City Signs Agreement To Strengthen Care For Downtown Parks

Jayda Leder-Luis | Patch | January 13, 2020 https://patch.com/massachusetts/boston/city-signs-agreement-strengthen-care-downtown-parks On January 10, 2020, Martin J. Walsh today announced the City of Boston Parks and Recreation Department and the Friends of the Public Garden have signed a formal cooperation agreement to enhance the care of Boston Common, the Public Garden, and the Commonwealth Avenue Mall. The Memorandum of Agreement (MOA), signed today (1/10/2020), strengthens the 50-year partnership between the Parks Department and the Friends at the strategic and operational level, committing to a shared objective of preserving, restoring, and caring for these historic parks in the heart of downtown. "Our parks and gardens are so important to our community: they hold our history, they bring people together, and they bring the beauty of nature into our City," said Mayor Walsh. "The Friends of the Public Garden put their heart and soul into these community spaces, and has been a partner to the City for a long time. I want to congratulate them on their 50 year anniversary, and...
Read More

Ex-parks chief: NPS filled with ‘anti-public land sycophants’

Rob Hotakainen | E&E News | January 10, 2020 https://www.eenews.net/stories/1062045073 Jonathan Jarvis, who headed the National Park Service for eight years under President Obama, said the agency now is loaded with "unconfirmed anti-public land sycophants" who want to dismantle the national parks. In an op-ed published in The Guardian today, Jarvis assailed the Trump administration for its management of the park system, saying "nothing is sacred as we watch the nation's crown jewels being recut for the rings of robber barons." Jarvis cited a long list of complaints, accusing the Trump administration of trying to double entrance fees, rescinding climate policies and moving veteran park superintendents to force their retirements. He also criticized the administration for leaving parks open during last year's partial government shutdown, misusing entry fees, opening park trails to e-bikes and considering a plan to privatize campgrounds, among other things. "These are not random actions," Jarvis said. "This is a systematic dismantling of a beloved institution, like pulling blocks from a Jenga tower, until it collapses." Jarvis is...
Read More

Woerd Ave Dump Closer To Becoming ‘World Class’ Park

Jenna Fisher | Patch | January 3, 2020 https://patch.com/massachusetts/waltham/woerd-ave-dump-closer-becoming-world-class-park For decades, almost 9 acres of land have sat largely overgrown and underutilized. But the old Woerd Avenue landfill, once used as a dumping ground for ashes leftover from heating furnaces, is a step closer to being turned into a public park. In the 1930s, the city set up a town dump next to Cram's Cove called the Woerd Avenue landfill. In 1971 with an estimated 35,000 tons of ashes dumped there annually, the city closed the landfill. You can see the former dump behind Koutoujian Playground, along Woerd Avenue and Cove Street near one of the city's most dense areas and in one of the lowest income neighborhoods. For years, residents and officials have eyed the land on the Southside as other old landfills around the country were transformed into parks. About three years ago, the city, led by Housing Division Programs Robert Waters, applied for a loan to transform the property. But as the city looked...
Read More

Central Mass. hikers, bikers, skaters swing into 2020

George Barnes | Worcester Telegram & Gazette | January 2, 2020 https://www.telegram.com/news/20200102/central-mass-hikers-bikers-skaters-swing-into-2020 With the sun breaking through Wednesday morning, people found opportunities to get off their couches and head outside to celebrate New Year’s Day with first day hikes, skating, and even bicycling. At the Wachusett Reservoir, more than 100 people joined reservoir rangers Andy Leahy and Sean Flood in a hike from Gate 22 near the West Boylston-Boylston town line. The large group enjoyed a two-mile round-trip hike to the South Bay area of the reservoir, which looks across to Dover Point. It was one of 10 hikes held by the state Department of Conservation and Recreation’s First Day Hikes Initiative. The national effort to get people to enjoy state parks got its start in Massachusetts in 1992. Another Central Massachusetts hike was held at the Blackstone River and Canal Heritage State Park at River Bend Farm in Uxbridge. A smaller group took to bicycles for the 2nd Annual Worcester County Women’s Cycling Ride....
Read More

Editorial: Placing value on our natural landscape by protecting it

Editorial Board | Greenfield Recorder | December 5, 2019 https://www.recorder.com/Kestrel-Land-Trust-120319-30968163 From atop Mount Sugarloaf, farmland stretches as far as the eye can see — to the distant Seven Sisters range in Hadley and beyond. It’s a beautiful landscape that’s for the most part untouched by large swaths of commercial development. Wooded areas and open spaces afford opportunities for recreation and provide a buffer for busier economic hubs to the south. This isn’t a coincidence. The Pioneer Valley’s residents have historically valued its natural landscape and, as such, have taken steps to protect it. Through concerted conservation efforts over decades by a host of local agencies, including the Amherst-based Kestrel Land Trust, thousands of untouched acres throughout Western Massachusetts provide refuge for native wildlife. The work continues today. Soon, there will be an additional 120 conserved acres in Whately. The land, known as the Whately Center Woods Project, encompasses Westbrook, Chestnut Plain and Haydenville roads. According to the Kestrel Land Trust, the agency working on the project,...
Read More

December Blog, Looking Ahead to 2020

Chuck Anastas, Chair, Board of Directors | December 18, 2019 Thank you for your financial contributions, advice, and encouragement in 2019. With your help, our mission to support the state's parks, forests, reservations, and open spaces took us to communities and involved us in issues across the Commonwealth. We successfully worked to increase the Department of Conservation and Recreation's (DCR) operations budget, particularly the office of engineering, by $7 million. Additionally, MCV supported efforts to protect lands in Boston, Leominster, Upton, and Newton. We also testified in favor of the Public Lands Preservation Act (PLPA), which will further protect property owned by the citizens of Massachusetts. The PLPA (S.459) has received a favorable recommendation from the Joint Committee on Environment, Natural Resources, and Agriculture, and is currently sitting in Senate Ways and Means.  Finally, MCV continued to advocate for the importance of appointing members to the vacant seats on the DCR Stewardship Council, which, despite our effort, still lacks any representation from anyone who lives...
Read More

Editorial: Placing value on our natural landscape by protecting it

Greenfield Recorder From atop Mount Sugarloaf, farmland stretches as far as the eye can see — to the distant Seven Sisters range in Hadley and beyond. It’s a beautiful landscape that’s for the most part untouched by large swaths of commercial development. Wooded areas and open spaces afford opportunities for recreation and provide a buffer for busier economic hubs to the south. This isn’t a coincidence. The Pioneer Valley’s residents have historically valued its natural landscape and, as such, have taken steps to protect it. Through concerted conservation efforts over decades by a host of local agencies, including the Amherst-based Kestrel Land Trust, thousands of untouched acres throughout Western Massachusetts provide refuge for native wildlife. The work continues today. Soon, there will be an additional 120 conserved acres in Whately. Part of the Dauchy property, being referred to by the Kestrel Land Trust as the Whately Center Woods Project, in Whately. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO/MARK WAMSLEY The land, known as the Whately Center Woods Project, encompasses Westbrook,...
Read More

First Day Hikes

America's State Parks | StateParks.org What better way to kick off the New Year than by getting a jump start burning off those extra holiday calories in the great outdoors? On New Year’s Day, America’s State Parks have all 50 states offering free, guided First Day Hike Programs. These hikes provide a means for individuals and families to welcome the coming year in the outdoors, exercising and connecting with nature. Last year nearly 55,000 people rang in the New Year, collectively hiking over 133,000 miles throughout the country on the guided hikes.  Numerous others hiked state park trails throughout the day. The guided First Day Hikes are led by knowledgeable state park staff and volunteers.The distance and rigor vary from park to park, but all hikes aim to create a fun experience for the whole family.People are invited to savor the beauty of the state park’s natural resources with the comfort of an experienced guide so they may be inspired to take advantage of...
Read More

Privatizing State Parks Can Save Them — or Wreck Them

Alex Brown | The Pew Charitable Trusts | December 3, 2019 When Alabama closed Roland Cooper State Park in 2015 because of budget cuts, entrepreneur Warren Meyer saw an opportunity. Meyer runs Recreation Resource Management, a concession company that maintains campgrounds, builds cabins and provides amenities at state parks and U.S. Forest Service sites around the country. The Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources awarded the company, known as RRM, a contract to run the park on the agency’s behalf. The campgrounds, cabins and bathrooms reopened in 2016 for the anglers, campers and birders who visit the 236-acre park along the Alabama River. “We were able to reopen the park within a year after it closed, and RRM has been running it ever since and doing a fantastic job,” said Rob Grant, assistant director of Alabama’s State Parks Division. “It’s a net profit for us, and we were losing money there before.” Meyer advocates for increased privatization on state and federal land. He...
Read More

The State Wants To Turn Cranberry Bogs Into Wetlands. It’s Gritty Work.

Barbara Moran | WBUR | November 26, 2019 https://www.wbur.org/earthwhile/2019/11/26/transforming-cranberry-farmers-wetlands-cape-cod Alex Hackman picks up a shovel and digs in to what used to be a cranberry bog. Down through an inch or two of tough green cranberry vines, down into the sandy soil beneath. Down, down, down. "It's tough going," says Hackman, stopping to catch his breath. "This is, you know, a century of effort by the prior farmers to have this beautiful dense layer of cranberry vines." Hackman is a restoration ecologist with the Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration. He runs a state program dedicated to turning cranberry bogs back into wetlands. The state program partners with the UDSA's Wetland Reserve Easement Program, which has been around for decades. But lately there's been an uptick of interest from local farmers, says Brian Wick, executive director of the Cape Cod Cranberry Growers Association. That's because the cranberry business has been tough in recent years, with prices driven down by competition from Canada and Wisconsin, and the trade war with...
Read More

Our National Parks Are In Trouble

Jon Waterman | Opinion - The New York Times | November 22, 2019 CARBONDALE, Colo. — Deep inside Alaska’s six-million-acre Denali National Park and Preserve, I could see miles of space beneath my feet as I stood on the summit of the tallest mountain in North America. The startling view from the 20,310-foot Denali of rugged wilderness spreading out in all directions, plus the challenge of climbing it, were just two of the many wonders and adventures that I’ve experienced in America’s national parks. I recently finished writing a book for National Geographic, “Atlas of the National Parks,” based on extensive research, a lifetime of exploring the parks and several years in the 1980s working as a ranger in two of them, Denali and Rocky Mountain in Colorado. I meant the book as a celebration of the 103-year-old national park system, and it is. But what I also discovered was an operation in deep trouble, with some parks degraded by ruinous overcrowding; invasions of nonnative plants and animals that are...
Read More

Save Webster Woods

Save Webster Woods | Chuck Anastas, Chair Webster Woods in Newton sits in the middle of the greater 114-acre Webster Conservation Area and includes the State-owned and DCR managed Hammond Pond Reservation and Hammond Pond Parkway. On an unseasonably cold and gray November Sunday afternoon, I walked the perimeter of Webster Woods. It’s rough terrain with rock outcroppings everywhere, made walking even more difficult under slippery fallen leaves. Despite the weather, I ran into a number of hikers and dogwalkers along the way. Although there were none on this particular Sunday, this area is a favorite of rock climbers. With names like Cake Rock and Gooche’s Cave marked on the map - it would have been fun to watch them on these and other challenging rock faces. Maybe another time. Mayor Ruthanne Fuller is leading the effort to preserve 17 acres of the 25 acres of Webster Woods owned by Boston College. After talks between the City and Boston College broke down, Mayor...
Read More

Rattlesnake Hill in Sharon has been spared from development!

Guest blog by NepRWA Board Member and Sharon Resident, Paul Lauenstein | Neponset River Watershed Association | November 5, 2019 https://www.neponset.org/happenings/neprwa-blog/rattlesnake-hill-in-sharon-has-been-spared-from-development/ On November 5, 2019,  Sharon Town Meeting voted to use Community Preservation Act funds and a grant from the state to purchase and preserve most of this 337-acre parcel of natural open space, which has been classified as Priority Habitat by the Massachusetts Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program (NHESP). Rattlesnake Hill’s granite dome rises to an elevation of 431 feet, affording views of Boston and Cape Cod. Parallel scrape marks in the bare granite at the summit are evidence that glaciers up to a mile thick advanced and retreated over Massachusetts during the last ice age. Rattlesnake Hill adjoins Borderland State Park. Together, they comprise an area of almost 2,200 acres of contiguous natural open space. Vernal pools at Rattlesnake hill support a diverse ecosystem including rare Blanding’s turtles that migrate seasonally from the ponds at Borderland State Park to feed on amphibian eggs...
Read More

Lemuel Shattuck Hospital: an opportunity to make things right

Clayton Harper | Arborway Matters | November 12, 2019 https://arborwaymatters.blogspot.com/2019/10/lemuel-shattuck-hospital-opportunity-to.html Lemuel Shattuck Hospital in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, which is slated for demolition soon, sits on land that was “Heathfield” - a scenic setting near the westernmost entrance to Frederick Law Olmsted’s masterpiece, Franklin Park, the crown jewel of the Emerald Necklace parks in Boston. Heathfield was once a grassy open field with full public access and walking paths surrounded by forest and rocky slopes, including “Rock Milton”, a large puddingstone cliff that rises above Scarboro Pond. Now it is covered with asphalt parking lot and sits behind a barbed-wire fence. The City of Boston agreed to convey more than 13 acres of Franklin Park to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1949 specifically for healthcare purposes, and in the seventy years since, the site has been used for the care of respiratory ailments, cancer patients, HIV care, psychiatric services, addiction treatment as well as Department of Corrections inmates with health issues....
Read More

Restoring America’s Wildlife Act to fund Massachusetts conservation

Mia Cathell | The Daily Free Press | September 10, 2019 https://dailyfreepress.com/blog/2019/09/10/restoring-americas-wildlife-act-to-fund-massachusetts-conservation/ The Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife announced its support for a bill in Congress that would provide $12 million every year to aid the state’s efforts to protect over 500 species, according to a Sept. 3 MassWildlife press release. The “Recovering America’s Wildlife Act” was first introduced to Congress in December 2017 by Rep. Jeff Fortenberry (R-NE) and Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-MI), but was reintroduced this July after it stalled last year, according to the bill’s history on Congress’s website. Beginning in fiscal year 2020, the bill would amend the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act, which diverts funds from the general excise tax for wildlife conservation, to allocate an additional $1.3 billion for the Wildlife Restoration Fund, according to the bill. The bill also says it would allow states to determine how the funds will be used to protect fish and wildlife of the “greatest conservation need,” as well as for other conservation purposes. MassWildlife’s...
Read More