星期四, 8月 01, 2024

Healey-Driscoll Administration Awards $52 Million in Climate Resiliency Funding to Communities

Healey-Driscoll Administration Awards $52 Million in Climate Resiliency Funding to Communities 

Most Funding Ever Awarded through the Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness Program 

LEOMINSTER– The Healey-Driscoll administration today announced a landmark commitment of $52.4 million in grants dedicated to advancing climate resilience across Massachusetts. This significant investment is the largest in the history of the Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness (MVP) Program. This year, the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) is providing an additional $7 million to help communities impacted by devastating inland flooding in 2023. Governor Maura Healey and EEA Secretary Rebecca Tepper made the announcement in Leominster, a community profoundly impacted by catastrophic flooding last September.   

“We have seen the devastation caused by extreme weather and heard the calls for help. Today, we are continuing our promise to help communities in addressing last year's challenges and taking proactive steps to reduce future climate risks,” said Governor Healey. “These grants are more than just financial support – they are a strong statement of our commitment to resilience. Our goal is to empower every community to adapt, thrive, and lead in the face of climate challenges.”   

“As a former mayor, I've witnessed firsthand the challenges posed by climate change on our communities. These grants are crucial because they empower us to take proactive steps against future flooding and relieve the immense burden that climate change places on the shoulders of local leaders,” said Lieutenant Governor Kim Driscoll. “By securing these funds, we ensure our community's resilience and ability to thrive amidst environmental challenges. This initiative not only sets a powerful example for sustainable development but also underscores our collective responsibility in safeguarding our future and mitigating the economic impacts that would otherwise burden our municipality.”  

The MVP Program combines local leadership and expertise with a significant investment of resources and funding from the state to tackle the ongoing impacts of climate change, such as inland flooding, more frequent and severe storms, rising sea levels, drought, and extreme temperatures. The MVP Action Grant will be used to carry out priority climate change adaptation measures identified through the MVP Planning process, or a similar climate change vulnerability assessment and action planning. A total of 71 projects have been awarded grants, including 62 for municipalities, seven for regional planning agencies, and two for tribes.  

“Every year, our communities need more support dealing with climate change, especially when it comes to reducing flooding. We are going all in to provide every resource,” said Secretary Tepper. “We are committed to making serious investments in local projects, like enhancing stormwater systems and culverts. These upgrades are critical for bringing down flood risks and protecting the health and safety of Massachusetts residents.”  

In April 2023, Governor Healey launched the pilot round of MVP Planning 2.0, which marks the next phase of the administration’s flagship program. This program supports communities in updating their climate change resiliency plans with a focus on environmental justice and other priority populations most impacted by climate change and helps in putting these plans into action. The next application for this program is expected to be announced later this year. MVP is a priority program of ResilientMass, the state’s initiative to reduce risk and build local resilience to climate change impacts. 

“The City of Leominster is pleased to have been out front in creating a Climate Action Plan with the assistance of the state’s MVP Program. Since that time, we have partnered with the MVP program on several occasions to allow us to bring our most critical environmental projects to reality,” saidLeominster Mayor Dean Mazzarella. “With this new round of grants, communities across Massachusetts can continue to invest in environmental solutions to prepare us for future climate changes. A huge thank you to the Healey-Driscoll Administration for continuing this important program.”   

The City of Leominster is receiving $487,483 to enhance flood resilience in the high-risk Burrage & Mascoma neighborhood. The funding will support collaborative efforts with private property owners to develop solutions considering current and future impacts of increased precipitation and stormwater runoff. Additionally, Leominster will benefit from a $458,400 grant awarded to the Montachusett Regional Planning Commission. This funding will facilitate the development of interactive map-based tools, utilizing municipal and community-sourced data such as images, videos, and firsthand accounts, to illustrate the impacts of the September 2023 flood emergency. These tools will serve as a historical record of the event and provide crucial information on sustainable land use practices aimed at mitigating flooding challenges.  

The following communities will receive funding to complete the MVP action process:  

Grantee 

Project Title 

Total Award 

Amherst (Public Works Department) 

Phase 2: Fort River Watershed Improvements for Flood & Water Quality Resilience 

$1,179,700  

Ashburnham 

Whitney Pond Dam Removal and River Restoration 

 $377,652  

Ashfield 

Ashfield Rural Climate Resilience and Living Culture Project 

 $166,001  

Athol 

Greening the Lord Pond Plaza 

 $3,000,000  

Barnstable 

Sandy Neck Beach Facility Coastal Resiliency Project 

 $2,833,849  

Billerica 

Flowing Toward Resilience: Climate Change and Hydraulic Capacity of Culverts 

 $129,500  

Bolton 

Future Resilient Field at Derby 

 $488,824  

Boston (& Revere) 

Resilient Bennington Street & Fredericks Park Project (Phase II) 

 $456,500  

Boston 

Community-Based Flood Resilience and Green Infrastructure Planning 

 $449,710  

Boston Region Metropolitan Planning Organization & Metropolitan Area Planning Council (& Chelsea, Everett, Framingham, Revere) 

NO-HEAT: Neutralizing Onerous Heat Effects on Active Transportation 

 $1,001,100  

Bridgewater 

Hanson Farm Conservation Restriction Purchase 

 $3,000,000  

Cambridge (& Mystic River Communities) 

Developing Successful, Cost-Effective, Urban Forest Strategies for Areas of High- and Low-Tree Mortality Across the Mystic Watershed 

 $276,800  

Dartmouth 

Nature-Based Solutions Retrofit of Critical Infrastructure within Coastal Flood-Prone Areas Town of Dartmouth - Phase 2 

 $113,100  

Deerfield 

Bloody Brook Resilience Hydrologic/Hydraulic Modeling 

 $170,300  

Dudley 

Stormwater Retrofit Program at the Dudley Municipal Complex 

 $281,000  

Everett (& Chelsea) 

Island End River Flood Resilience Project 

 $5,000,000  

Everett (& Chelsea, Malden, Arlington) 

Wicked Cool Mystic - Súper Fresco Místico 

 $687,000  

Fitchburg 

Nature-base Solutions for a Resilient Coolidge Park 

 $323,160  

Franklin Regional Council of Governments (& Regional Communities) 

Resilient Together: Building Partnerships in the Greater Connecticut River Watershed 

 $646,025  

Georgetown 

Georgetown Park & Ride Library Street Resiliency Improvements 

 $68,265  

Greenfield 

Building Community and Resilience through Plantings at Millers Meadow 

 $37,830  

Hampden 

Town of Hampden Main Street Bridge Replacement and Green Solutions Project 

 $275,450  

Harwich 

Red River Valley Preserve Watershed Resiliency Project 

 $1,800,000  

Hassanamisco Nipmuc Band 

Nukkone Mayash (the Old Ways) 

 $823,446  

Haverhill 

Little River Dam Removal and River Restoration 

 $3,000,000  

Holyoke 

Green Infrastructure Construction in the Day Brook Watershed 

 $1,229,730  

Kingston 

Purchasing the Correira Bogs in Kingston, MA 

 $1,620,000  

Lanesborough (& Mount Washington, Blandford, Goshen, Middlefield, Shutesbury) 

Western Massachusetts Unpaved Road Project 

 $432,096  

Lawrence 

Green Lawrence Blue Merrimack: Stormwater Resilience Master Plan 

 $1,601,840  

Leominster 

Burrage & Mascoma Neighborhood Area Flood Mitigation Project 

 $487,483  

Lowell 

Saint Louis Sponge Park Phase 2 

 $979,120  

Martha's Vineyard Commission (& Regional Communities) 

Martha's Vineyard Public Food Forest Plan 

 $97,764  

Mashpee 

Increasing Resilience to Harmful Algal Blooms in Santuit Pond: Construction of Town Landing Resilience Improvements 

 $1,669,956  

Medford 

Resilient Urban Forest Master Plan 

 $220,900  

Medford 

Strengthening Medford Connects: An Interconnected Resiliency Network for Future Resilience Hubs 

 $746,580  

Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) (& Chelsea, Everett, Malden, Revere, Winthrop) 

Lower Mystic Cool Communications to Build Regional Heat Resiliency 

 $490,813  

Middleborough 

School Street Parking Lot Project 

 $171,230  

Monson 

Chicopee Brook Flood Resilience Improvements 

 $487,500  

Montachusett Regional Planning Commission (& Leominster) 

 

Looking Upstream, Learning Downstream: A Geo-Spatial Chronicle and Lessons Learned from the Leominster Flood Emergency of 9/11/2023 

 $458,400  

Natick (& Charles River Communities) 

Charles River Watershed Flood Mitigation Plan Implementation 

 $330,492  

Natick 

Natick High School Constructed Wetland and Subwatershed Evaluation 

 $266,400  

Newton 

Flood Storage and Bank Restoration Along Cheesecake Brook 

 $1,240,995  

North Adams (& Clarksburg) 

North Adams Flood Resiliency 

 $1,061,203  

North Andover 

Cochichewick Brook Riverine Floodplain Management Study and Plan 

 $133,150  

Northampton 

Northampton Critical Infrastructure Flood Resiliency Project 

 $337,615  

Norwood 

Norwood Nature Based Solutions to Reduce Flooding and Heat 

 $144,300  

Old Colony Planning Council (& Brockton, Plymouth, Abington, Easton, Duxbury) 

Building a Climate Resilient Food System in Plymouth County 

 $245,500  

Orange 

Fisher Hill School Solar/Bess and Outdoor Classroom 

 $390,290  

Oxford 

Petroleum to Pollinator: Design to Restore a Former Gas Station Back to Nature 

 $206,100  

Pioneer Valley Planning Commission (& Regional Communities) 

Toward Greater Resilience in our Drinking Water Supply: A Regional Plan for the Pioneer Valley (1st Phase) 

 $420,223  

Pittsfield 

Unkamet Brook Restoration 

 $275,000  

Plymouth 

Plymouth Downtown Resiliency Project: Green and Heat Island Reduction Infrastructure 

 $360,265  

Provincetown 

Resilient Central Vacuum Station 

 $1,000,000  

Reading (& Upper Mystic River Communities) 

Resilient Facilities Project: Finding Solutions for Flood-Prone Sites that Serve Priority Populations 

 $522,500  

Salem 

Resilient Together: The Point 

 $466,380  

Shutesbury  

Library Solar with Ford Lightning Battery Backup 

 $222,105  

Somerville

...

波士頓市長盃網球賽訂8/12至15日舉行

                (Boston Orange 編譯) 波士頓市公園及休閒局 (Boston Parks and Recreation Department) 818歲青少年舉辦的吳弭2024市長盃網球賽,將於812日至15日,在Carter 遊樂園網球場 (709 Columbus Ave.) 舉行,分單打、雙打等5個組別。

今年賽事的正式贊助機構為運動員的網球俱樂部(Sportmen's Tennis Club and Tenacity) P&G Gillette。報名可上網 boston.gov/parks-sports

Mayor’s Cup Tennis Tournament Begins August 12th 

Boston, MA - July 30, 2024 - Mayor Michelle Wu and the Boston Parks and Recreation Department are excited to announce the 2024 Mayor's Cup Tennis Tournament. Athletes ages 8-18 will have the opportunity to battle for “Boston’s Best” in singles and doubles tennis. 

"We are proud to continue this tradition and celebrate the talent and sportsmanship of the young athletes in our city of champions,” said Mayor Michelle Wu. “The Mayor's Cup Tennis Tournament is a wonderful opportunity to activate our parks with healthy competition and friendly rivalry.”
The tournament will kick off on Monday, August 12 at 9:30 a.m. with the games concluding on Thursday, August 15. Matches will take place at Carter Playground Tennis Courts, 709 Columbus Ave. Divisions are as follows: 8U singles, 10U singles, 12U doubles and singles, 14U doubles and singles, 18U doubles and singles. Registration is now open on boston.gov/parks-sports.

The Boston Parks and Recreation Department presents the Mayor’s Cup Tennis Tournament in partnership with the Sportmen's Tennis Club and Tenacity. P&G Gillette is the official sponsor of this year’s tournament. 

“Youth sports are such a meaningful part of summer in Boston,” said Parks Commissioner Ryan Woods. “We are thrilled to host this year’s Mayor’s Cup Tennis Tournament and hope you will come to cheer on the young athletes at Carter Playground”

For more information about Boston’s Parks please visit Boston.gov/parks. Stay updated with news, events, and design and construction work in Boston Parks by signing up for our email list at bit.ly/Get-Parks-Emails and following our social channels @bostonparksdept on X, Facebook, and Instagram.

熱浪再來襲 波士頓市長籲請民眾8月1至3日注意防曬

              (Boston Orange) 波士頓市長吳弭 (Michelle Wu) 今日發佈通知,提醒居民,根據天氣預報,81日至3日的氣溫都接近華氏90度,波士頓市已採取行動,為民眾提供納涼措施。

              民眾可上網查詢安全措施。

MAYOR WU ADVISES CAUTION IN ANTICIPATION OF HIGH TEMPERATURES

BOSTON - Thursday, August 1, 2024 - Mayor Michelle Wu today announced a heat advisory for the City of Boston beginning today, August 1 through Saturday, August 3, due to the upcoming weather forecasts. High temperatures will reach into the high 80s, with the heat index expected to reach the 90s. The current City of Boston heat advisory threshold is 3 days or more of 90 degrees heat index, sustained for 2 or more hours per day. 


“With the forecast for the coming days reaching extreme temperatures, we encourage all residents to take time to prepare,” said Mayor Michelle Wu. “Staying hydrated, taking breaks from working outside, and paying attention to your health are important steps for ensuring our city remains healthy and cool during this hot and humid period.”


The City of Boston is taking critical immediate action to provide heat relief, including short-term, actionable steps toward relief during heat waves. The City of Boston has been engaging in a variety of projects to support extreme heat mitigation and improved health for residents. Anyone, regardless of their medical conditions, can feel the impacts of extreme heat. During a heat wave, Boston Emergency Medical Services typically experience an 10-15% increase in calls to 9-1-1 for people of all ages. 


Splash pads will be open at parks and playgrounds throughout the City. Several city pools are open for people to cool off and operating hours can be found at boston.gov/pools. Memberships to all City pools are free. Learn more about how to create a membership and register for a swim session at Boston.gov/BCYF-registration.


Boston Public Library locations are also available for residents to seek relief from the heat.  Patrons are always welcome to participate in BPL’s summer programming for kidsteens, and adults.


Information on heat safety tips can be found online at boston.gov/heat and by following @CityofBoston on Twitter. Residents can sign up for AlertBoston, the City's emergency notification system, to receive emergency alerts by phone, email, or text. Sign up online here. Residents are also encouraged to call 311 with any questions about available City services.


The Mayor issued the following heat safety tips:


  • Children and pets should never be left alone in vehicles, even for short periods of time.
  • Stay hydrated. Drink plenty of fluids regardless of activity level. Avoid alcoholic beverages and liquids high in sugar or caffeine.
  • Keep cool with frequent cool showers, shade, and air conditioning or fans. 
  • Limit outdoor activity to morning and evening hours. Rest often in shady areas and be extra cautious from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m., when the sun's ultraviolet (UV) radiation is strongest.
  • Know the signs of heat exhaustion. Heavy sweating, cool and clammy skin, dizziness, nausea, and muscle aches could all be signs of heat exhaustion. If symptoms persist, call 9-1-1 immediately. Do not delay care. Heat is the leading cause of weather-related deaths in the U.S. and can exacerbate underlying illnesses.
  • Adults and children should use sunscreen containing an SPF-30 or higher and wear protective, loose-fitting clothing including long sleeve shirts and hats.
  • If you have a child in your home, use child window guards in addition to screens on any open window on the second story or above. Falls are the leading cause of injury for children under the age of six. 
  • Secure all window air conditioner units according to the manufacturer's specifications.
  • If you are heading to a beach, lake, or pool to beat the heat, swim where lifeguards are present. Always watch children near the water and make sure they’re wearing a U.S. Coast Guard approved life jacket.
  • Please call or check on neighbors, especially older adults and people with disabilities.
  • Please keep pets indoors, hydrated, and cool as asphalt and ground conditions are significantly hotter and unsafe during heat.


Helping Individuals Experiencing Homelessness:


  • If you notice individuals who seem unable to move or disoriented due to the heat, or families living in vehicles, please ask them if they need help and call 9-1-1 immediately.
  • The Boston Public Health Commission (BPHC) operates emergency shelters at 112 Southampton St (men’s shelter) and 794 Massachusetts Ave (women’s shelter). These facilities are air conditioned and open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Amnesty will be called at temperatures of 90 degrees or above, so those with non-violent restrictions can access shelter out of the heat.
  • The City of Boston works closely with a network of shelter providers to ensure there is adequate shelter, food, water, and a cool respite from the heat.
  • Street outreach teams providing recovery services remain operating as normal during summertime weather. Outreach teams are providing water on outreach routes.


Playground Safety:  


  • Shoes should be worn outdoors, including playgrounds and turf athletic fields, as  surfaces can become extremely hot and cause burns, even on splash pads and spray decks.


Outdoor Fires and Grilling:


  • No outdoor fires are allowed in Boston, including fire pits, chimineas, and bonfires.
  • Charcoal grills must be on the ground and away from buildings. Keep in mind the wind and never leave grills unattended. Dispose of the ash in a metal container once completely out.
  • Propane tank grills are only allowed on first floor porches with steps to the ground. Do not place propane tank grills near air conditioners or up against a building. Make sure all connections are tight and never carry propane tanks into a home.
  • Grills should always be used in a well-ventilated area.


The City of Boston’s work is guided by the Heat Resilience Solutions for Boston framework to prepare for hotter summers and more intense heat events. The Heat Plan presents 26 strategies that will help build a more just, equitable, and resilient Boston. Visit boston.gov/heat regularly to learn more about the latest strategies for staying cool and to access the most up-to-date resources available. Each individual, family, and community’s plan may look different: from accessing one of Boston’s public pools or parks, or requesting a pop-up cooling kit for use at an outdoor event. You can read more about the strategies to stay cool this summer in the Summer Cooling GuideIn all extreme heat situations, please look out for your community, specifically heat-sensitive residents like elders, children, or unhoused people.