WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — Environmental Defense Fund President Fred Krupp will be the principal speaker at Williams College's 234th commencement exercise on Sunday, June 4.
The day before, U.S. Holocaust Museum Director Sara Bloomfield will deliver the college's baccalaureate lecture. Krupp and Bloomfield will both receive honorary doctor of laws (LLD) degrees during the commencement ceremony.
Fred Krupp is the president of the Environmental Defense Fund, a global nonprofit environmental advocacy group based in New York City. In this role for more than three decades, Krupp is a leading voice on climate change, energy, and sustainability. Under his leadership, EDF has become one of the world's most influential environmental organizations with staff in more than two dozen countries.
He successfully advocated for dramatic reductions in the pollution that causes acid rain, focused international attention on the problem of methane emissions from the oil-and-gas industry, elevated the challenges of hydrogen fuel and led EDF's corporate partnerships with FedEx, KKR, McDonald's, Walmart and others.
Krupp was named one of America's Best Leaders by U.S. News and World Report and is a recipient of the 2015 William K. Reilly Environmental Leadership Award, among others. He is co-author with Miriam Horn of the New York Times best-seller "Earth: The Sequel — The Race to Reinvent Energy and Stop Global Warming." A graduate of Yale University and the University of Michigan Law School, Krupp has taught environmental law at both schools, and received an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from Haverford College. He is currently a trustee at Yale. He has served on boards for numerous environmental organizations and on councils advising Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama. He is also an avid rower and won a gold medal in the 2006 World Rowing Masters Regatta.
Sara J. Bloomfield has led the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum for 24 years, working to build a global institution that raises Holocaust awareness, deepens understanding of the lessons of the Holocaust, confronts denial, and advances genocide prevention.
She serves on the International Auschwitz Council and is a recipient of the Officer's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland and five honorary doctorates. She joined the planning staff of the museum in 1986 when it was still a project in development and served in a variety of roles before becoming director in 1999.
Originally from Cleveland, Bloomfield holds a bachelor of arts degree in English literature from Northwestern University, a master's degree in education from John Carroll University, and has studied business administration at the graduate level. Ms. Bloomfield is the 2021 recipient of the Roger E. Joseph Prize, awarded annually for exceptional work in the field of human rights and Jewish survival.
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PFAS Issue Splits Williamstown Select Board on Sewer Rate
By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — About 20 residents and the majority of the Select Board on Monday sent a message to the Hoosac Water Quality District: importing sludge and converting it to compost is a bad deal and unethical.
In a rare break from past practice, a divided Select Board voted against recommending that town meeting OK the HWQD's proposed fiscal year 2026 sewer rate.
The district's plan to accept sludge from other communities and sell off the resulting compost through waste hauler Casella became an issue this winter when the HWQD presented its proposed FY26 sewer rate to the town's Finance Committee.
The district, a joint venture of Williamstown, North Adams and Clarksburg (not a voting member on the district board) has been talking for a couple of years about what will happen if and when the commonwealth bans the production of compost due to the presence of the so-called "forever chemicals," PFAS, which the International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified as a human carcinogen.
Despite that classification, not all states have banned the use of fertilizer derived from human biosolids, which are known to contain PFAS. And it is still legal in Massachusetts for wastewater treatment plants, like the HWQD plant in Williamstown, to operate composters and dispense compost containing PFAS within specified ranges.
District officials have warned the town for some time that once composting no longer is allowed, the cost to dispose biosolids — either through incineration or encapsulation in landfills — will skyrocket.
The HWQD's composting facility is one of the few in the region with excess capacity, and Casella has offered the district a deal under which the hauler will bring sludge (a semisolid byproduct of purifying water) to the Williamstown plant for composting and take resulting compost off-site for sale to users.
About 20 residents and the majority of the Select Board on Monday sent a message to the Hoosac Water Quality District: importing sludge and converting it to compost is a bad deal and unethical.
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