Trails grant. |
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — BRPC is hoping to kick off an effort to bolster mountain biking in the area.
Berkshire Regional Planning Commission is joining with two others Western Massachusetts planning organizations in a grant application to map, analyze, identify trail conditions, and lay the framework for a marketing effort to make Western Massachusetts known as a mountain biking hub.
"The senator is a strong advocate for mountain biking and in the environmental bond bill, he got some money to do some of this work to promote Western Massachusetts as a mountain biking destination," BRPC Executive Director Thomas Matuszko said. "This new grant program came up, this Mass Trails program and the senator thought this would be a good program to apply to, working with our neighboring planning agencies — the Franklin County Council of Governments and the Pioneer Valley Planning Commission — for all of western Mass,"
BRPC's grant application is for a different, and a smaller, pool of money. Matuszko said he expects the application to be somewhere in the $150,000 range and each of the three areas will choose a piece of state property to do the analysis and mapping.
"We can scale up or down with the field work depending on the site we identify. I think we are thinking of Pittsfield State Forest right now as the pilot site for Berkshire County," Matuszko said.
BRPC is also looking for a grant to help North Adams become more efficient in purchasing. The executive committee gave Matuszko the OK to apply for an Efficient and Regionalization Grant to streamlining its purchasing and add such items as online ordering.
"There are ways to improve this program, possibly with some kind of online ordering form," Matuszko said.
He said the total budget for such a project hasn't been developed and the grant program doesn't open until Jan. 15. But he still received the approval to apply once the program opens.
BRPC is also preparing to back a piece of legislation to allow industrial hemp to be grown in lands under agricultural protection. Matuszko said the state law defines what can be done on agriculturally protected lands by referring to horticulture.
But "that definition of horticulture doesn't include industrial hemp. A relatively simple amendment is to have the definition of horticulture to include industrial hemp," Matuszko said.
BRPC is now waiting for the piece of legislation to be introduced and will be writing to state lawmakers in support of the passage.
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