Volunteers Clean Up the Housatonic River

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — On Saturday, June 29, the Berkshire Environmental Action Team (BEAT) and Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) held their first Housatonic River Cleanup of the season.

With the help of over a dozen volunteers, they cleaned out trash and other dumped items from six locations along the River in Pittsfield. 

BEAT also conducted a trash inventory of what was removed from the banks and bottom of the river.  Some of the most notable items included ten shopping carts, multiple cell phones, hundreds of empty "nip" bottles, bicycles, scooters, and vehicle parts—including eight tires, a fender, rims, reflectors, and license plates. They also found an electronic cash drawer, prompting a call to the police, who quickly retrieved the item. 

Collecting data about what is removed from the river allows BEAT to prioritize which areas need further action. The number of beverage containers, especially nips, recovered signifies the need for better systems for capturing and recycling this waste before it reaches the river. One solution BEAT continues to push for this legislative session is an expanded bottle bill, which, among other updates, would increase the current deposit rate from 5 to 10 cents and expand the range of beverages covered under the system, even to include nips. 

Cleanups make a considerable difference in the health of the Housatonic River. Since beginning annual cleanups, the efforts of BEAT and HVA have made a noticeable difference, with the piles of trash getting smaller. This was only possible with the help of their volunteers.

Join BEAT and HVA at one of their Housaontic River Cleanups on July 13 and August 10 to make a difference for the environment. Learn more and get involved at www.tinyurl.com/Housatonic-River-Cleanups-2024.

West Branch Housatonic River Cleanups are organized by Berkshire Environmental Action Team (BEAT) and Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) and co-sponsored by Blue Q, Panera Bread, and the City of Pittsfield.


Tags: BEAT,   cleanup,   

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Pittsfield Cleans Downtown Litter, Works on Outreach Program

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — As the city develops a peer support outreach program, workers are clearing the downtown of potentially hazardous litter from the wintertime. 

Over the past three weeks, the Health Department has sent out inspectors to assess sanitary conditions in the downtown, beginning on North Street, moving to First Street, and to the McKay Street parking garage. 

"We've identified a lot of needles, and mostly needle caps and then small drug paraphernalia, and while we're identifying them, we're noting where we're finding them, and we're also picking them up and disposing of them properly," Director of Public Health Andy Cambi said. 

"… We have not found any human waste sanitation issues currently, again, not to say that there isn't any, but I think it also speaks to the fact that we do have a new facility that's open, that's being run, The First, which does offer bathroom facilities, laundry facilities." 

On Monday, he updated the Public Health and Safety subcommittee on the progress of the upcoming peer support outreach program and cleanup efforts in the area it will serve. 

The First housing resource center opened in February in the basement of the Zion Lutheran Church with bathrooms, lounge spaces, lockers, and more. In its early days, it averaged about 50 visitors daily; on Sundays, an average of 70 visitors. 

Cambi said he is in constant communication with ServiceNet, which is operating The First. 

"It has been used heavily, so I think that speaks to the relief of issues that we're seeing in the downtown area in regards to those sanitation issues," he added.

"It's a great resource that's available that is being constantly used, so again, what it was intended for."

When the department comes across human waste, they will connect with Department of Public Works staff to have it cleaned and sanitized.  Workers can make a clear distinction between pet and human waste, Cambi reported. 

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