August 3, 2022


Hi Team,


It’s been a battle royale over the new Massachusetts climate bill. After much deliberating by the legislature to mesh together the very different — but both good — House and Senate bills, they passed it to Governor Baker for signing. On Friday afternoon, he handed it back with 22 pages of amendments. 


With a wave of pressure from the grassroots, and some epic hours put in over the weekend, the legislature managed to reject the bad proposals, embrace the good and hold the rest of the bill together and hand it back to Governor Baker. Now it rests in his hands to sign the bill!


Please contact Governor Baker today! Call his office at 617-725-4005 to urge that he sign the Act Driving Clean Energy and Offshore Wind, and makes sure that Massachusetts stays a leader on climate! You can learn more about An Act Driving Clean Energy and Offshore Wind here.


Thanks for all you do to protect the environment!


Jane, Rose, Jake, Noah, and Chelsey

Upcoming BEAT Events


Tree ID Walk at Bowker's Woods, Stockbridge

Saturday, August 13 | 9:30 AM – 11:00 AM


Pittsfield Green Drinks — "Cliff Swallows in Northeastern North America: A Conservation Adventure" with Linda Merry and Mara Silvers 

Tuesday, August 16 | 5:15 PM – 7:00 PM at Thistle & Mirth in Pittsfield

Presentation begins at 6:00 PM


Programs in West Side Parks: Connecting Kids with Nature

Thursday, August 18 | 4:00 PM – 5:00 PM


Beginner Naturalist Walk at Burbank Park, Pittsfield 

Saturday, August 27 | 10:00 AM – 11:30 AM

IN THE NEWS

Resources help restaurants reduce plastic and make impactful changes


Berkshire Environmental Action Team

"Beyond Plastics, a nationwide project based at Bennington College with a mission to end plastic pollution, has just created a guide for restaurants to reduce their plastic use. The guide has a ton of useful information about reducing your plastic waste as a business owner, employee, or consumer. [...] Within the guide, you'll find the recommendation of PlasticScore: a free app that allows you to fight plastic pollution every time you dine in or get take-out by reviewing restaurants and coffee shops based on their usage of single-use plastics. [...] If you've wanted your restaurant or school to stop using single-use plastics and transition to reusable replacements, PlasticFreeRestaurants can help. It's a nonprofit organization that pays the difference in costs for restaurants and schools to buy reusables instead of disposables. They've also been compiling a list of plastic-free restaurants across the country.Read More

Housatonic Valley Association Receives National and Regional Honors


Housatonic Valley Assocation (HVA)

"The Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) received National Garden Clubs, Inc. (NGC) Award of Excellence in May and Aquarion Water Company’s Environmental Champion Award in June. HVA was recognized for its track record of conservation accomplishments and goal of achieving climate-ready environmental conditions across the region over the next two decades. To help establish watershed conditions that are healthy enough to withstand the effects of climate change, HVA launched three key initiatives: Clean, Cool and Connected, aimed at restoring and protecting rivers, streams, and groundwater; Follow the Forest, aimed at helping partners conserve a connected woodland corridor and wildlife habitat linkages from the Hudson Valley to Canada; and engaging and involving more people and local communities to be a part of the solution. HVA has saved or helped save more than 20,000 acres of land, with another 50,000 acres needed, and restored several hundred miles of local waterways and wetlands with another 500 miles needed, all leveraged by their 200+ partners. This includes municipalities, land trusts, nonprofits, businesses, and community groups, as well as the thousands of volunteers engaged in river clean ups, plantings, paddle trips, and more." Read More

Wilderness Programs for People of Color

Reconnecting Black, Indigenous, and People of Color to nature through mindful wilderness trips and ancestral workshops


The Rusty Anvil

"Peterburg, NY. August 13–14 & September 3–4, 2022. The BIPOC friction fire workshop is an overnight experience to learn and practice the art of fire birthing. The group will participate in a land walk to identify trees and other materials to make a bow drill kit. Participants will learn carving techniques and knife safety and begin carving their own bow drill kit. We will spend our second day together fine tuning our kits, learning about tinder and fire lays, and working on getting a coal. We will talk about fire both as a tool for survival and a bridge to the ancestral realm and ponder ways friction fires can become a part of your daily, weekly, or monthly spiritual practice. These programs run on a sliding scale. Registrations can be made here:

https://www.the-rusty-anvil.land/trips-and-workshops" Learn more about upcoming trips/workshops

New Pollinator Resolution signed between Rotary District 7890 and the Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area


Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area 

"Rotary District 7890 and the Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area have signed a Pollinator Resolution in joint support of helping to reduce pollinator loss. A signing ceremony took place on July 15 at the French Park Pollinator Pathway in Egremont, MA. The National Park Service has joined this effort by helping to build collaborative partnerships between Rotarians and National Heritage Area leaders across our nation. Rotary International and the National Park Service / National Heritage Area Program have identified pollinator protection as a program priority, and have begun working collaboratively to raise public awareness of the problem and to support local actions that mitigate the hazards to pollinators. Throughout Southern New England, Rotary and National Heritage Areas have signed joint pollinator resolutions, pledging action in support of pollinators." Learn More

A woodpecker's brain takes a big hit with every peck: study


Jon Hamilton | NPR

"The brain of a woodpecker experiences a seemingly catastrophic impact every time beak meets wood. 'When you see these birds in action, hitting their head against a tree quite violently, then as humans we start wondering how does this bird avoid getting headaches or brain damage,' says Sam Van Wassenbergh, a researcher at the University of Antwerp in Belgium. In the past, scientists have suggested the bird's brain is protected from the impacts, perhaps by a skull that acts as a cushion, or a beak that absorbs some of the force, or a tongue that wraps around the brain. But Van Wassenberg wasn't convinced. [...] So Van Wassenbergh led a team that set out to settle the issue using high-speed video of woodpeckers in action. 'We went to four different zoos in Europe where they had woodpeckers and we recorded them at very high frame rates, while they were pecking,' he says. The videos, part of a study published in the journal Current Biology, revealed some remarkable details. [...] 'The way we see the head behaving is very rigid, like you would use a hammer hitting wood,' Van Wassenbergh says. That means the organ repeatedly experiences deceleration that would cause a concussion in a human brain. Yet the woodpecker brain emerges unscathed, even after thousands of impacts in a single day. That is possible because a woodpecker's brain is protected — not by cushioning, but by its tiny size and weight, Van Wassenbergh says." Read More

Springfield City Council urges rejection of Eversource pipeline project


Paul Tuthill | WAMC Northeast Public Radio

"The Springfield City Council has recorded an official protest to a controversial natural gas pipeline project in western Massachusetts. Citing the need to rapidly transition from fossil fuels, the danger of explosion and fire, and the cost to ratepayers, the City Council passed a resolution stating its opposition to a plan by Eversource to build a high-pressure natural gas pipeline from Longmeadow to Springfield. All nine Councilors present remotely when the vote was recorded Monday night supported the resolution. It was authored by City Council President Jesse Lederman and had 9 co-sponsors. Councilor Zaida Govan said Springfield, and the state, need to stay on a course to greatly decrease dependency on fossil fuels. [...] Eversource has said the new pipeline is needed as a backup for infrastructure that is 70-years-old. If the existing pipeline is damaged, or needs to be shutoff for maintenance, 58,000 Springfield customers could be without natural gas service potentially for months, the utility has stated. The cost for the project is currently put at $65 million. With the passage of the resolution, the Council joins a growing list of opponents to the pipeline project including the Longmeadow Selectboard and half-dozen members of the local state legislative delegation who recently sent a letter of opposition to state utility regulators. [...] An Eversource spokesperson, in a written statement, said the company is 'disappointed in the outcome' of the Springfield City Council’s vote. Eversource will continue the years-long effort to make its case for the project with state regulators, the spokesperson said. Energy companies, including National Grid, which along with Eversource are the two largest gas utilities in Massachusetts, have recently promoted plans to use their existing pipeline infrastructure to deliver hydrogen and 'renewable' natural gas that is sourced from landfills and animal waste." Read More

manchin_anna-moneymaker-getty-1536x1024 image

Senate Democrats Produce a Far-Reaching Climate Bill, But the Price of Compromise with Joe Manchin is Years More Drilling for Oil and Gas


Marianne Lavelle and Nicholas Kunetz | Inside Climate News

"To seal their surprise climate deal with Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, Senate Democrats conceded that their only hope for advancing a plan for a clean energy future in Congress was to bind it up in a lifeline for fossil fuels. The legislation they propose to bring to the Senate next week still contains the heart of President Joe Biden’s climate plan—an historic $370 billion investment in transforming the U.S. power and transportation sectors and more than $60 billion in grants to help pollution-burdened disadvantaged communities achieve environmental justice. But the package—now called the 'Inflation Reduction Act of 2022'—also would invest in ensuring a future for U.S. fossil energy in a carbon-constrained world. The legislation hikes tax incentives for expensive carbon capture technology 70 percent. It also requires that, for the next decade, the federal government offer tens of millions of acres offshore for oil and gas drilling as a prerequisite to the expansion of offshore wind energy development. And Manchin said that he has obtained a commitment from Biden, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi that they will advance separate legislation this fall that streamlines the permitting process for energy infrastructure, including pipelines and export facilities. [...] The legislation includes $369.75 billion in tax incentives and other support for clean energy—by far, the biggest federal investment ever in addressing climate change. It marks a decisive turning away from market-based schemes like cap-and-trade that Congress considered its best chance of gaining support for climate action a decade ago. Instead, Democrats will provide federal support directly, which, among other things, allows them to include the climate program in a budget bill, meaning they can pass it with just the 50 Democrats and Vice President Kamala Harris’ vote under Senate rules. [...] Tax credits for renewable energy for the first time would be extended for 10 years, a major boost for the wind and solar industries, which have not had sufficient time to plan and develop large-scale projects when tax credits were only available for one- and two-year intervals. The legislation also gives clean energy developers new flexibility to choose the type of tax credit that works best for their project—one based on the cost of their investment or one based on the project’s production. [...] The legislation also includes tax credits for an array of technologies that do not currently get any support, such as large, grid-scale power storage, as well as incentives for the manufacturing of solar panels, electric vehicles and other hardware domestically. The bill includes $9 billion in consumer home energy rebate programs, mostly focused on low-income consumers, to electrify home appliances and for energy efficient retrofits. [...] Perhaps the most controversial provisions of the bill are those that would require continued development of oil and gas on federal lands and waters for a decade. The deal would prohibit the Interior Department from approving renewable energy development over that period unless it also opened lands to oil and gas development. Onshore, the department would have to lease at least 2 million acres each year or half of what was requested by oil companies, whichever figure is smaller, in order to issue rights-of-way for wind or solar development. Offshore, it would need to lease at least 60 million acres for oil and gas development each year in order to open leasing for offshore wind development. [...] The bill includes a new tax credit for 'clean hydrogen' production, with levels of the credit varying depending on the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions associated with manufacturing the fuel. Together with more than $12 billion allocated for carbon capture and removal in last year’s infrastructure bill, 'this package would provide the most transformative and far-reaching policy support in the world for the economy-wide deployment of carbon management technologies,' said Madelyn Morrison, external affairs manager of the Carbon Capture Coalition... While a few advocacy groups support this carbon capture tax credit, many environmental activists have come out strongly against it, arguing that it would effectively subsidize fossil fuel operations like power plants and even refineries. A coal-fired power plant, for example, could stand to reap hundreds of millions of dollars in federal tax benefits if it captures CO2 emissions, even as it continues to produce toxic coal ash waste." Read More

COMMUNITY CALENDAR 

We list events from a variety of local and regional organizations and individuals. 

 



Events with BEAT:


FRIDAY, AUGUST 5

Volunteer w/ BEAT: Cut & Pull Invasive Hardy Kiwi


Community Calendar: 


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3

Our Warming Planet – Climate Change Impacts & Adaptation (Webinar Series) — Online

Learn about pollinators and pollinator gardening with Bee Friendly Williamstown (weekly)

New England Public Media Listening Tour

Nice & Easy Trail Hike


THURSDAY, AUGUST 4

Junior Ranger Program 

Learn-To-Fish — MassWildlife


FRIDAY, AUGUST 5

Volunteer w/ BEAT: Cut & Pull Invasive Hardy Kiwi

Discover Greylock Hikes


SATURDAY, AUGUST 6

The Easy Naturalist: Signs of Summer (self-guided hike)

Learn-To-Fish — MassWildlife

Pocumutuck Homelands Festival

Scenic Summer Tours


SUNDAY, AUGUST 7

Self-Guided Nature Scavenger Hunt

Scenic Summer Tours

The Building of Bascom Lodge


MONDAY, AUGUST 8

Photography Workshop Series

Trails and Tale Hike


TUESDAY, AUGUST 9

Tuesday Treks


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10

Back to Roots – Fungi and Forest Restoration — Online 

Family Summer Discovery Hike at Wild Acres, Pittsfield 

Massachusetts Climate & Transportation Bill — Online

Learn about pollinators and pollinator gardening with Bee Friendly Williamstown (weekly)



See Calendar for More

JOBS

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

 


Berkshire County Postings

Farm Manager | Cricket Creek Farm | Williamstown

Energy and Environmental Planner | Berkshire Regional Planning Commission (BRPC) | Pittsfield

Western District Wildlife Technician | MA Department of. Fish & Game | Dalton

Pittsfield Energy Advocate (part-time) | Ener-G-Save | Pittsfield 

Head Gardener CSA Manager, Assistant to the Director and Development Office, Membership and Sponsorship Manager, Events Assistant, Farm and Garden Staff, Visitors Services | Hancock Shaker Village | Pittsfield


Postings w/ Deadline

Steward | The Trustees | Boston | deadline 8/15/22

Grants Specialist | MA Division of Ecological Restoration | Boston | deadline 8/18

Fiscal Coordinator | MA Division of Ecological Restoration | Boston | deadline 8/18

Operations Specialist | MA Division of Ecological Restoration | Boston | deadline 8/18

Environmental Analyst III | Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection | Boston | deadline 8/26

Land Stewardship Position | Kestrel Land Trust | Amherst | deadline 9/10


Recent Postings

Teacher Naturalist | Mass Audubon South East | Marshfield, Plymouth, Westport, Attleboro

Apprentice Farm Conservation Planner | American Farmland Trust | Remote, CT

Apprentice Farm Conservation Planner | American Farmland Trust | Remote, MA

Regional Education Manager | Mass Audubon Southeast | Southeastern

Watershed Resilience Planner | Neponset River Watershed Association | Canton

TerraCorps Community Engagement Coordinator | Merrimack River Watershed Council | Lawrence

Chapter Coordinator | Sierra Club – MA Chapter | Boston

Campaign Representative – Building Electrification | Sierra Club | Remote, MA or CT

Development & Operations Coordinator | Massachusetts Land Trust Coalition | Sudbury

Executive Director | Nashua River Watershed Association | Groton

Program Associate, Conservation | Fidelity foundations | Boston

TerraCorps/AmeriCorps Service Member | TerraCorps | Lowell

Crew Member | Massachusetts Conservation Corps | Rowe

Environmental Educator | “e” Inc. The Planet Science Learning and Action Center | Boston

Undergraduate Research Assistant Opportunities for Fall 2022-Spring 2023 | Columbia Climate School



Click Here for More Jobs

Environmental Monitor

JULY 22, 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:

• Hancock, Lanesborough, Hinsdale, Cheshire, Dalton  Eversource – WT-02 Transmission Right-of-Way Reliability Project – EENF Certificate – Requires an Environmental Impact Report – issue 7/15/22


CT River Valley Index:

• Westfield – Westfield-Barnes Regional Airport – ENF – requesting a Single EIR – comments due 8/8/22

• Erving, Montague, Wendell, Pelham, Shutesbury, Granby, Leverett, Northfield, Ludlow, Belchertown, Amherst – Eversource WT-11 Transmission Right-of-Way Reliability Project – ENF - requesting a Single EIR – comments now due 8/22/22

• Springfield – Western Massachusetts Gas Reliability Project – ENF – comments NOW due 7/28/22 — BEAT is watching this one closely!


Statewide Index:

• MassDEP – Notice of Grant Opportunity: 2023-2024 Technical Assistance Grant Program – applications due 10/18/22

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

BEAT Public Notices PAGE
Berkshire Environmental Action Team
20 Chapel St., Pittsfield, MA 01201
(413) 464-9402
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