Housatonic Valley Association Joins International Conservation Program

Print Story | Email Story
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Housatonic Valley Association (HVA) has been selected for the Salazar Center for North American Conservation’s Peregrine Accelerator for Conservation Impact 2025 cohort. 
 
This international program aims to enhance the impact of strategies addressing biodiversity loss, ecological connectivity, and community resilience.
 
Through this six-month program, which includes funding, mentorship, and collaboration with organizations in the North Atlantic region of the U.S. and Canada, HVA's "Follow the Forest" initiative will be expanded. "Follow the Forest" involves over 50 partners working to protect and connect forests across Connecticut, New York, Massachusetts, and Vermont.
 
"Follow the Forest is about working across natural, political and organizational boundaries to protect the connections that sustain life,” said Tim Abbott, HVA’s Conservation Director. "The Peregrine Accelerator is an exciting opportunity to elevate this work and strengthen the partnerships that make it possible."
 
Julia Rogers, HVA’s Senior Land Protection Manager, added:
 
"The Accelerator will catalyze our connectivity work across the region, inspiring collaborative efforts informed by community members and scientific data,” she said. 
 
HVA staff are scheduled to attend a retreat on Prince Edward Island in early June to commence the program. The "Follow the Forest" initiative focuses on safeguarding forest acreage in eastern New York, western Connecticut, western Massachusetts, and Vermont, an area identified as crucial for species movement, ecosystem health, and carbon storage. The initiative has engaged various land trusts and conservation partnerships to address habitat fragmentation and conserve forested areas to foster a more connected and climate-resilient landscape. The Accelerator will provide HVA and its partners with support to strengthen community science tools, communication strategies, and funding and governance models for the initiative.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.

Governor Healey Announces $2M Boost for Pittsfield Tech Hub

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass.— Governor Maura Healey visited the Berkshire Innovation Center on Wednesday to see where millions in state funding will help build a tech hub for advanced optics. 

On the same day, her administration announced a $2 million award to the BIC for its upcoming Advanced Manufacturing for Advanced Optics Lab.  This is on top of $5 million from the MA Tech Hub designation and a total of $1 million from the city’s economic development funds

"This is so inspiring to be at this site to look out at what was and to see how it's coming back to life in a new and even better form," Healey said, looking over at the former "moonscape" surface of Site 9 that is now greened over, a $10 million effort. 

"…One thing that we've leaned into as an administration is innovation. It's been core to who we are." 

An 8,000-square-foot addition is planned for the BIC to welcome a new company, Myrias Optics Inc. Myrias, a meta-optics producer, has a partnership with BIC tenant Electro Magnetic Applications for testing and simulation services, and the two companies will be able to work side by side once the expansion is complete. 

Project funding has been closed with this award, and shovels will be in the ground in the fall. Myrias will bring up to 55 employees to Pittsfield with an average salary of $110,000.

Patrick Larkin, founder and director of the Innovation Institute, the economic development division of the MassTech Collaborative, said this was only possible through the Tech Hub program that has "really catalyzed communities."

"This region has captured advanced optics. It’s where they want to build an economy," he reported. 

View Full Story

More Pittsfield Stories