Massachusetts Conservation in Action: Reflections from The Nature Conservancy’s State Director | February 2026
Six months ago, I stepped into my role as Massachusetts State Director for The Nature Conservancy (TNC) feeling both grateful and energized. My love for the outdoors—and my belief that strong communities and quality of life depend on a healthy planet—are what drew me to this work and to TNC’s mission to create a livable climate, healthy communities and thriving nature.
Since joining TNC, I’ve been diving into our efforts to address climate change and protect Massachusetts’ lands, rivers, ocean and coasts. From the Berkshires to our estuaries, these ecosystems are deeply interconnected. The water that starts as raindrops in the Berkshires fills rivers and flows through cities and towns, eventually reaching estuaries, where it supports the plants and animals that sustain coastal economies and fisheries.
People across Massachusetts rely on these systems culturally, economically and for their wellbeing—which is why our conservation strategies take a whole-watershed, source-to-sea approach. While our freshwater and coastal goals may be distinct, success depends on working in harmony with nature and across systems.
Over the past several months, I’ve visited projects across the state—from river restoration and dam removals in Western Massachusetts to living shorelines on the South Shore and habitat and oyster restoration on Martha’s Vineyard. The projects below show how science-based solutions strengthen communities, improve climate resilience and support biodiversity and local economies.
- In East Braintree, TNC is supporting the city's efforts to build a living shoreline to naturally address erosion and flooding. Lessons we're learning from these projects are being shared regionally to help communities adapt to climate change, and they connect directly to our national and global efforts to help 100 million people at severe risk of climate-related emergencies.
- On Martha’s Vineyard, where TNC has worked for several decades, we are restoring rare sandplain grasslands and supporting oyster aquaculture and restoration. It is inspiring to consider the many species that benefit from restored habitat and improved water quality, and the positive outcomes for communities that depend on healthy coastal systems—not just on Martha’s Vineyard but also on Cape Cod and across Massachusetts’ shores.
- In Western Massachusetts, we are building on TNC’s early 2000s leadership on dam removal by scaling our impact through the Free Rivers Accelerator—a groundbreaking initiative to restore Appalachian rivers. With 390,000 miles of waterways and 70,000 dams across the region, only two percent of U.S. rivers remain free-flowing. The Free Rivers Accelerator addresses barriers to dam removal, like limited local capacity to take on projects and limited collaboration between organizations with shared goals. The work started in the Berkshires and is expanding across the region to ensure rivers flow unobstructed for the benefit of people and nature.
The benefits of habitat conservation and healthy, free-flowing freshwater extend far beyond inland Massachusetts—they reach all the way to the coast. From the Westfield River in the Appalachian landscape through the Connecticut River to Long Island Sound, or from the Merrimack River into the Gulf of Maine and the Atlantic Ocean, implementing strategies with a whole-watershed approach is how we make lasting progress.
Much like communities continue to adapt to climate change and its impacts, we adapt our strategies to meet evolving challenges. Heading into the rest of 2026, I am confident that TNC in Massachusetts will continue to be a leader in innovative conservation—from forest to sea, and everything in between.