February 9, 2022
Hi Friend,

This coming week is packed with BEAT events! Tonight at 6PM is the Wildlife Track & Sign I.D. evening, a collaborative event between Northeast Wildlife Trackers and BEAT. You can RSVP to that here.

We also have Pittsfield Green Drinks, multiple tracking events, a StoryWalk, and two No Fracked Gas in Mass events that are coming up. You can find more info below!


Thanks for all you do to protect the environment,
Jane, Rose, Jake, Noah, and Chelsey

It's Black History Month. Each week during February, BEAT will be celebrating Black environmentalists, spotlighting environmental inequalities, and honoring the contributions of Black folks to the environmental justice movement.
This week we are celebrating Marjorie Eugene Richard and Sharon Lavigne.
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Marjorie Richard is the first African American to win the Goldman Environmental Prize - a prize awarded annually to grassroots environmental activists from each of the world's six geographic regions. She grew up in a historically Black neighborhood in Norco, Louisiana, in a house just 25 feet away from the fence line of a Shell Chemicals plant. Four generations of Marjorie's family have lived in Old Diamond, a neighborhood within the southern Mississippi River region known as "Cancer Alley." Growing up, Marjorie was acutely aware of the devastating health problems her community faced as result of the Shell refinery, which is what led her to take the front line of a long, hard-won battle to hold the company accountable for the health problems they had inflicted on her community. Marjorie secured agreement from Shell Chemical to reduce its toxic emissions by 30 percent, contribute $5 million to a community development fund, and finance relocation of her Old Diamond neighbors in Louisiana. She is the 2004 Goldman Prize recipient, and her campaign has been hailed as a landmark environmental justice victory.
Sharon Lavigne is the most recent Goldman Prize recipient for North America. Sharon has lived in St. James Parish, Louisiana, her entire life, which is located alongside the Mississippi River in "Cancer Alley." She worked as a special education teacher until 2018 when she decided to dedicate herself full-time to working for environmental justice in her community. Sharon successfully stopped the construction of a $1.25 billion plastics manufacturing plant alongside the Mississippi River in St. James Parish by mobilizing grassroots opposition, educating community members, and organizing peaceful protests to defend her predominantly Black community. The plant would have generated one million pounds of liquid hazardous waste annually, in a region already facing known carcinogens and toxic air pollution. Sharon Lavigne is the 2021 Goldman Prize recipient, and she is still continuously opposing new chemical plants in her community.
You can learn more about Marjorie Richard and Sharon Lavigne by visiting the sources linked with their names.
You can also read about the history of "Cancer Alley" and the insidious affects it has had on communities that reside within its corridors through these articles:
*Upcoming Special Events*
BEAT and No Fracked Gas in Mass have a lot of events these next couple of weeks. We have only listed a few here, but you can find the rest in our Event section below!

TONIGHT, FEBRUARY 9TH: Wildlife Track & Sign I.D.
Join Berkshire Environmental Action Team and Northeast Wildlife Trackers tonight at 6 p.m. for an evening of track and sign I.D. based on photos from you - the audience! Expert trackers will examine submitted photos and discuss features of local wildlife track and sign while they try to uncover the mystery of who made them. If you would like to take part in this lively evening, bring your curiosity and questions and RSVP here

Join us next Tuesday for our February Pittsfield Green Drinks event to hear Elizabeth Saunders, the Massachusetts director of Clean Water Action, speak about how our two ways of disposing of trash — incinerators (“Community Eco Power” in Pittsfield) and landfills — have huge negative consequences for public health, the environment, and justice. RSVP HERE!

NO FRACKED GAS IN MASS EVENTS
Energy Storage Webinar - WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16 @ 12:00 - 1:30PM VIA ZOOM
We’d like to invite you to an energy storage webinar Sponsored by Massachusetts Climate Action Network and Prince Lobel, the law firm involved in opposing the Peabody Peaker.
We’ll be speaking along with MCAN, Prince Lobel law firm, peaker transition consultants Clean Energy Group and Cogentrix - owner of three peaker power plants in Massachusetts that will be converting from fossil fuel generators to renewables and storage by end of next year.
This webinar will showcase recent advances in policy, technology and pricing that support an accelerated transition to large-scale battery storage as an effective clean energy strategy. 
» Please RSVP to [email protected] and you will receive the Zoom login information under separate cover.
» Visit the Facebook Event Page to Share and Invite friends.

Peabody Peaker Teach-In and Action Party - TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15 @ 6:30PM VIA ZOOM
As you've probably heard, activists have been hard at work for almost a year to stop a proposed gas peaking power plant in Peabody. We need to reach out to key decision-makers across the state and ask them to step up and do their job to protect our communities. We'll be sharing the latest information about the campaign, then taking action by writing letters to our state legislators and gubernatorial candidates. 
» Visit the Facebook Event Page to Share and Invite friends
IN THE NEWS
The Old Man and the Tree

Jonny Diamond | Smithsonian Magazine
"For most of the 20th century, it was a matter of settled wisdom that the ancient forests of New England had long ago fallen to the ax and saw. How, after all, could such old trees have survived the settlers’ endless need for fuel to burn, fields to farm and timber to build with? [...] But the loggers and settlers missed a few spots over 300 years, which is why we’re at Ice Glen on this hot, humid August day. [...] If the goal is to minimize global warming, climate scientists often stress the importance of afforestation, or planting new forests, and reforestation, or regrowing forests. But there is a third approach to managing existing forests: proforestation, a term coined by climate scientist William Moomaw to describe the preservation of older existing forests. [...] In studying individual Eastern white pines over the age of 150, Bob [Leverett] was able to determine that they accumulate 75 percent of their total carbon after 50 years of age—a pretty important finding when every year counts in our struggle to mitigate the effects of climate change. Simply planting new forests won’t do it." See Photos & Read More
U.S. Environmental Court back PCB cleanup plan for the Housatonic River, rejecting claim of EPA error and allowing Lee landfill

Larry Parnass | The Berkshire Eagle
"...[The] fight against local disposal of polychlorinated biphenyls, a probable carcinogen, now will move to the 1st Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals. Two justices with the Environmental Appeals Board ruled that the Environmental Protection Agency was justified in changing course on how it would require the General Electric Co. to handle soils contaminated with PCBs. In February 2020, the agency revealed, after a secretive mediation process, that it would allow GE to bury most of the PCB-tainted sediments pulled from the river in a specially designed Lee landfill, a plan that it confirmed in a formal determination in December 2020." Read More
Are Cardinals Redder In Winter?

Staff Writers | All About Birds
"...Like many birds, Northern Cardinals molt their feathers and grow new ones in late summer and early fall, after the breeding season is over and at a time when food is abundant. [...] The birds reach the peak of brilliance by midwinter ahead of the spring breeding season. [...] The richness of a male’s red feathers may make a difference in his reproductive success: One study found that in rural areas, brighter red cardinals tended to mate earlier and nest in higher-quality habitat—factors usually associated with more offspring. But for cardinals that live in cities, redder may not be better. A study in 2010 found that in urban areas brighter cardinals had poorer body condition and didn’t produce as many young as more subtly hued cardinals. The study’s authors said the surprising finding may have to do with the prevalence of non-native honeysuckle. [...] 'Studies like this show that one of the best things you can do for birds is provide habitat and food using native plantings...'Read More
Dear White Enviros: You can't fight climate change without communities of color

Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva (D-ARIZ.) & Andrés Jimenez | The Hill
"...When conservationists claimed these lands, they were already richly inhabited by Indigenous Peoples who had been cultivating, conserving, and connecting with them since time immemorial. [...] Environmental and social justice champions like us can’t pretend that our feelings about America’s conservation history aren’t complicated. How can we appreciate a movement that created places of refuge for both humans and wildlife when that same movement tried to erase the existence of Indigenous Peoples from those very places? [...] Communities of color and Indigenous Peoples are overwhelmingly on the frontlines of climate change; they’re the ones bearing the brunt of higher temperatures, sea level rise, and stronger and more frequent severe weather events, including hurricanes and heatwaves. They’re the ones whose communities have been infiltrated by polluting petrochemical plants and fossil fuel production facilities. Yet, they’re also the ones who are being left out when environmental organizations are deciding how they’ll address climate change. [...] We can’t change the American environmental movement’s dark history of white supremacy. But if we want to light a sustainable and equitable path through the climate crisis, the environmental movement must close shop on the ivory tower and open the door to more diverse voices for a more just and inclusive future." Read More
EPA acts to curb air, water pollution in poor communities

Matthew Daily | AP News
"The Environmental Protection Agency announced a series of enforcement actions to address air pollution, unsafe drinking water and other problems afflicting minority communities in three Gulf Coast states. [...] The agency will conduct unannounced inspections of chemical plants, refineries and other industrial sites suspected of polluting air and water and causing health problems to nearby residents. And it will install air monitoring equipment in Louisiana’s 'chemical corridor.' [...] The EPA also issued a notice to the city of Jackson, Mississippi, saying its aging and overwhelmed drinking water system violates the federal Safe Drinking Water Act." Read More
Warming Ocean Leaves No Safe Havens for Coral Reefs

Bob Berwyn | Inside Climate News
"In the race to save at least some remnants of the world’s coral reefs, a new study shows only one thing really matters—capping global warming at 1.5 degrees Celsius. Even at only that level of warming, more than 99 percent of areas previously seen as potentially safe havens for coral will disappear. Warming of 2 degrees C would wipe out all the “reef refugia” where corals might survive relentlessly warming oceans. The grim projections are made in research published today in the journal PLOS One using new climate models that more accurately show how interactions between different parts of the climate system, like winds, ocean currents, clouds and multiyear ocean temperature changes like El Niño, affect reefs. [...] Governments have agreed in international pacts on conservation and biodiversity that the loss of coral reefs represents the unraveling of one of the major strands of the web of life. Reefs will be one of the first major global ecosystems to be wiped out mainly by global warming, followed by glaciers and certain types of forests. As reefs and their fisheries dwindle, people are likely to go hungry without massive adaptation efforts in coastal areas of developing countries around the world.Read More
Massachusetts approves $4B efficiency plan. Is it 'transformational' or a 'missed opportunity' on equity?

Robert Walton | Utility Drive
"The Massachusetts Department of Public Utilities (DPU) on Wednesday approved a three-year spending plan for the state's energy efficiency program, Mass Save, that will provide an estimated $9 billion in benefits and aim to deliver 845,000 tons of emissions reductions. The efficiency program has a total budget of $3.94 billion for 2022-2024, with a "significant portion" going to electric heat pump incentives for residential, income-eligible and commercial and industrial customers, according to the DPU. The previous three-year budget was set at $2.8 billion. Regulators call the plan "transformational," but efficiency experts say continued incentives for some fossil fuel heating and the removal of provisions for low- and moderate-income customers make the order a "missed opportunity" to improve energy equity." Read More
How Indigenous Communities Are Building Energy Sovereignty

Natalie Peart | Yes! Magazine
"...As countries across the world have pledged to reduce carbon emissions, many Indigenous communities across the U.S. have been and are creating new energy futures. [...] On the Hawaiian island of Moloka’i, residents—many of whom are Native Hawaiian—pay a high price for electricity: $0.41 per kilowatt hour compared to the United States average of $0.13. Though Moloka’i residents use the least energy of all the Hawaiian Islands, they are saddled with the greatest expense. This energy inequality has led the community to try and gain more control over how their energy is sourced and distributed. [...] Even with success stories like these, the renewable energy sector is facing significant questions. [...] But experts argue renewable energy is still less damaging than our current model of fossil fuel dependence. And as the world invests big in renewables, the sector will likely see myriad community-led innovations and improvements..." Read More
Record Fossil Extraction from Canada, U.S., Norway Despite Fervent Climate Pledges

The Energy Mix
"The United States, Norway, and Canada are set to produce more oil this year than ever before, despite solemn pronouncements at last year’s COP 26 climate summit on the urgent need for climate action, Oil Change International asserts in a new analysis. [...] According to U.S. Energy Information Administration forecasts, U.S. oil production in 2023 will surpass Donald Trump’s 2019 record for domestic crude production, courtesy of a drilling permit approval rate that surpasses that of Biden’s fossil-championing predecessor. The U.S. “has more oil and gas extraction expansion planned in the next decade than any other country,” Oil Change says. Meanwhile, Canada’s Trudeau is proving to be another “climate hypocrite,” they write... [...] Norway, meanwhile, has just announced a further 53 oil and gas licenses, a number of them involving exploration in the ecologically sensitive Barents Sea." Read More
Individuals Are Not to Blame for the Climate Crisis

Cassandra Roxburgh| Yes! Magazine
"Generation Z has grown up in the shadow of the climate crisis. Global leaders promised they would act. But despite grave warnings by leading experts on climate change, every year for the past four decades, the world has been largely paralyzed by inaction. Meaningful progress has been obstructed by fossil fuel companies’ intentional obfuscation of responsibility for the climate crisis. The result? The climate crisis is now reality. Globally, 41 million people are on the edge of famine due to climate change, and that number is set to increase with the higher temperatures, desertification, and more extreme weather events on their way. But who’s at fault? The 2020 Carbon Majors Report identified 90 companies, mainly fossil fuel companies, that are responsible for two-thirds of carbon emissions. Despite this, global leaders still somehow conclude that individuals are to blame. [...] Suggesting turning off the lights or driving less loses sight of the global severity of the climate crisis and shifts the focus off those with the greatest capacity and responsibility to make meaningful change. [...] This externalization of responsibility allows fossil fuel companies to downplay their role in the climate crisis and undermine climate litigation, regulation, and activism. Individualizing the responsibility is an insidious weapon within the fossil fuel industry’s arsenal, which includes greenwashing and woke-washing." Read More
Wheat blessing: Jordan’s grassroot movement for food sovereignty

Marta Vidal | Al Jazeera
"Carrying sickles, a group of Jordanians gather to harvest a wheat field that spreads around Amman’s City Mall. Logos of international supermarkets and franchises tower above the golden wheat, as dozens of people reap a crop that for thousands of years has been cultivated in the region. This collective harvest last summer in west Amman [...] was part of a grassroots initiative promoting food sovereignty by converting unused land into wheat fields. [...] The COVID-19 pandemic’s disruptions of supply chains have highlighted the problems of lacking food sovereignty. Since Jordan imports most of its key staples, it is particularly vulnerable to disruptions. A recent report published by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace found 53 percent of Jordanians are vulnerable to food insecurity. [...] For the founders of Barakeh, growing wheat in neglected plots of land is a way of reclaiming independence and promoting sovereignty in a country that relies heavily on food imports and foreign aid." See Photos & Read More
COMMUNITY CALENDAR 
We list events from a variety of local and regional organizations and individuals. 
 

Events with BEAT:
 
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9
Wildlife Track & Sign I.D. - BEAT & Northeast Wildlife Trackers

SATURDAY,FEBRUARY 12
Family Self-Guided StoryWalk (English & Español) - Goes from FEB. 12 through FEB. 27

TUESDAY , FEBRUARY 15

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16


Community Calendar: 

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9
Wildlife Track & Sign I.D. - BEAT & Northeast Wildlife Trackers

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10


FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11

SATURDAY,FEBRUARY 12
Family Self-Guided StoryWalk (English & Español) - Goes from FEB. 12 through FEB. 27

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14
Family Self-Guided StoryWalk (English & Español) - Every day (dawn to dusk) from FEB. 12 through FEB. 27

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16


JOBS
We list jobs related to the environment from a variety of organizations. 
 

Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) | Stockbridge
High Road Manager | Berkshire Natural Resources Council | Hybrid/Berkshires
Conservation Technician | Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) | Stockbridge
Administrative and Marketing Manager | Nonprofit Center of the Berkshires | Great Barrington
Administrative Manager | Nonprofit Center of the Berkshires | Great Barrington
Marketing and Communications Manager | Nonprofit Center of the Berkshires | Great Barrington
Conservation Corps Member | SCA Massachusetts Conservation Corps | Berkshire Hills | deadline 3/14
Experiential Education Director | Christodora, Inc. | Florida, MA | deadline 3/20
River Steward — Paid Internship | Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) | deadline 3/31
Seasonal Wildlife Technician | BiodiversityWorks | Vineyard Haven | deadline 2/11
Beach-Nesting Bird Conservation Assistant | BiodiversityWorks | Vineyard Haven | deadline 2/11
Sustainability Fellowship | University of New Hampshire | Durham | deadline 2/14
Zero Waste Campaign Associate | U.S. Pirg | Boston | deadline 2/18
Wildlife Intern | Martha’s Vineyard Land Bank | Edgartown | deadline 2/21
Field Crew Leader | Great Pond Foundation | Edgartown | deadline 2/28
Southern New England Trails Volunteer Programs Field Coordinator | Appalachian Mountain Club | Russel | deadline 2/28
ACE: Fisheries Specialist–AmeriCorps Eligible | American Conservation Experience | Sunderland | deadline 2/28
Communications Intern | Massachusetts River Alliance | Cambridge | deadline 2/28
Program Coordinator | Earthwatch | Boston or Remote | deadline 3/1
Shorebird Monitor | Duxbury Beach Reservation | deadline 3/1
Southeast Massachusetts Common Loon Field Biologist | Biodiversity Research Institute | deadline 3/1
Western Massachusetts Common Loon Field Biologist | Biodiversity Research Institute | deadline 3/1
Ecological Restoration Technician – Level 1 | Land Stewardship, Inc. | Turner Falls | deadline 3/1
Ecological Restoration Technician | Land Stewardship, Inc. | Turner Falls | deadline 3/1
Field Assistant | Mass Audubon Coastal Waterbird Program | Cummaquid
Crew Leader | Mass Audubon Coastal Waterbird Program | Cummaquid
Seasonal Shorebird Technician | The Trustees of Reservations | Nantucket
Seasonal Shorebird Technician | The Trustees of Reservations | Vineyard Haven
Learnership/Student Internship in Field Botany & Native Plant Gardening | Farmscape Ecology Program – Hawthorne Valley Farm | Ghent, NY
Summer Experience Studying Insects on Farm | Farmscape Ecology Program – Hawthorne Valley Farm | Ghent, NY
Natural Resources & Environmental Permitting Summer Intern | SWCA Environmental Consultants | Amherst



***Are you a non-profit environmental organization looking for willing, capable, and *free* summer interns? 
The Center for Environmental Studies at Williams College provides funding to students to pursue unpaid environmental summer internships with non-profit organizations and governmental agencies, supervised research, and creative endeavors. Learn more about this summer program and how you can get involved here.


Environmental Monitor
January 26, 2022

The Environmental Monitor provides information on projects under review by the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) office, recent MEPA decisions of the Secretary of Energy & Environmental Affairs, and public notices from environmental agencies.
 
Berkshire Index:
Lenox – Lenox Valley Waste Transfer Facility – ENF – comments due 1/11/22

Pioneer Valley Index:
Southampton – Notice of Intent to Initiate an Ecological Restoration Project – (click on link, then click on attachments) – submitted 1/26/22
Southampton – Notice of Application and Issuance of a Draft Groundwater Discharge Permit – (click on link, then click on attachments) – submitted 1/7/22
Agawam – Agawam Distribution Facility – ENF – issued 1/7/22
Whately – Hannum Family Property – ENF – issued 1/7/22
Westfield – Westfield Target Supply Chain Facility – ENF – comments due 1/11/22
 
Statewide Index:
Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources SMART Solar Program  (click on link, then attachments tab) – Advisory Opinion – issued 1/8/22
Public Notices
Public Notices listed here are from a variety of sources, from town conservation commissions and select boards to state and federal agencies. These listings are for Berkshire, Hampshire, Hampden, and Franklin counties. Listings are only posted if they are environmental in nature. You can find all public notices for Massachusetts here
Berkshire Environmental Action Team
20 Chapel St., Pittsfield, MA 01201
(413) 464-9402
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