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Grant Supports Berkshires Ecological Restoration, Climate Resilience

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STOCKBRIDGE, Mass. — The Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) recently received a grant to support healthy aquatic systems and address climate change in the Berkshires.?
 
Funds were awarded by the Massachusetts Department of Fish and Game's Division of Ecological Restoration (DER) through its Regional Restoration Partnerships Program, which helps nonprofits and Regional Planning Agencies build capacity and advance ecological and aquatic restoration work.  
 
The nearly $200,000 grant will further support the Berkshire Clean, Cold, and Connected (BCCC) Restoration Partnership, a network of key stakeholders in Berkshire County working to keep the Hoosic, Housatonic, and Farmington River watersheds healthy. The BCCC Restoration Partnership is one of only three Partnership regions in the state to receive this funding.  
 
"Strong partnerships between the Commonwealth, regional organizations, municipalities, and non-profit organizations are critical for helping people and nature adapt to climate change. The Berkshire Clean, Cold, Connected Partnership catalyzes and supports river and wetland restoration projects throughout the region.?We are thrilled to support BCCC's work and can't wait to see what comes next," said DER Director Beth Lambert.?
 
Funding supports a full-time HVA Restoration Coordinator solely focused on facilitating collaboration between partners by helping them increase capacity to complete stream and wetland restoration work, which builds resilience for species and habitats as well as infrastructure and property threatened by climate change.  
 
BCCC core partners include the Berkshire Regional Planning Commission, the Berkshire Environmental Action Team, the Hoosic River Watershed Association, the Farmington River Watershed Association, and Trout Unlimited.   
 
Through these local and regional partnerships, HVA leads projects focused on habitat connectivity and green infrastructure by restoring degraded aquatic ecosystems that help reduce the adverse impacts of climate change. This includes dam removal, streamside buffer plantings, in-stream habitat enhancement, floodplain reconnection, polluted stormwater capture, and road-stream crossing replacements, or areas where a road crosses a stream. While bridges and culverts make it possible for people to get from one side of the stream to the other, some are outdated, restricting waterflow and threatening wildlife migration.?
 
"We are so grateful to DER for providing this transformational investment in the aquatic natural heritage of the Berkshires. The Restoration Partnerships Program is unique in recognizing what conservation practitioners like HVA and our BCCC partners need to make meaningful change on the ground. Our warming climate threatens both built and natural environments, and we've worked hard to find cost-effective projects that help ecosystems and communities adapt to this "new normal," which is impossible to ignore this year," said Mike Jastremski, HVA's Watershed Conservation Director. "DER Partnerships Program funding will help move those important projects forward, identify others for the future, and is the capacity-building glue needed to align the excellent work BCCC partners already do towards our shared vision of healthy streams and wetlands in Berkshire County."  
 
HVA also completed Road-Stream Crossing Management plans for the towns of Egremont, Richmond, and Great Barrington, and played a key role in helping all three receive DER Culvert Replacement Municipal Assistance (CRMA) Grant Program funds totaling nearly $160,000.?The CRMA program provides financial and technical assistance for municipalities to fix culverts that are flood risks and barriers to fish and wildlife movement. CMRA-funded projects were identified as high priorities in each community's Road-Stream Crossing Management Plan.
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Overall, DER awarded $6.4 million in grants to help communities prepare for large storms, strengthen climate-ready infrastructure, restore flood storage capacities, and protect fisheries, wildlife, and river habitat.
 

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Butternut Fire Expands to Sheffield, Covering 1,100 Acres

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

The fire expanded during to the night to cover more than 1,100 acres. 

GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — The Butternut Fire has expanded tenfold, now covering almost 1,100 acres of forest and spreading to Sheffield.

Just before noon on Wednesday, the town reported that the wildfire near Brush Hill Road off East Mountain had unexpected growth overnight. It spread over 100 acres on Tuesday and on Wednesday, was estimated to cover slightly less than 1,100 acres.

The town remains in a state of emergency, as declared by the Select Board on Tuesday, but first responders assure that Great Barrington is not in danger.

Around 2 p.m., the Great Barrington Fire Department reported via Facebook that "significant fire" was extinguished by using a Blackhawk helicopter to drop 600 gallons of water. Water is now being pulled from Three Mile Pond in Sheffield.

The blaze is being referred to as the Butternut Fire due to its proximity to Ski Butternut, which has confirmed there is no damage to the ski area.

"At this time the fire is more than a quarter of a mile from the nearest structures and there are not any immediate threats to the public. There have NOT been any evacuation orders at this time. We have strategically placed structural fire crews in the areas where there is the POTENTIAL for us to operate in a protection mode to protect homes and property," the town's press release reads.

"In the event of a need for an evacuation order, residents will be notified through Code RED along with in-person door-to-door notifications of the affected area — an information post will be shared on how to sign up if you are already not signed up."

The fire was first reported Monday evening and by 9 p.m., firefighters were pulled from the mountain because of the hazardous conditions. On Tuesday morning, neighboring departments were called in to help contain the blaze.

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