BCC to Offer Water Quality Monitoring Certificate

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PITTSFIELD, Mass — Berkshire Community College (BCC) announced the creation of a Water Quality Monitoring Certificate Program, a new offering for the fall 2023 semester. 
 
The program, designed to train drinking water and wastewater professionals, requires the completion of three courses totaling 11 credits: 
 
  • ENV-205 Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (4 credits) 
  • ENV-182 Environmental Advocacy (3 credits) 
  • CHEM 150A Essentials of Chemistry (4 credits) 
 
The certificate can be completed in as little as two semesters and is "stackable," meaning credits earned can be applied toward an associate degree in Environmental Sciences.
 
Generally, CHEM 150A would be taken in the fall semester, with the remaining two courses taken in the spring. 
 
"Since 2019, BCC science faculty has been training staff members of Berkshire County environmental organizations to sample area surface waters, including streams, ponds and outfalls, and to analyze those samples for a number of pollutants and indicators," said Bruce Winn, Associate Professor of Environmental and Life Sciences."We also have been providing ongoing support for these projects, which are undertaken under contracts with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection Agency (DEP)."  
 
Winn explained that the DEP encouraged BCC to offer a certificate that would provide the state with assurances that field workers have been trained in the equipment and processes needed for these environmental projects.  
 
Small communities, such as those in Berkshire County, often lack a municipal water system and are instead served by small public water systems or private wells. As a result, there is a need for water quality monitoring in the communities served by BCC. Adding to this need is the fact that a huge wave of retirement in the water and wastewater industries is occurring, leaving many opportunities open for the next generation of trained workers in the field. 
 
The BCC Water Quality Monitoring Certificate can help fill this need, with graduates finding work as wastewater operators or drinking water operators in a municipality or in private industry. Other opportunities include working as a contract operator, providing water quality sampling, certification and other services to small businesses. 

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Firm Chosen to Lead Study on 'Reconnecting' North Adams

NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The city has selected a Boston firm to lead the $750,000 feasibility study of the Veterans Memorial Bridge.
 
Stoss Landscape Urbanism and its partners are charged with providing North Adams options for addressing the failing overpass to create a more connected and thriving downtown.
 
"The city of North Adams is thrilled to be working with Stoss and their partners to make sure that we make inform decisions about our future and that we explore every  opportunity to remedy disconnected traffic patterns downtown caused, in large part, by the Route 2 Overpass. It is imperative that, unlike the Urban Renewal programs of the past, we do so in an inclusive, collaborative way." said Mayor Jennifer Macksey in a statement announcing the selection. "We are excited by the possibility that this collaboration among the city, Stoss, Mass MoCA and NBCC will result in a truly transformative project that will benefit of the people of North Adams, surrounding communities and visitors to the city."
 
The city partnered with Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art to apply for the Bipartisan Infrastructure Act's Reconnecting Communities Pilot Program. The program is providing a $1 billion over the next five years for planning, construction and technical grants for communities affected by past infrastructure projects. 
 
Connecting the city's massive museum and its struggling downtown has been a challenge for 25 years. A major impediment, all agree, is the decades old Central Artery project that sent a four-lane highway through the heart of the city. 
 
The 171-foot span is in dire need of repair and deemed "structurally deficient" after the most recent inspection by the state Department of Transportation. A set of jersey barriers narrows the four-lane highway to two lanes at the midpoint. The last time it was overhauled was in 1992 with the federal government and state picking up the $2.1 million tab.
 
The museum and city are seeking options that include its possible removal and a reconfiguration of that busy traffic area. 
 
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