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J. Matthew Bellisle, P.E. Senior Vice President
J. Matthew Bellisle, P.E. Senior Vice President RELEVANT EXPERIENCE Mr. Bellisle possesses more than 20 years of experience working on a variety of geotechnical, foundation, civil, and dam engineering projects. He has acted as principal-in-charge, project manager, and project engineer for assignments involving geotechnical design, site investigations, testing, instrumentation, and construction monitoring. His experience also includes over 500 Phase I inspections and Phase II design services for earthen and concrete dams. REGISTRATIONS AND Relevant project experience includes: CERTIFICATIONS His experience includes value engineering of alternate foundation systems, Professional Engineer – Massachusetts, ground improvement methodologies, and temporary construction support. Mr. Rhode Island, Bellisle has also developed environmental permit applications and presented at New Hampshire, New York public hearings in support of public and private projects. Dam Engineering PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS Natural Resources Conservation Services (NRCS): Principal-in- American Society of Civil Charge/Project Manager for various stability analyses and reports to assess Engineers long-term performance of vegetated emergency spillways. Association of State Dam - Hop Brook Floodwater Retarding Dam – Emergency Spillway Safety Officials Evaluation - George H. Nichols Multipurpose Dam – Conceptual Design of an Armored Spillway EDUCATION - Lester G. Ross Floodwater Retarding Dam – Emergency Spillway University of Rhode Island: Evaluation M.S., Civil Engineering 2001 - Cold Harbor Floodwater Retarding Dam – Emergency Spillway B.S., Civil & Environmental Evaluation Engineering, 1992 - Delaney Complex Dams – Emergency Spillway Evaluation PUBLICATIONS AND Hobbs Pond Dam: Principal-in-Charge/Project Manager for the design PRESENTATIONS and development of construction documents of a new armored auxiliary spillway and new primary spillway to repair a filed embankment and Bellisle, J.M., Chopy, D, increase discharge capacity. -
Chapter 4: Outdoor Recreational Resources— Hampshire County
CHAPTER 4: OUTDOOR RECREATIONAL RESOURCES— HAMPSHIRE COUNTY Introduction With its rolling hills, cascading waters, deep forests, open meadows, and abundance of open space, the Route 112 Scenic Byway corridor is an extraordinary outdoor playground for residents and visitors alike. Opportunities abound in the region to hike, camp, swim, boat, cross‐country ski, hunt, fish, and cycle. In the Hampshire County section of the corridor, there are nearly 30 square miles of open space available for multiple recreational opportunities, including 5,803 acres within state forests and parks, 10,669 acres within wildlife management areas, and 1,919 acres within other significant open space lands. The greatest recreational treasures in Hampshire County include the Westfield River with its federal Wild and Scenic designation, and the extensive 7,900‐acre wilderness area created by the adjoining lands of the Knightville Dam Wildlife Management and Recreation Area, the Gilbert A. Bliss State Forest, and the Hiram H. Fox Wildlife Management Area. This Outdoor Recreational Resources chapter and accompanying map provide an inventory of recreational resources developed through a review of Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation listings, Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife’s MassWildlife listings, information from the Commonwealth’s Office of Geographic and Environmental Information (MassGIS), and narratives within the Open Space and Recreation Plans of Byway towns. Resources are described here by type of facility (State Forest and Parks, and Wildlife The Westfield River Wildwater Races, an annual spring event for more Management Areas) and than 55 years, attracts boating enthusiasts from across the northeast. by type of activity (hiking trails, camping, swimming, boating, cross‐country skiing and snowshoeing, hunting and fishing, bicycling, and golfing). -
Singletracks #149 December 2016
NEW ENGLAND MOUNTAIN BIKE ASSOCIATION FebruaryFebruary 20172017 #149#149 www.nemba.orgwww.nemba.org 2 |February 2017 Ride the Trails SSingleingleTTrackS NEMBA, the New England Mountain Bike February 2017, Number 149 Association, is a non-profit 501 (c) (3) organi- zation dedicated to promoting trail access, maintaining trails open for mountain bicyclists, and educating mountain bicyclists to use these trails sensitively and responsibly. eMTBs -- Where ©SingleTracks Editor & Publisher: Philip Keyes can they be Contributing Writer: Bill Boles Ridden? Copy Editor: Nanyee Keyes Executive Director: Philip Keyes [email protected] NEMBA offers guidance about where electric mountain bikes can be ridden. Short answer: NEMBA 7 PO Box 2221 anywhere offroad motorized vehicles and go. Acton MA 01720 Board of Directors Adam Glick, President Matt Schulde, Vice-President Anne Shepard, Treasurer Harold Green, Secretary Places to Ride Rob Adair, White Mountains NEMBA Fat Bikes in the John Anders, Midcoast Maine NEMBA Matt Bowser, Central NH NEMBA Aaron Brasslett, Penobscot Region NEMBA Winter David Burnham, Wachusett NEMBA If you’re getting ready to hit the trails on your Paula Burton, FC NEMBA fat bike this winter, check out our compilation Eammon Carleton, BV NEMBA Matt Caron, Southern NH NEMBA of destinations and events. By Bill Boles Steve Cobble, SE MA NEMBA 10 Brian Danz, Greater Portland NEMBA Perry Ermi, Cape Cod NEMBA Chris Gaudet, Southern NH NEMBA Peter Gengler, RI NEMBA Jeremy Hillger, Pemi Valley NEMBA David Hughes, Carrabassett Region NEMBA Stacey Jimenez, Quiet Corner NEMBA Paper Trail John Joy, Central Central CT NEMBA SingleTracks Hey, get creative! We wel- Hank Kells, North Shore NEMBA come submissions, photos and artwork. -
A Hiking and Biking Guide
Amherst College Trails Cadwell Memorial Forest Trail, Pelham Goat Rock Trail, Hampden Laughing Brook Wildlife Sanctuary Trails, Hampden Redstone Rail Trail, East Longmeadow Amherst College trails near the main campus traverse open fields, wetlands, This 12,000-acre forest offers a trail includes 24 individually numbered stations, each The 35-acre Goat Rock Conservation Area connects two town parks via a popular Laughing Brook Wildlife Sanctuary features woodlands, meadows, and streams along The Redstone Rail Trail connects two major destinations in town. The wide and flat flood plain, upland woods, and plantation pines. The Emily Dickinson railT is with information about a different aspect of the forest’s wildlife habitat. The main hiking trail called the Goat Rock Ridge Trail, which runs along the Wilbraham its four-mile trail system in its 356 acre property. Laughing Brook was once the home asphalt path connects town soccer fields and industrial district with the center of south of the Fort River. trail links to the M&M Trail. Mountain ridge for a little over a mile. There are two scenic vistas, Lookout Point at of beloved children’s author Thornton Burgess and the beautiful brook inspired many town. The trail passes by fields, wetlands, and wooded areas. PIONEER VALLEY Location: The trail network can be accessed from the Mass Central Rail Location: Take Enfield Road off Pelham Road; after 2 miles bear left on the east end of the trail and the historic Goat Rock at the west end. of his timeless tales. Location: From the rotary in the center of town travel ¼ mile west on Trail, and from South East St., College St., South Pleasant St., Packardville Road. -
Rehabilitation of the Otis Reservoir Dam: Improving Cost Effectiveness by Including Bridge Placement
CEP_28_Taylor_Layout 1 2/13/2014 4:02 PM Page 1 Project Considerations Rehabilitation of the Otis Reservoir Dam: Improving Cost Effectiveness by Including Bridge Placement was found to be in “Poor” condition due pri- Combining efforts to address marily to the deteriorating/leaking spillway dam safety issues with access and downstream masonry wall and the erodi- bility of the “emergency spillway” over the and transportation issues main embankment section of the dam. provided a win-win situation To address most of the main dam safety concerns, a reconstructed spillway with a for all of the involved hydraulically actuated crest gate was chosen parties. as the preferred alternative. The crest gate option provided additional hydraulic capacity while also improving the DCR’s ability to MATTHEW A. TAYLOR & JOHN G. DELANO manage the reservoir level, most importantly, he Massachusetts Department of Con - during the annual winter drawdown. ser vation and Recreation (DCR) owns During the planning stages of the project, Tand operates the Otis Reservoir Dam in maintaining access to the west side of the Otis, Massachusetts, for recreational purposes. reservoir during construction was identified In 2006, the 145-year-old, 31.5-foot-tall, earth- as a critical component in the viability of the en embankment dam with downstream project. At the time, the bridge over the spill- masonry wall and stone masonry spillway way was a one and one-half lane, temporary CIVIL ENGINEERING PRACTICE 2013 1 CEP_28_Taylor_Layout 1 2/13/2014 4:02 PM Page 2 “Bailey bridge” installed in 1995. It was sup- ered by about 3 feet to create an “emergency posed to have been replaced with a permanent spillway,” although no erosion protection, bridge in 1998. -
Continuous Forest Inventory 2014
Manual for Continuous Forest Inventory Field Procedures Bureau of Forestry Division of State Parks and Recreation February 2014 Massachusetts Department Conservation and Recreation Manual for Continuous Forest Inventory Field Procedures Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation February, 2014 Preface The purpose of this manual is to provide individuals involved in collecting continuous forest inventory data on land administered by the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation with clear instructions for carrying out their work. This manual was first published in 1959. It has undergone minor revisions in 1960, 1961, 1964 and 1979, and 2013. Major revisions were made in April, 1968, September, 1978 and March, 1998. This manual is a minor revision of the March, 1998 version and an update of the April 2010 printing. TABLE OF CONTENTS Plot Location and Establishment The Crew 3 Equipment 3 Location of Established Plots 4 The Field Book 4 New CFI Plot Location 4 Establishing a Starting Point 4 The Route 5 Traveling the Route to the Plot 5 Establishing the Plot Center 5 Establishing the Witness Trees 6 Monumentation 7 Establishing the Plot Perimeter 8 Tree Data General 11 Tree Number 11 Azimuth 12 Distance 12 Tree Species 12-13 Diameter Breast Height 13-15 Tree Status 16 Product 17 Sawlog Height 18 Sawlog Percent Soundness 18 Bole Height 19 Bole Percent Soundness 21 Management Potential 21 Sawlog Tree Grade 23 Hardwood Tree Grade 23 Eastern White Pine Tree Grade 24 Quality Determinant 25 Crown Class 26 Mechanical Loss -
Upper and Lower Collinsville Dams Hydroelectric Project
PROPOSED UPPER AND LOWER COLLINSVILLE DAMS HYDROELECTRIC PROJECT TOWN OF CANTON, CONNECTICUT PRE-FEASIBILITY STUDY FOR RE-POWERING THE UPPER AND LOWER COLLINSVILLE DAMS ALONG THE FARMINGTON RIVER Prepared by: GZA GeoEnvironmental, Inc. Prepared for: The Town of Canton, CT May 3, 2011 Upper and Lower Collinsville Dams Hydroelectric Project Canton, Avon, and Burlington, CT Town of Canton, CT EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Upper and Lower Collinsville Dams are both located along the Farmington River, the Upper in the Town of Canton, CT and the Lower in Avon and Burlington, CT. Both dams were originally constructed for hydropower but have long since ceased generation. With grant assistance from the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund, the Town of Canton (Town) has commissioned this pre-feasibility study to explore the potential for redeveloping the dams to generate clean, renewable hydroelectricity and provide other benefits to the Town and region. The scope of the study, prepared by GZA GeoEnvironmental (GZA), includes preliminary analysis of the technical, financial, and environmental aspects of constructing and operating hydroelectric projects at the Upper and Lower Collinsville Dams. A specific focus was given to identifying potential issues which might be considered as “fatal flaws” that would preclude project development. Baring any obvious fatal flaws, the study examined several options for project configuration, power and energy generation potential, preliminary estimated project costs, and potential project financial benefits. The Town currently holds a Preliminary Permit issued by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for both sites. The Preliminary Permit allows the Town to study potential development and provides priority in applying for Licenses for the sites, but does not give permission to develop the sites. -
Giving Back to the Future by Syd Smithers
and workshops. Our urban initiatives in strategic plan to mobilize and inspire a It’s In the Interest Boston, Holyoke, and Fall River inspire critical mass of people and partners who of the busIness youth to become the next generation of care about their communities and will conservationists, programs soon to come work to protect their quality of life in hill communIty to have to a city near you. towns, cities, and suburbs. In the next decade, the work we do—the work we a good clImate for Why volunteer? must do—will matter even more. That’s our workers: clean It’s in the interest of the business why I give my time. community to have a good climate for our As a state, we are devouring open land streets and clean aIr, workers: clean streets and clean air, good out of all proportion to the growth in our good schools and good schools and good hospitals, and places population. And as the climate continues to refresh and recreate. Our nonprofits its painful shifts, we face a future as un- AT THE BAR hospItals, and places to are key to that effort, in the Berkshires predictable as the weather on an October refresh and recreate. as elsewhere. afternoon. Within the business environ- The work of a nonprofit is both like ment, good citizenship requires being Naumkeag and Ashintully, as well as and unlike the work of business. In either part of the community and a supporter view-scapes such as Bartholomew’s case, committees aren’t known for en- of all the things that make it worth living Cobble, a National Natural Landmark— gaging the imagination, or offering sig- here. -
The Civilian Conservation Corps and the National Park Service, 1933-1942: an Administrative History. INSTITUTION National Park Service (Dept
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 266 012 SE 046 389 AUTHOR Paige, John C. TITLE The Civilian Conservation Corps and the National Park Service, 1933-1942: An Administrative History. INSTITUTION National Park Service (Dept. of Interior), Washington, D.C. REPORT NO NPS-D-189 PUB DATE 85 NOTE 293p.; Photographs may not reproduce well. PUB TYPE Reports - Descriptive (141) -- Historical Materials (060) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC12 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Conservation (Environment); Employment Programs; *Environmental Education; *Federal Programs; Forestry; Natural Resources; Parks; *Physical Environment; *Resident Camp Programs; Soil Conservation IDENTIFIERS *Civilian Conservation Corps; Environmental Management; *National Park Service ABSTRACT The Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) has been credited as one of Franklin D. Roosevelt's most successful effortsto conserve both the natural and human resources of the nation. This publication provides a review of the program and its impacton resource conservation, environmental management, and education. Chapters give accounts of: (1) the history of the CCC (tracing its origins, establishment, and termination); (2) the National Park Service role (explaining national and state parkprograms and co-operative planning elements); (3) National Park Servicecamps (describing programs and personnel training and education); (4) contributions of the CCC (identifying the major benefits ofthe program in the areas of resource conservation, park and recreational development, and natural and archaeological history finds); and (5) overall -
Annual Report 2015
AnnualAnnual ReportReport 20152015 MassachusettsMassachusetts DivisionDivision ofof FisheriesFisheries && WildlifeWildlife 109 Annual Report 2015 Massachusetts Division of fisheries & WilDlife Wayne MacCallum (partial year) Jack Buckley (partial year) Director Susan Sacco Assistant to the Director Jack Buckley (partial year) Rob Deblinger, Ph.D. (partial year) Deputy Director Deputy Director Administration Field Operations Jim Burnham Debbie McGrath Administrative Assistant to the Administrative Assistant to the Deputy Director, Administration Deputy Director, Field Operations Blank Page Inside Title Page>>> 4 Table of Contents The Board Reports .............................................................................................6 Fisheries ...........................................................................................................16 Wildlife .............................................................................................................30 Private Lands Habitat Management ................................................................47 Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program .........................................50 Information & Education ................................................................................61 Hunter Education ............................................................................................71 District Reports ................................................................................................73 Wildlife Lands ..................................................................................................88 -
Department of Conservation & Recreation
Appendix X. DEPARTMENT OF CONSERVATION & RECREATION DIVISION OF STATE PARKS & RECREATION BERKSHIRE ECOREGIONS (DCR FACILITIES - COMMUNITY & ACRES) Municipality Area Name Acres DALTON APPALACHIAN TRAIL CORRIDOR 840 EGREMONT 80 GREAT BARRINGTON 51 HINSDALE 6 MONTEREY 56 MOUNT WASHINGTON 353 WASHINGTON 80 Sub-total 1,466 MONTEREY ARTHUR WHARTON SWANN SF 850 Sub-total 850 HINSDALE ASHMERE LAKE SP 180 PERU 22 Sub-total 203 ADAMS ASHUWILLTICOOK RAIL TRAIL 5 Sub-total 5 LANESBOROUGH BALANCE ROCK SP 137 Sub-total 137 MOUNT WASHINGTON BASHBISH FALLS SP 407 Sub-total 407 HANCOCK BATES MEMORIAL SP 421 Sub-total 421 GREAT BARRINGTON BEARTOWN SF 5,011 LEE 634 MONTEREY 3,717 NEW MARLBOROUGH 124 OTIS 199 STOCKBRIDGE 453 TYRINGHAM 384 Sub-total 10,522 BECKET BECKET SF 611 Sub-total 611 CUMMINGTON BRYANT MOUNTAIN SF 617 Sub-total 617 BUCKLAND BUCKLAND SF 93 Sub-total 93 HUNTINGTON C.M. GARDNER SP 85 Sub-total 85 NEW MARLBOROUGH CAMPBELLS FALLS SP 138 Sub-total 138 COLRAIN CATAMOUNT SF 1,344 Landscape Assessment and Forest Management Framework: Berkshire Ecoregions in Massachusetts Sub-total 1,344 BLANDFORD CHESTER-BLANDFORD SF 1,539 CHESTER 1,238 Sub-total 2,777 SANDISFIELD CLAM LAKE F.C. SITE 500 Sub-total 500 CLARKSBURG CLARKSBURG SF 3,305 NORTH ADAMS 96 Sub-total 3,401 CONWAY CONWAY SF 1,702 WILLIAMSBURG 54 Sub-total 1,756 NEW MARLBOROUGH COOKSON SF 2,274 SANDISFIELD 524 Sub-total 2,798 ASHFIELD D.A.R. SF 201 GOSHEN 1,437 Sub-total 1,638 CHESTERFIELD DEAD BRANCH SF 71 Sub-total 71 CUMMINGTON DEER HILL SR 136 PLAINFIELD 215 Sub-total 351 BUCKLAND DUBUQUE MEMORIAL SF 48 HAWLEY 6,258 PLAINFIELD 1,124 WINDSOR 6 Sub-total 7,436 GREAT BARRINGTON EAST MOUNTAIN SF 1,798 NEW MARLBOROUGH 7 SHEFFIELD 199 Sub-total 2,004 FLORIDA FLORIDA SF 1,588 NORTH ADAMS 25 Sub-total 1,613 GREAT BARRINGTON FOUNTAIN POND PARK 250 Sub-total 250 CHESTERFIELD GILBERT A. -
FRLA Box Title
Job Name FRLA Title/ Subject Job No. and Notes Box Location The Worlds Most Beautiful Exposition; Issued by 1 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, Seattle USA, 1909 the Dept. of Publicity " The Exposition Beautiful"; (Map inside cover 1 Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, Seattle, 1909. with key, OBLA.) 1 Alaska-Yukon- Pacific Exposition,"Offical Guide" "Preliminary", Albert Heis , Manager. Issued by the Northern Pacific Railway, St. Paul 1 The Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition, Seattle, June1-October 16, 1909 Minn.; HHB cover Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway.; 1 Alaska-Yukon- Pacific Exposition, Seattle, June 1 -October 16, 1909 February 1909. American Academy In Rome, School of Fine Arts, Regulations and Course 1 F.L.O. cover of Study. American Academy In Rome, Statement; Boston Committee on Endowment Executive Committee, Frederick L. Olmsted Vice- 1 Fund, February 1920 Chairman Ferruccio Vitale Chairman, Frederic law Olmsted, 1 Fellowship In Landscape Architecture, American Academy In Rome. & Bryant Fleming. Jurry; Landscape Architecture: James Sturges 1 History of the American Academy In Rome, by C. Grant LaFarge, 1917. Pray, Frederic law Olmsted, Ferruccio Vitale. American Architect & Architecture, The Portfolio Outdoor Paving, January 237,5578 1 OB photos pages 2,3,4,5,11 1937 , 6042 Southern Indiana, Thomas Hibben, Archt. 1 American Architects Reprints, Lincoln Memorial, December 20, 1927. Frederick Law Olmsted L.A.; Pgs 795-796. 1 Bulletin of the American Association of Park Superintendents, 1906-1911. Nos. 1,2,3,4,5,&7; Letters by F.L.O. American City Planning Institute, Principals of City Planning By Frederick 1 Law Olmsted. 1919-1920 American Civic Association, City Planning by Frederick Law Olmsted, June Series II, No.