Category: Volunteer Opportunity

  • Call for Volunteers – Commonwealth Avenue Mall

    The Commonwealth Avenue Mall Committee needs volunteers to water new and recently planted trees on the Mall, especially in the blocks Exeter-Fairfield, Gloucester-Hereford, and Hereford-Massachusetts Avenue. This would involve a once-a-week commitment of about ½ hour through September or October. (Back-up is available for vacations, etc.) Lightweight hoses are accessible from vaults in every block and instruction is provided. The trees and lots of passersby will thank you! To volunteer, please call Susan Juretschke @ 617-833-9609 or 617-876-6542.

  • Saturday, July 2, 9:00 am – 12:00 noon – Summer Butterfly Count

    Saturday, July 2, 9:00 am – 12:00 noon – Summer Butterfly Count

    On Saturday, July 2 from 9 – noon, join The Trustees and the North American Butterfly Association for an annual summer butterfly count at Appleton Farms, in Hamilton and Ipswich, Massachusetts. Appleton’s wet meadows and farm fields provide important habitat for many common and uncommon butterfly species. Trustees Ecology Program Director Russ Hopping and Massachusetts Butterfly Club President Howard Hoople will orient the group with an Introduction to butterflies before setting out for the count. Participants should wear long pants, sunscreen and proper clothing to be walking through fields of tall grass. Bring a lunch. Free for Trustees members, $3 for nonmembers.  Pre-registration is required by emailing bzschau@thetrustees.org

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  • Saturday, June 18, 10:00 am – 12:00 noon – “Bee-cology” Crowdsourcing Project

    Our native bees are under threat.  Join Dr. Robert Gegear of WPI on Saturday, June 18 from 10 – 12 at Tower Hill Botanic Garden in his “Bee-cology” Crowdsourcing Project.  We’ll begin with a short presentation on bumblebee behavior, ecology and identification, then help by identifying bumblebees at Tower Hill.  Use this information to develop a bumblebee-friendly garden in your backyard.  Free with admission, but pre-registration required at www.towerhillbg.org.

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  • Tuesday, May 24, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm – Young Friends of the Public Garden Happy Hour

    Meet new people and enjoy an evening connecting with old friends while learning about how you can help the Friends of the Public Garden. The Tuesday, May 24 event will take place at Abby Lane, 253 Tremont Street, beginning at 6 pm. $15, register by clicking here or email info@friendsofthepublicgarden.org.

    Stewardship of our greenspace is essential to the future of Boston. You can help the Friends continue our work to preserve and enhance the Boston Common, Public Garden, and Commonwealth Mall.

  • Saturday, April 30, 8:30 am – 12:00 noon – Alley Rally 2016

    Spring is finally here and with it, comes all of the left over sand and salt left behind from preemptive storm prep.

    Alley Rally 2016 will sweep through the neighborhood on Saturday, April 30th, 2016, from 8:30 a.m. through noon. Coordinating with Mayor Walsh’s Citywide Cleanup, Boston Shines 365, come and join your neighbors, including groups from local fraternities and some of our Back Bay schools, in sweeping the alleys and side streets. Thanks to donations from our local businesses, The Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay provides coffee, juice, bagels and doughnuts at the Clarendon Street Playground starting at 8:30 a.m. At 9:00 a.m., we will divide in groups and head off to clean with City-supplied tools. After we finish, there will be a picnic lunch and free raffle (also donated by Back Bay businesses) for the volunteers at the playground. This is a great way to get to know your neighbors and spruce up the neighborhood at the same time. NABB has been conducting Alley Rally since 1967! All ages welcome & no RSVP necessary. For further information, please contact Jason at jason.b.post@gmail.com or call (617) 839-7185.

  • Thursday, May 12, 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm – Boston Park Advocate Summit

    Please join the Boston Park Advocates on the evening of Thursday, May 12 from 5:30 to 8 at the Franklin Park Golf Clubhouse, One Circuit Drive in Dorchester to learn more about opportunities to work together on two important campaigns this year.

    BPA finally has an opportunity to fight for a dedicated park funding stream through the Community Preservation Act (CPA). Hear from Linda Orel of The Trust for Public Land on what Boston stands to gain and get answers to your CPA questions.
    BPA wants to make sure that parks have strong representation in the Imagine Boston 2030 planning process. Take part in an activity to share your vision for Boston’s future.

    If you are involved in any park-connected group, as staff or volunteer, you are encouraged to attend. You understand that parks and open space are important for public health as well as many kinds of activities and populations, such as sports, arts, gardening, youth, family, and seniors. Refreshments will be provided. Please click here by May 5 to RSVP for the Boston Park Advocates Summit. Free.

  • Saturday, April 23, 9:00 am – 12:00 noon – Earth Day Volunteer Morning

    Celebrate Earth Day on Saturday, April 23 with the Massachusetts Horticultural Society.

    Join them for a morning of community and help prepare the gardens and landscapes for spring. Bring your family and friends, garden tools to help kick off their garden season. Check in at the Hunnewell Carriage House. Rain Date April 26, 9am – noon.  Image from www.anacostiaws.org

    Free, but PLEASE PRE-REGISTER at www.masshort.org.

  • Gardener Assistant Program on the Esplanade

    The Esplanade Association will begin its Gardener Assistant Program, which is an 8 week program (May 3 – June 21)  to get recurring volunteers out during the months of May and June to help out the Esplanade Association’s Horticulture staff in gardening and horticulture needs. The activities will run from 10:00am-12:00pm, and tasks will include weeding, mulching, dead-heading and more.

    The Association will be holding in-person interviews starting in April to gauge volunteer interest and commitment. Prior gardening experience is preferred.

    If you are interested please reach out to Kyle Richard, the Volunteer and Program Manager, at krichard@esplanadeassociation.org or call 617-227-0365 for more details.

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  • CALL TO ACTION: Gas Leaks in Back Bay and Across the Commonwealth

    According to the Massachusetts Chapter of the Sierra Club, Massachusetts has one of the nation’s oldest natural gas pipeline systems, and it is showing its age. Gas pipes around the Commonwealth have more than 25,000 leaks, losing more than eight billion cubic feet of natural gas into the air every year – and possibly as much as nineteen billion cubic feet.

    Natural gas leaks kill trees by attracting bacteria to their roots, are harmful to human health, are an extraordinary potent greenhouse gas, waste a valuable fossil fuel that has been harvested through fracking, and can potentially cause explosions.

    In addition, utilities don’t pay for the gas that is wasted through leaks, but pass that cost onto ratepayers by factoring it into the price the pay. Nor are the utilities required to repair any leaks, unless a leak is considered potentially explosive. Leaks never get any better; they only get worse over time.

    In 2015, for the first time, utilities in Massachusetts reported on the location of natural gas leaks in their territories. A nonprofit group called the Home Energy Efficiency Team (HEET) has used those reports to create Google maps of the reported leaks, which you can see by clicking here. Using those maps, you can zoom in on your neighborhood to find out where there are local gas leaks (as reported by the utilities in March 2015).

    For example, downtown Boston (which includes Back Bay) was reported to have 246 unrepaired leaks as of February 26, 2015. Importantly, one of HEET’s solutions is for all of us to support state legislation that will help solve the problem. Two such legislative bills are currently pending in the Massachusetts Legislature:

    A Bill Protecting Consumers (H2870): This bill, if passed, would prohibit utility companies from passing the cost of wasted gas onto consumers, incentivizing them to fix the leaks as quickly and cost effectively as possible.

    A Bill Requiring Gas Leak Repairs During Road Projects (H2871): This bill, if passed, would require gas companies to check and repair all gas leaks whenever a street is already open for construction. Repairing leaks before repaving is not only cheaper for the utility companies, it also decreases the chance the street will need to get opened up soon afterward for pipeline repairs, reducing future street repaving needs (and costs) for the local municipality and disruption for nearby residents.

    We therefore urge you to contact your State Representative and State Senator to express your support for both of these important bills. If you live in the Back Bay, your State Representative is Jay Livingstone (Jay.Livingstone@mahouse.gov) or Byron Rushing (Byron.Rushing@mahouse.gov) and your State Senator is William Brownsberger (William.Brownsberger@masenate.gov). The more voters who speak out in favor of these bills, the better the chance is that they will be enacted into law.

  • Saturday, December 19 – Christmas Bird Count

    Visit http://www.audubon.org/conservation/science/christmas-bird-count to learn everything you need to know to help with this Citizen Science project, the longest continuously running bird data survey nationwide.  The event takes place all day Saturday, December 19.  You can add to a century of science by signing up now.