Mass Audubon Closes On Over 850 Acres in Becket

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BECKET, Mass. — Mass Audubon purchased Palmer Brook – the 858-acre Becket property formerly known as the Berkshire Fishing Club – on May 4, completing a years-long effort to protect a parcel that provides habitat for a wide variety of plant and animal species, enhances climate resiliency, and will eventually be a wildlife sanctuary fully open to the public.
 
In 2024, after years of conversations with the landowners who owned the property since the 1960s, they agreed to sell the property to Mass Audubon for $5 million. This will expand a 26,000-acre conservation corridor – one of the region's most significant – anchored by October Mountain State Forest consisting of 16,500 acres. Protecting large landscape corridors is key to the state's biodiversity strategy.
 
Although the opening of Palmer Brook Wildlife Sanctuary isn't planned for some time, it will eventually become one of Mass Audubon's largest wildlife sanctuaries in the Berkshires. The small lodge near the 125-acre lake may become a visitor center that eventually offers a broad range of nature education and recreation opportunities for the community.
 
This acquisition was made possible with the help of conservation partners including the Becket Land Trust, Berkshire Natural Resources Council, Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation, Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, and many individual donations.
 
MathWorks, a Natick company, has also stepped up by donating $25 million for land conservation two years ago. Funds from that transformational commitment seeded Mass Audubon's 30x30 Catalyst Fund and were used in part for this acquisition.
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Prosperity Way Phase 1 Complete; Berkshire Gas Volunteer Day

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Some 55 Avangrid/Berkshire Gas employees spent the day sawing, hammering and painting at Prosperity Way.
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Prosperity Way was founded on the dream of creating an affordable neighborhood where local working families can own a home, build a future, and create lasting memories. Soon, that vision will become reality as homeowners begin moving in.
 
Nearly a year ago, Central Berkshire Habitat for Humanity broke ground on its three-phase affordable housing project. Now, volunteers are putting the final touches on the six homes and have already begun phase two. 
 
"One of the homeowners is closing on her house tomorrow, so she's moving in this weekend, and then the other family is moving in next week," said Habitat CEO Carolyn Valli. 
 
During Phase 2, seven additional homes will be built, the first modular ranch for that phase has been set, and the stick-built ranch is currently in construction. There are two additional ranches on site, to be set once foundations are cured and two colonial homes are scheduled for delivery on Monday, she said. 
 
Phase 3 will have the construction of another seven homes. Central Berkshire Habitat hopes to finish the project before 2028, dependent on securing sufficient grant funding to bridge the gap between construction costs and affordable sale prices, Valli said. 
 
Energy ran high on Thursday, as more than than 50 employee volunteers from Berkshire Gas, a subsidiary of Avangrid Inc., spent the day helping move the project forward through painting, landscaping, and construction work.
 
"We are an energy company in all aspects. We generate wind energy, we have electric utilities and gas utilities, and this crew is demonstrating their energy for a good cause today to support home building for folks who might otherwise never be able to afford a home," said Chris Farrell, Berkshire Gas' communications and government relations manager. 
 
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