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David McGowan of Brookline, Mass., has been named the new executive director of the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation.

Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation Names New Director

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WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — The Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation has named David McGowan of Brookline, Mass., as its next executive director.

McGowan has dedicated his career to conserving land throughout Massachusetts. After receiving his graduate degree from Antioch New England University in 1996, he worked at the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation. There, he worked on projects throughout the commonwealth – securing critical inholdings at Bradley Palmer State Park and Willard Brook State Forest, and helping conserve the 900-acre Spectacle Pond Farm at Otis State Forest.  

In 2006, McGowan took a position with The Nature Conservancy in Massachusetts. Many of his projects at the Conservancy focused on adaptation to climate change, including a project to provide flood storage along the Taunton River, and the protection of an 800-acre property in Copake, N.Y., that creates a large wildlife corridor within the Berkshire-Taconic landscape.

Following a productive year at Mass Audubon, McGowan joins the Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation in July with an eye toward continuing the work of the organization in the areas of land conservation and nature education. Rural Lands will continue to provide meaningful engagement for the citizens of Williamstown.


McGowan will succeed outgoing Executive Director Leslie Reed-Evans, who has been with the WRLF for almost 23 years. Reed-Evens counts the WRLF's acquisition and move to Sheep Hill as one of its greatest accomplishments during this time. In addition to the preservation of Sheep Hill and its development as a community resource, WRLF has successfully completed several important and innovative farm protection projects and added many miles of public hiking trails.

The president of the Foundation, Philip McKnight, summed up the transition of its leadership.

"Leslie Reed-Evans's retirement comes as a bittersweet moment in the life of the Foundation. She has over her career been instrumental in the development and the continued success of its land conservation efforts and its nature education programs," he said. "We are grateful for Leslie's commitment over more than two decades to the mission and the purpose of Rural Lands. David McGowan's role as our next executive director will permit us to continue our important work in both the preservation of the town's beautiful landscape and in aiding in the equally important task of fostering the town's economic development by helping make our community a destination for visitors and new homeowners alike."

The Williamstown Rural Lands Foundation is a non-profit, member-supported land conservation trust which just celebrated 30 years of working to preserve open and accessible space for the benefit of present and future generations. WRLF also serves as a catalyst to increase public awareness over land-use issues and options, to promote responsible land stewardship, and to connect the community to the region’s natural heritage through outdoor education and programs.


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2025 Year in Sports: Mount Greylock Girls Track Was County's Top Story

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
Mount Greylock Regional School did not need an on-campus track to be a powerhouse.
 
But it did not hurt.
 
In the same spring that it held its first meets on its new eight-lane track, Mount Greylock won its second straight Division 6 State Championship to become the story of the year in high school athletics in Berkshire County.
 
"It meant so much this year to be able to come and compete on our own track and have people come here – especially having Western Mass here, it's such a big meet,"Mounties standout Katherine Goss said at the regional meet in late May. "It's nice to win on our own track.”
 
A week later at the other end of the commonwealth, Goss placed second in the triple jump and 100-meter hurdles and third in the 400 hurdles to help the Mounties finish nearly five points ahead of the field.
 
Her teammates Josephine Bay, Cornelia Swabey, Brenna Lopez and Vera de Jong ran circles around the competition with a nine-second win in the 4-by-800 relay. And the Mounties placed second in the 4-by-400 relay while picking up a third-place showing from Nora Lopez in the javelin.
 
Mount Greylock's girls won a third straight Western Mass Championship on the day the school's boys team claimed a fourth straight title. At states, the Mounties finished fifth in Division 6.
 
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