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Party for Live Earth

Berkshires for the Earth is hosting a Party for Live Earth on Saturday evening, July 7. from 7-11pm in the “farmers’
market” at the Aspinwell Shops in Lenox.

Likely, you know that July 7 (7/7/07) will mark a day when 2 billion people around the planet are going to tune
into global warming. As a follow up to An Inconvenient Truth, Al Gore‘s organization has lined up hundreds of
musicians to participate in Live Earth, 10 concerts on 7 continents – 24 hours of entertainment and learning – all
to bring attention to the challenge we face collectively. The events will be shown on NBC stations on television as
well as streamed on the Internet.

To bring this massive effort to our County, the Lenox Environmental Committee has created “Berkshires for the
Earth” on July 7, with a focus of showing our residents and visitors what we are doing here and urging them to l
earn more and take actions that will make a difference.  There will be music, dancing, food, and all sorts of
educational information available. We will be screening some of the highlights of concerts from Sydney to Rio to
London
and more!

Most importantly, come party with us! What a radical thing, to be together around this rather intense topic, and
celebrate together. Celebrate because we will find a way if we all work together.

Warmly,
Susan Olshuff
Berkshires for the Earth
413-637-2643
berkshiresfortheearth@hotmail.com

 

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MassPIRG looking for Campus Organizers

MassPIRG is looking to hire a few more campus organizers right now. Here’s what Sasha, a current campus organizer and 2005 graduate from Northwestern University, says about her job:

“In my 2nd year out of college, I found myself working on some of the most critical issues in Massachusetts. I’ve been able to get real results on issues like higher education while training students to be leaders for social change.”

I hope that you know people like Sasha who might be interested in a MASSPIRG career. Please, l et your friends and family know about this great opportunity. We really need a good organizer or two in the western end of the state.

Background

To give you a taste of a campus organizer’s work, I’ll once again feature Sasha Rosen.

Sasha was our a campus organizer at Salem State College on the north shore. In that role, she worked with students and helped them develop the skills and gain the experience to become engaged in public interest issues.

Sasha found that many students were interested in working on U.S.PIRG’s higher education campaign. The students recognized the importance of higher education and the growing burden of student debt on recent graduates.

This past fall, Sasha worked with U.S.PIRG advocate Luke Swarthout to determine how the students could best address the growing burden of student debt. They worked to influence Congress to increase grant aide and strengthen student loan programs. Sasha worked with the students at Salem State to gather petitions to their Congressman John Tierney and get coverage in the local media. A number of students traveled to Washington, D.C. to testify before the Board of Education on the importance of student loan program.

Sasha and the students were not only able to gain Congressman Tierney’s support on the issue. They were ecstatic to hear that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi made it one of her top priorities in the first 100 hours!

Our work with college students develops leaders, and it also helps us win the specific reforms on which we work. It’s a critical piece of how we approach social change. We have researchers and advocates who work on these issues in Boston and Washington, D.C. We have members who contribute to our efforts through their actions as well as their financial support. And we have organizers who work with citizens, including many who work with college students, to engage them in important issues of the day.

Please, let your friends and family know about this great opportunity.

 

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BEAT strongly supports Mass Audubon’s Environmental Bond priorities which include:

 

  • Enacting a separate Environmental Bond in 2007.  An omnibus bond merging transportation, housing, and
    environment runs the risk of overshadowing environment capital needs.
  • Developing a meaningful capital-spending plan, which includes continued and increased funding for existing
    programs, as well as new programs.

    • Existing programs include Self-Help and Urban Self-Help Grants, Agricultural Preservation Restrictions
      (APR), Department of Fish and Game land protection, Department of Conservation and Recreation land
      protection, Conservation Partnership Grants, and others.  The bond also funds aquatic restoration
      projects, including river restoration through dam removal and Riverways Small Grants program, salt
      marsh restoration, terrestrial ecological restoration, water quality monitoring, technical assistance for
      the Wetlands Protection Act, and planning tools including those produced by MassGIS.
    • Mass Audubon suggest that new programs include:
        1. The revision and implementation of the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs
          Statewide Conservation Plan as a smart first step in guiding the use of bond funds for habitat
          protection and restoration.
        2. Planning for the ecological impacts of climate change on aquatic and terrestrial plants and
          animals and their habitats.  This includes impacts on shoreline species that may be affected
          by sea level rise, including shorebirds and the myriad of aquatic life found in estuaries and
          salt marshes, cold water fisheries, anadromous fish those that mature in the ocean and return
          to rivers to spawn, and addressing invasive species management.
        3. Funds specifically targeted for rare and endangered species protection and recovery.
  • Addressing the need for a $100 million annual capital authorization for land protection.  Bond spending for
    land
    protection peaked in 2002 at $73 million, and then plummeted in subsequent years. To read the recent
    Boston
    Globe editorial on the need for environmental bond funds for land protection, click here.
  • Increasing spending cap in annual capital budget for land conservation and aquatic and terrestrial habitat
    restoration:

    • Increasing bond cap, or amount of bond funds available, would increase funding for protection of
      important natural areas identified in the Division of Fisheries & Wildlife Natural Heritage & Endangered
      Species Program’s “BioMap” and “Living Waters” as critical to the preservation of the Commonwealth’s
      biological diversity, as well many other state funded conservation programs.  Increasing bond cap also
      boosts funds available for aquatic and terrestrial habitat restoration.

Mass Audubon has released these general priorities to the Administration and Legislature and is working on more
detailed priorities as we move quickly into the drafting and release of the bond, which is slated for early July.

 

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SELF-HELP, URBAN S-H AND LWCF GRANTS

From Ian A. Bowles, Secretary, Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs:
“I am pleased to announce that my office, through the Division of Conservation Services (DCS), in anticipation of, and contingent upon, the availability of funds, will conduct the annual Fiscal Year 2008 grant round for the state Self-Help and Urban Self-Help Programs and for the federal Land and Water Conservation Fund Program. The filing deadline for each program is 3 p.m. on Tuesday, July 31, 2007.

Download the application package at:
http://www.mass.gov/envir/dcs/default.htm
Each application package contains both of those files, plus all application materials necessary for conservation
and recreation proposals.

Self-Help Program (Conservation Projects)
The Self-Help Program provides funds to municipal conservation commissions for the purchase of conservation land.  The priority for this year’s Self-Help grant round will be for the protection of coastal and estuarine property; sensitive stream, river, lake and pond watersheds; and biological conservation (especially rare species habitats). Projects which fall under lands mapped in the Statewide Land Conservation Plan, and those that augment or connect to existing conservation lands, and thereby help to preserve the integrity and health of the local or regional ecosystems, will receive greater consideration for funding.

Urban Self-Help Program (Park Projects)
This year there is a particular focus on getting new parks built in underserved city neighborhoods. Small towns may qualify for these grants where projects are designed to provide statewide or regional recreational facilities or up to a maximum grant of $50,000 for smaller recreational projects.
Questions to Melissa Cryan, Urban Self-Help Coordinator
(617) 626-1171 or melissa.cryan@state.ma.us

Land and Water Conservation Fund Program (LWCF) (Conservation or Park Projects)
This federal grant program funds conservation or park projects submitted from both municipal and state agency project sponsors.  The federal program is being announced in anticipation of a congressional appropriation.  The federal program is open to the Mass. Dept. of Conservation and Recreation and the Mass. Dept. of Fish and Game.  Municipal projects may be considered for funding under both the federal LWCF program and the appropriate DCS program – but can only be approved for funding through one of the programs.  Municipalities must indicate on their application that they wish to be eligible for either program.
NPS RIVERS, TRAILS & CONSERVATION ASSISTANCE GRANTS

National Park Service Rivers, Trails & Conservation Assistance Program
Deadline: August 1

If you’re working on restoring a river, building a trail, or making an urban park flourish, they would love to talk with you
about ways you might be able to work together.  Could your project benefit from 1-2 years’ staff time and technical
assistance from a National Park Service specialist? They want to help you succeed.

DRINKING WATER SUPPLY PROTECTION GRANTS

FY08 Drinking Water Supply Protection Grant Program
Application Deadline: 3 p.m. Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, in coordination with the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, is pleased to issue the FY08 Request for Responses for the 2008 Drinking Water Supply Protection Grant Program.

This grant program provides funding to public water systems and municipalities for land acquisitions that protect public drinking water supplies and drinking water quality. The direct recipient of a grant must be a municipality or public water system authorized by the Commonwealth to provide water to the public.  Eligible land acquisitions include land located in existing drinking water supply areas.  Land may be acquired through purchase of fee simple title, purchase of a conservation restriction, or purchase of a combination of fee simple title and conservation restriction(s).

The maximum grant award for a single project is $500,000.  The maximum reimbursement amount available is 50% of the total project cost. This Request for Responses is being issued in anticipation of the availability of funding. Final grant awards are continent upon funding. There is no guarantee that monies will be awarded. Multiple contracts may be awarded by MassDEP.

Qualified applications will be selected on a competitive basis.  We look forward to receiving your applications. Applications must be submitted no later than Wednesday, September 5, 2007 at 3:00 p.m.

The complete Drinking Water Supply Protection Request for Responses (RFR) is now available on the Comm-PASS website: https://www.comm-pass.com/ Directions for negotiating the site are included below.
Questions? Contact Christy Edwards (EOEEA) via email at Christy.edwards@state.ma.us

FY08 Drinking Water Supply Protection Grant Comm-PASS Instructions:
1.) On the Comm-PASS home page (http://www.comm-pass.com/) select the “Solicitations” tab at the top-left of the page.
2.) Select “Search for a Solicitation”.
3.) In the “Search by Specific Criteria” section enter “BRP 2007-03” in the Document Number field.
4.) This search will yield one result. Click on the sentence on the top of the page that says: “There are 1 Solicitation(s) found that match your search criteria”.
5.) Select the spectacle icon on the far right-hand column to view all information available for this grant program.
6.) Click on the tab that says “Specifications” to view the grant Request for Response. Answers to questions and amendments to the original RFR (if necessary) will also be posted here. Click on the spectacle icon to view and print any document posted in this section.

 

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Joint Committee on the Environment, Natural Resources, and Agriculture 2007-2008 Hearing Schedule. This schedule is subject to change.  For questions please contact the Committee at (617) 722-2210

All hearings in State House Hearing Room A-1 unless otherwise noted

Agriculture and Milk – July 9, 2007 – 1:00 PM – Location TBA
Oceans – July 16, 2007 – 1:00 PM – Location  TBA
Oceans and Waterways – July 23, 2007 – 1:00 PM – Location New Bedford
LAND CONSERVATION – July 30, 2007 – 1:00 PM – Location TBA
Pesticides & Hazardous Waste – September 10, 2007 – 1:00 PM
Fish and Game – September 17, 2007 – 1:00 PM
Policies – September 24, 2007 – 1:00 PM
Dept. of Conservation & Recreation (DCR) – October 1, 2007 – 1:00 PM
Sewers, Title V, Wetlands – October 15, 2007 – 1:00 PM
Miscellaneous – October 22, 2007 – 1:00 PM

 

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