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The BEAT News

May 21, 2008

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Linda Mack to Become New MACC Executive Director

Linda Mack

MACC is very pleased to announce that Linda A. Mack will become our Executive Director in early June.

A long-time resident of Townsend, Linda has over 18 years experience as a Conservation Commissioner and five years as an agent. During the 1990s she was a powerful force in the enforcement and restoration of an immense beaver dam that was destroyed by vandals. The dam supported one of the largest Great Blue Heron nesting sites in the Commonwealth. In a separate case, also having to do with wetland destruction, her enforcement actions resulted in possibly one of the largest local fines ever levied against a developer in Massachusetts.

Linda has worked in an academic environment as both an educator and professional fundraiser for over two decades. She comes to MACC after completing two successful $3.5 million capital campaigns for a private boarding school in Wilton New Hampshire. She spearheaded marketing and fundraising efforts targeted at an international base of alumni and community members.

Linda has the ability to educate, inspire and motivate others to work together toward a common goal. Her skills are grounded in a passion to protect our wetland and open space resources.

Linda's goals as Executive Director will be to continue MACC’s outstanding educational programs for Conservation Commissioners, to advocate and lobby for strong state and local environmental laws and policies, and to rally generous financial support for MACC.

Welcome Linda!
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Have you visited the CET Events page lately? If you have you may have noticed that CET now has a second events page called Community Events http://www.cetonline.org/Events/eventsExternal.php. Anyone can post green events on this page! All you have to do is click on the link that says "Post your events here".   CET welcomes any listing that have anything to do with the environment -- forums, workshops, seminars, meetings, summits, fairs, concerts...
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Announcing Free Summer Canoe Programs

Mass Audubon and Housatonic Valley Association are announcing a series of free summer canoe programs on the Housatonic River. These trips are part of the Housatonic Environmental Literacy Program (HELP).

HELP is one of ten restoration projects within the Housatonic Watershed in Massachusetts awarded by Trustees from the Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from an initial round of projects funded by the settlement with General Electric. The funding must be used to restore the natural resources and services that were impaired as a result of the chemical waste contamination.

HELP canoe trips are approximately three hours long and include all equipment necessary. Accommodations can be made for paddlers with special needs. All participants will receive a copy of Mass Audubon’s Paddlers Guide to New England. The trip is appropriate for children ages 5 and up.

Please call 413-637-0320 to reserve as space is limited. Locations and times will be given when reservations are made. The trips are scheduled as follows:
July 6th, 7th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 21st, 26th, and 28th. August 3rd, 4th, 9th, 11th, 17th, 23rd, 25th, and 30th.
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Got a song flowing in your veins?

If so, the Connecticut River Watershed Council wants to hear it.

The Greenfield-based organization is launching a song-writing contest to celebrate the river, and eventually, all its tributaries.

The contest grew out of the singing of ''river songs'' at watershed council board gatherings that often ended with people saying, ''Wouldn't it be good if we had a song about the Connecticut River?'' said contest coordinator Pat LaMountain, a songwriter and singer who's been performing with her husband, Tex, for more than 30 years.

Those concerts included Bill Halley's ''Miss the Mississippi and You,'' and they left everyone wondering why, if there are odes to the Columbia, the Suwanee, the Shenandoah and even the Allegheny and the Monongahela, there's shouldn't be a theme song for the Connecticut.

Considering that the river flows 410 miles from the Canadian border through four New England states, LaMountain figures there are probably a lot of songwriters who feel a connection to the Connecticut, not to mention all of the nonprofessional lovers of the river whose original Native American name -- Quinnetukut -- means ''long, tidal river.''

The watershed council will allow up to three original song entries per writer by the July 15 deadline, with 10 finalists to be chosen by Aug. 15.

Finalists will perform their original works at a ''Living Along the River Concert'' scheduled for Sept. 12 at the Great Falls Discovery Center in Turners Falls, at which judges will choose a winner.

The project is supported in part by grants from the arts councils in Greenfield, Montague, Northfield, Whately and Hadley.

An information session about the contest is scheduled for today at 7 p.m. at the council's offices at 15 Bank Row in Greenfield.

''We could use good songs, for many reasons,'' said LaMountain, who also works as finance director for the nonprofit organization. Not the least of these, she said, is to raise awareness about the river and to provide topical songs for concerts and gatherings, like the Source to the Sea cleanup the council held last fall.

The watershed council is looking at future contests to inspire songs about the Deerfield, Millers, Sawmill, Ashuelot and all of the other Connecticut tributaries, once it's dealt with the main stem, LaMountain said.

''We're not stopping with the Connecticut,'' she said, adding that the tributaries extend through about half of Massachusetts. Her hope is that poets, musicians and people who simply feel moved will turn out for the cause.

''Everybody cares about the river,'' she said. ''It's in our blood.''

On the Web: http://www.ctriver.org

You can reach Richie Davis at: rdavis@recorder.com or (413) 772-0261 Ext. 269
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