This just in: Small towns are wonderful

Boston magazine — can you even purchase a copy in the Northwest Corner? — has proclaimed Sharon one of its favorite 15 New England towns.

The paragraph explaining the designation is relatively star-struck, and says  there is a chance of running into actors Campbell Scott, Michael J. Fox or Kevin Bacon at the post office. For good measure, “Meryl Streep lives a few towns over.â€�

The periodical observes that the town’s “rigorous zoning� has protected its splendid Federal, Gothic and Georgian architecture.

The same unspecified rating system at the magazine also singled out Great Barrington, Mass., which is also a few towns away from Meryl Streep, and in fact is business home to another actress, Karen Allen, who has a fibrewear store on Railroad Street. And Robert Redford and Ted Kennedy have been known to ski there.

The Great Barrington criteria for inclusion leans to the culinary, the magazine limning the array of restaurants to be found in close congestion, along with “a cheesemonger, an old-time general store and a new-age co-op market.�

What’s interesting is, Boston magazine happens to have singled out two towns — and we haven’t even looked closely at the others such as Hanover, N.H., or Putnam, Conn. — that have been particularly combative lately.

Sharon, as we know, has hit a wall in efforts to expand its library and has taken a strong stand (meaning townspeople are willing to spend potentially a half-million dollars) to pursue protection of a recreational right-of-way on land owned by a relative newcomer.

Great Barrington, likewise, is recovering from what many viewed (loudly and often) as a wrong-headed designation of an out-of-town developer for its now-empty Bryant-Searles school complex. Last year’s winning developer dropped out, and the Board of Selectmen this fall gave the nod to the also-ran in the previous request for proposals.

Plus, many in Great Barrington are concerned that the  25-year-old (and showing their age) pear trees lining the main drag may be replaced in a major streetscape overhaul that will tap into newly available federal funds.

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If it’s true that Bostonians rarely migrate west on their vacations (perhaps because of the language barrier?), there would appear to be little chance of an onslaught of new visitors or second-home buyers as a result of the coverage.

We may see more return-to-the-soilers, though. Mother Earth News in its latest issue named Cornwall among recipients of its 2009 “Great Places You’ve (Maybe) Never Heard Of� award.

The magazine promotes sustainable living. The award is given based on community dynamics and environmental initiatives. Cornwall has, indeed, been a pacesetter, taking the lead in programs such as the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund’s 20 percent by 2010 program. Expected this month is the installation at the elementary school of a free solar voltaic system earned through the program.

One of the things that put Cornwall over the top, according to Mother Earth, is a “friendly mix of rural locals and vacationing urbanites.�

Sure, everyone is friendly in the Northwest Corner.  But the message in at least two of these towns, and perhaps throughout the region: Mess with what we have at your own risk.

This is, after all, New England.

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