The Center for Ecological Technology (CET) serves Western Massachusetts by providing information and services in composting, solid waste, sustainable agriculture, economic development, indoor air quality, energy resource conservation, and renewable resources.
Since 1976, the CET has helped the communities of Western Massachusetts meet the normal challenges of daily life with practical, affordable, and environmentally sound solutions, especially in the areas of energy and natural resource conservation.
The CET's mission is to "research, develop, demonstrate, and promote technologies that have the least destructive impact on the natural ecology of the Earth" to protect the environment, increase people's energy self-reliance, and reduce our dependency on expensive and polluting technologies.
The organization devotes its resources to four areas of main environmental concern: energy conservation for residents, environmental education of students and teachers, sustainable development (with special emphasis on North Berkshire), and solid waste (including reuse, recycling, composting, and the use of less toxic products).
The CET offers many services throughout the county to help residents protect not only the planet but their pocketbooks, including home energy surveys and incentives, a heating oil co-op, and water and energy conservation products.
Their programs include everything from the ReStore Home Improvement Center and an annual symposium on Green Energy, to economic renewal and business waste disposal.
The CET's ReStore Home Improvement Center was recently opened in Springfield. The ReStore collects valuable home improvement goods that were headed for the trash heap and resells them at a discounted price to homeowners, landlords, and tenants that can make use of them. The ReStore also accepts donations of quality items as well, including cabinets, doors, and windows.
Over the past several years, the CET has hosted a symposium entitled “Creating a Market for Green Energy in the Berkshires.†The daylong workshop for aspiring citizen leaders explored the journey of electrons from power plants to the light switches in homes and offices, the complexities of utility restructuring, and the potential for solar and wind power in the region.
Currently, the CET is assisting the town of Adams in setting goals for sustainability that incorporates economic renewal, environmental protection, and community well being. The CET serves as a community resource for Adams to help steward the Greylock Center, a planned sustainable development.
The Materials Exchange, another program developed by the CET, helps businesses save on disposal and purchasing costs and reduce waste through its new, interactive web resource www.materialsexchange.org. Businesses disposing of reusable materials and by-products are able to connect with other businesses and nonprofits that can reuse them. The web site allows visitors to find information about currently available or wanted used, surplus, or by product materials, and post new listings.
The CET also works with Western Massachusetts farms and businesses that generate significant volumes of organic waste (food wholesalers, supermarkets, restaurants) and haulers to divert organic waste to on-farm composting.
On the education front, the CET conducts professional development workshops, curriculum development, community service learning projects, and classroom presentations on topics including recycling, composting, worm composting, energy conservation and renewables, gardening/agriculture, water conservation, and quality and sustainability issues.
The CET is a nonprofit organization with offices in Pittsfield and Northampton. For more information on the Center for Ecological Technology and their programs in Berkshire County, write to them at 112 Elm St., Pittsfield, MA 01201; call 445-4556, or e-mail cet@cetonline.org. For information on their ReStore Home Improvement Center, contact their Northampton office at 586-7350.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
Your Comments
iBerkshires.com welcomes critical, respectful dialogue. Name-calling, personal attacks, libel, slander or foul language is not allowed. All comments are reviewed before posting and will be deleted or edited as necessary.
No Comments
Study Recommends 'Removal' for North Adams' Veterans Bridge
By Tammy Daniels iBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Nearly a year of study and community input about the deteriorating Veterans Memorial Bridge has resulted in one recommendation: Take it down.
The results of the feasibility study by Stoss Landscape Urbanism weren't really a surprise. The options of "repair, replace and remove" kept pointing to the same conclusion as early as last April.
"I was the biggest skeptic on the team going into this project," said Commissioner of Public Services Timothy Lescarbeau. "And in our very last meeting, I got up and said, 'I think we should tear this damn bridge down.'"
Lescarbeau's statement was greeted with loud applause on Friday afternoon as dozens of residents and officials gathered at Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art to hear the final recommendations of the study, funded through a $750,000 federal Reconnecting Communities grant.
The Central Artery Project had slashed through the heart of the city back in the 1960s, with the promise of an "urban renewal" that never came. It left North Adams with an aging four-lane highway that bisected the city and created a physical and psychological barrier.
How to connect Mass MoCA with the downtown has been an ongoing debate since its opening in 1999. Once thousands of Sprague Electric workers had spilled out of the mills toward Main Street; now it was a question of how to get day-trippers to walk through the parking lots and daunting traffic lanes.
The grant application was the joint effort of Mass MoCA and the city; Mayor Jennifer Macksey pointed to Carrie Burnett, the city's grants officer, and Jennifer Wright, now executive director of the North Adams Partnership, for shepherding the grant through.
Nearly a year of study and community input about the deteriorating Veterans Memorial Bridge has resulted in one recommendation: Take it down. click for more
The new thrift and consignment shop on Marshall Street is a little bit "Punky" with an eclectic mix of shiny, vintage and eccentric curated items. click for more
Federal pandemic funds made available during the Biden administration were critical to ensuring the continuation of Berkshire East, a major employer in the hilltowns. click for more