Whitney Pond Dam Removal & River Restoration Project: Ashburnham

Under a grant from the MA Division of Ecological Restoration (DER), the NRWA is helping to lead outreach and information efforts in Ashburnham in regards to the town's decision to remove the Whitney Pond Dam. The NRWA views dam removal on a case-by-case basis. Each dam, community, and waterway has its own unique set of circumstances that need to be fully understood in the decision-making process. In the end, the decision to repair or remove must be made by the dam owner, in this instance the Town of Ashburnham. Learn more about this project including information about the Whitney Pond Dam, videos of community meetings, plans and permitting documents, and benefits of removal and restoration.

Dam Removals Across New England

Across New England, aging and unsafe dam infrastructure has led to an increase in dam removals. These dam removals can provide significant public safety and ecological benefits, from a reduced risk of flooding to restored river connectivity. Supported by the MA Division of Ecological Restoration, the Nashua River Watershed Association offered educational talks about dam removals in Massachusetts, covering a general overview of why and how unsafe dams are removed, and what changes you might expect to see in your community as a result. Presentations were made possible in part by a grant from the MA Division of Ecological Restoration. View NRWA 2024 Dam Removal Presentation slideshow PDF.

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Using Nature to Adapt to Climate Change in the Nashua River Watershed

The NRWA is working with the communities of Ashburnham, Fitchburg, Groton, Leominster, and Pepperell to understand local climate change issues and ways that we can use Nature-based Solutions to address those issues. Citizen input is key to the process as NRWA, town leadership, and consultants work to identify specific sites and solutions to help each  community become more climate resilient. The concepts developed in these five communities will then be applied to create a Nashua River Watershed Nature-based Solutions Plan with tools accessible to all of our watershed communities. This project is funded by a Massachusetts Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness (MVP) grant. Learn more about this project and Nature-based Solutions.

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NRWA 2022 Water Report

The Nashua River Watershed Association is pleased to share our 2022 Water Report.  This new report analyzes the results of our 2022 water monitoring season covering topics such as: what do we study and why? what do the results tell us about the health of our waterways? what sections of rivers or streams are facing water quality challenges? The report is detailed and provides supporting images, graphs, and charts. 

Thank you as always to our team of volunteer water monitors.  In 2022, they collected 877 individual surface water samples.  Their dedication makes our work to protect our waterways possible. This Report is dedicated to all of you.

Read the NRWA’s 2022 Water Report.

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NRWA 2023-2028 Strategic Plan

The NRWA is pleased to share its 2023-2028 Strategic Plan, a guide to our priorities for our next five years. The Plan is the result of months of conversations, partner listening sessions, and a survey of supporters. We asked for your input, we listened, and your feedback is reflected in this directional piece. We look forward to working with you to achieve these goals. View online.  Download single page for print.  

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Nashua River Watershed Association Statement on MassWildlife’s Proposed Oak Woodlands Restoration at Squannacook River Wildlife Management Area

The MA Department of Fisheries and Wildlife (MassWildlife) has proposed an Oak Woodlands Restoration project on 215 acres at the Squannacook River Wildlife Management Area (SRWMA), which will result in altering the current forested landscape to an open woodland. The project would require significant clearing of the existing forest, periodic fire management, and herbicide applications.  For a more detailed description of the goals of the proposed project and restoration activities, please see: mass.gov/info-details/oak-woodland-restoration-at-squannacook-river-wma

The Nashua River Watershed Association (NRWA) has been closely keeping track of this proposed project and wishes to share the following significant attributes of the SRWMA project site, which MassWildlife has indicated would be Phase 1* of a multi-phase undertaking:

  • Abuts ~2 miles of the federally-designated Squannacook Wild & Scenic River, which is also a state-designated Coldwater Fisheries Resource; 
  • Is within the state-designated Squannassit Area of Critical Environmental Concern; and 
  • Is a Natural Heritage and Endangered Species Priority Habitat Area.
  • Meets MA DEP state-designated Outstanding Resource Water Massachusetts Surface Water Quality Standards [314  CMR 4.04(3)

  • Is included in the Squannacook-Nissitissit Rivers Sanctuary Act (MGL, Part I, Title XIX, Chapter 123A, Section 17)

  • Is a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Fisheries “Essential Fish Habitat”

  • Is a MA DFW Wildlife Management Area Reference Stream

  • US Geological Survey (USGS) gage on the Squannacook River was used as a least impacted site to set flow policy for the state’s Water Management Act. The river is also used as a “clean water” least impacted site by MA DEP’s SMART monitoring program. Water quality information from this site was used in the development of statewide Water Quality Standards including nutrients and pollutant loading analysis.

  • ~50 acres of Shirley Zone 1 Municipal Wellhead Protection Area (a 1,000 foot zone extending from wellhead)  

  • Subject property partially overlays a medium yield aquifer ½ mile upstream from the W. Groton Water Supply District public wellheads.

This site has long been recognized as an area worthy of the highest-level protection and preservation for its existing outstandingly remarkable environmental resource values. Therefore, proposed alteration of the site should be subject to particularly rigorous analysis.

In February of 2022 the NRWA requested that MassWildlife consider at least a three-year moratorium on advancing the proposed project while MassWildlife, NRWA, and other partners: 

  • Identify alternate sites that meet MassWildlife’s state-wide goals for Oak Woodland Habitat;
  • Undertake additional studies on SRWMA; and 
  • Assess the impact of the scale of the proposed project. 

Through dialogue with MassWildlife, the NRWA understands that MassWildlife cannot agree to a moratorium.  MassWildlife has communicated a commitment to transparency and to proceeding on a timeline with opportunities for site walks and public engagement. 

In addition, public comment periods which are required as part of local and state permitting would precede any actual site work by MassWildlife.  Opportunities for comments would occur at both Shirley and Townsend Conservation Commission meetings, and potentially be associated with an Environmental Notification Form (ENF) and Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (MEPA) review.  After reviewing forthcoming documents, the NRWA will offer detailed comments during the public comment periods as they arise.

* The NRWA notes that potential future Phases of the proposed project have not yet been described, but that the entire Squannacook River Wildlife Management Area encompasses a total of more than 1,300 acres.

 

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Chapter 4 Providing Education video link

NRWA 50th Anniversary Video Series

In 2019, the NRWA celebrated its 50th Anniversary.  As part of our celebration, we created a series of six short videos looking at where we began, where we are and where we are going in the future. We hope you enjoy this look at NRWA and what we accomplish together! Thank you!

Chapter 1:  The Beginning (2:38 min.)
Chapter 2:  Protecting Water (2:28 min.)
Chapter 3:  Protecting Land (2:20 min.)
Chapter 4:  Providing Education (1:55 min.)
Chapter 5:  Supporting Recreation (1:49 min.)
Chapter 6:  Looking Forward (2:31 min.)

Thank you to our 50th Anniversary Sponsors for making this series possible: Presenting Sponsor, Rollstone Bank & Trust, and Anniversary Sponsors, CanAm Machinery and Enterprise Bank.

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  Pulling invasive water chestnut by hand from a canoe

Controlling Invasive Water Chestnut

The NRWA has been working with the state and local entities, as well as volunteers to control the infestation and spread of invasive water chestnut in the Nashua River.  Learn more.

View new video "NRWA Water Chestnut Pull: Volunteers in Action. (3:14 min) produced by Max McCormick of NorthPoint Productions.

Field near Shepley Hill in Devens, MA

Open Space Plans: Helping Communities Identify and Manage their Natural Resources

Open Space Plans are the principle tool used by our communities to identify and inventory their important natural resources, as well as to develop a program to protect and manage those resources. They are very similar to municipal Master Plans, but narrower in scope. These Plans typically include an inventory of the various types of open spaces, including forests, wetlands, and agricultural lands, along with a description of their geological makeup. The Plans may also include data on population and housing growth, changes in land use and the amount of open space over a period of time, and a list of key properties to be acquired or protected as part of an Action Plan. It is important that these Plans identify and describe the environmental challenges facing a municipality, and begin to explore how these challenges can be addressed. Municipal Conservation Commissions, along with the Park and Recreation Departments, are the main bodies responsible for updating the Plan and overseeing its implementation.

An Open Space and Recreation Plan, valid for seven years, is a requirement for participation in grant programs offered by the Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, Division of Conservation Services (DCS). Approval of a Plan by DCS makes communities eligible for these open space acquisition funds:

The NRWA can assist communities with their Open Space Plans, and served as the primary consultant for the update of the 2006-2011 Devens Open Space and Recreation Plan and the Dunstable Open Space Plan. Our professional staff uses GIS mapping technology and their vast knowledge of the local landscape and resources to advise and support municipal efforts to protect and manage their open space. For more than a decade, the NRWA has been an active member of the Devens Open Space and Recreation Advisory Committee, paying close attention to developments on Devens that might impact key natural resources. The Committee’s work led to the creation of a Mirror Lake Recreation Area Improvement Plan and the expansion of The Trustees of Reservation’s Mirror Lake and Eskers Conservation Restriction.

To learn more about Open Space Plans, or for assistance with your community’s Open Space Planning, please contact Al Futterman, NRWA Land Programs Director, at (978) 448-0299, or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

NRWA organized a tour of the University of New Hampshire’s Stormwater Center

Protecting our Water through Stormwater Management and Low Impact Development

In the 1960’s, the Nashua River, along with many other rivers and streams in the United States, was overwhelmed by industrial pollutants and human wastewater that was directly discharged to the rivers via pipes. The Clean Water Act and other federal environmental laws now prohibit such direct discharges, or point source pollution. Today the water quality in our rivers and streams is threatened most by non-point source pollution, a pollution source which cannot be traced back to a single source such as a pipe. A major source of non-point source pollution is stormwater runoff. Stormwater runoff includes precipitation running off hard surfaces such as roads and parking lots carrying pollutants like road salt, oil, greases, and lubricants. It also includes water running off cleared lands with exposed soils enabling erosion, which allows bacteria and soil particles into our waterways. Older municipal storm drainage systems may allow runoff to be discharged into water bodies without proper wastewater treatment. All of these forms of untreated stormwater runoff threaten our water quality and negatively impact aquatic ecosystems and recreation, such as boating and swimming.

Siltation of streambed caused be erosion from storm runoff - Photo from Townsend Conservation CommissionStormwater Management and Low Impact Development are two means of controlling runoff through good site planning and creation of systems to slow runoff thus preventing non-point source pollution from reaching our rivers and streams. NRWA has been actively assisting our communities with stormwater management and promoting low impact development.

With grant funding provided by the ENVIRON Foundation, the NRWA prepared An Introduction to Water Resource Protection in Massachusetts and New Hampshire. This introductory guide to protecting water resources includes chapters on wetland protection, river and shoreland protection, stormwater management, low-impact development, aquifer and wellhead protection, erosion control and the protection of steep slopes. These are the most important water resource related topics that Conservation Commissioners and Planning Board members should be aware of in reviewing development proposals and in appraising the effectiveness of their zoning bylaws and regulations. The guide complements our work with municipal boards to develop bylaws and regulations that are in keeping with the latest practices to manage runoff.

Our water monitoring program helps to identify river stretches that are being negatively impacted by runoff. As part of our work to track sources of bacterial contamination, NRWA organized volunteers in Fitchburg to stencil storm drains to alert communities that what goes into the storm drain flows to the river. Our Monoosnoc Brook Greenway Project has worked with Leominster schools to teach children about non-point source pollution and help them to create rain gardens on school properties. We’re also partnering with the Massachusetts Watershed Coalition in its Billion Gallons per Year Initiative which has a goal of cleansing a billion gallons of stormwater before it reaches our local waterways.

Our adult education programs offer presentations on sustainable landscaping and creation of rain gardens, while our professional workshops help to inform developers, engineers, and municipal boards about topics like the NH Shoreland Protection Act and new techniques in erosion and sediment control.

More on Stormwater Management

Stormwater is worsened by hardened or impervious surfaces, which prevent runoff from soaking into the ground (infiltration) or being taken up by plants. In fact, several studies, such as that conducted by the Center for Watershed Protection, show that the health of a stream or water body is directly proportional to the amount of impervious surfaces in its contributing watershed. When the percentage of impervious cover is less than or equal to 10% of the watershed, stream quality is generally safeguarded. When the percentage of impervious surfaces increases to 10 – 25%, the ecosystem functions of streams are increasingly impacted.

Stream banks often show more erosion due to the more widely fluctuating water levels after storm events, and biological diversity begins to decrease. When the percentage of impervious surfaces increases to more than 25%, the stream is severely impacted and may become non-supportive of native plant and animal species. Such streams are often classified as urban streams, and are in essence drainage channels more than natural streams.

lid-stormwater-graph
Source: The Center for Watershed Protection

The United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) developed an approach to addressing non-point source pollution called the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System. Under Phase I of this program, which was enacted in 1990, stormwater discharges into medium to large municipal storm sewer systems were addressed.

These were defined as communities serving a population of at least 100,000 people, as well as stormwater discharges from eleven categories of industrial activities. Construction activities disturbing five or more acres of land are one category of such industrial activity.

In 2003, the USEPA published the standards for Phase II of their stormwater program. This program is aimed at municipal separate storm sewer systems, or ‘MS4’s’ for short. It covers all urbanized areas as identified in the 2000 US Census.

Even when a small town is not subject to the USEPA’s Phase II stormwater program, choosing to address stormwater in a comprehensive manner is one of the best steps a town can take to safeguard its water resources. Small towns can adopt bylaws / ordinances and accompanying regulations addressing stormwater runoff from construction sites and from illicit discharges.

As previously mentioned, most new construction activities require removal of vegetation and moving dirt around a site. Doing so exposes soil that was previously held in place by vegetation to the erosive effects of rainwater and dispersal by wind. In order to minimize such effects, practices can be adopted that minimize the amount of soil exposed at any one time and that prevent soil particles and other pollutants from leaving the site in runoff. Such practices can be spelled out in bylaws, ordinances, and regulations.

Typically, such regulatory provisions apply to construction activities above a certain threshold, such as a half acre or acre of land disturbance. Some of these regulatory approaches also place limits on the amount of impervious surfaces that can be created, either as a percentage of total lot area or a maximum amount of square footage. The environmental agencies of both Massachusetts and New Hampshire have developed model stormwater bylaws, ordinances and regulations that address the impacts of construction activities.

Illicit discharges refer to unpermitted or illegal discharges of stormwater or wastes into a sewer, drainage system or water bodies such as streams, rivers, lakes and ponds. The sources of illicit discharges are many and include but are not limited to industrial discharges and untreated sewage. Illicit discharge bylaws / ordinances and regulations usually require an agent of the town to be on the lookout for such discharges. In most cases this is an employee of the local Department of Public Works or the Highway Department.

Most illicit discharge bylaws / ordinances exempt residential land-uses from regulation, including the washing of individual cars, waterline flushing, discharges from lawn irrigation and water from foundation drains and sump pumps. Though residential uses such as those listed above are often exempt from formal regulation, homeowners and renters can still follow common sense best management practices in undertaking such activities.

More on Low-Impact Development

Low Impact Development (LID) is a term that has been applied to several development practices that minimize human impacts to the environment at the site and local level. LID can refer to everything from open space (cluster) style development to small scale ‘green’ stormwater systems. The term LID most often refers to practices that reduce both the amount and impacts of stormwater runoff. LID often first seeks to minimize the amount of impervious surfaces being created, because, as was seen in the stormwater discussion, the amount of impervious surfaces is directly correlated with water quality. LID also seeks to treat stormwater as close to its source as possible, in contrast to standard stormwater practices that often discharge stormwater far from where it originates.

The Massachusetts Coastal Smart Growth program of the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EOEEA) describes the benefits of LID as follows: “In conventional sprawl development, destruction of natural features and introduction of large impervious surfaces reduces infiltration of water into the ground and necessitates large structural stormwater controls such as catch basins, pipes and detention ponds. LID, in contrast, seeks to preserve natural features and relies on thoughtful site planning and the use of a broad range of design techniques, such as clustering, permeable paving, and bioretention to reduce the level of impervious cover and address the quantity and quality of stormwater drainage. Natural drainage pathways and open space are preserved, and the overall impact from development is significantly reduced.” The Practice of Low Impact DevelopmentPractice of Low Impact Development 

Rain garden bio-retention system plan and elevation views - Graphic by Stella LensingAt the site development level, LID typically consists of a series of small-scale stormwater best management practices that preserve and work with the natural features of the land as opposed to large-scale conventional methods of collecting, conveying, and piping away runoff such as large detention basins. LID attempts to mimic the natural flow of water (hydrology) on a site, and as such seeks to allow as much rainwater falling on a site to recharge the groundwater in the same location. Prior to widespread adoption of LID, best management practices often consisted of collecting the stormwater from a wide area and recharging it either far from where it was collected or in a different drainage basin altogether. This practice altered the natural drainage patterns and water balance of many locations, and often resulted in the depletion of local aquifers. Therefore, LID can be thought of as smaller scale, decentralized and predominantly vegetation-based stormwater management techniques that seek to mimic the natural flow of water on and underneath a site or area.

Typical LID stormwater practices include rain gardens (otherwise called ‘bioretention’), which use specific plant materials and soils to handle and treat stormwater, shallow road side swales, green infiltration strips within commercial parking lots, and porous pavement.

LID has been demonstrated to be economical, effective, flexible and attractive. Like well designed stormwater management systems, LID can reduce peak flows during flooding, remove sediments and pollutants from stormwater, provide health protection by removing bacteria, and improve property values due to the attractiveness of techniques such as rain gardens.

For more information about Stormwater Management and Low Impact Development, please contact Mark Archambault, NRWA Smart Growth Circuit Rider, at (978) 448-0299, or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Stormwater Management and LID Resources

NRWA—An Introduction to Water Resource Protection in Massachusetts and New Hampshire 

Massachusetts Stormwater Handbook

New Hampshire Stormwater Manual (available online and in hard copy)

Innovative Land Use Planning Techniques: A Handbook for Sustainable Development 

Stormwater Magazine, Forester Media, Inc., 2946 De La Vina Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93105

Organizations and their websites:

Riverwalk in Nashua, NH – Photo by Mark Archambault

Smart Growth for Sustainable Communities

Smart Growth is both a philosophy and set of planning techniques that seeks to minimize the impacts of human development on natural landscapes and ecosystems while promoting fairness and equity so as to proactively meet the needs of the people in an ecologically sustainable manner.

The NRWA plays a significant role in promoting smart growth planning in our region. For example, as part of our U.S. EPA funded "Protecting Today's Water for Tomorrow project our Smart Growth Circuit Rider worked with several towns within the combined Squannacook-Nissitissit sub-basin to develop smart growth related bylaws, ordinances and regulations, many of which were subsequently adopted by the towns. The Circuit Rider also gave many presentations to the towns and the general public, as well as organizing professional workshops in order to increase public understanding of smart growth and environmental protection in general.

Some of the guiding principles of smart growth include as promoted by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts:

  • Promote a variety of land-uses at the development scale, in contrast to the more archaic practice of Euclidean zoning that separates land-uses into distinct districts.
  • Concentrate, rather than disperse, new development within site and technological constraints (i.e. septic capacity if applicable). Higher density can be offset by the setting aside of permanently protected open space.
  • Use natural resources wisely, both in terms of construction materials and in terms of working with as opposed to against, the natural features of the landscape when undertaking development.
  • Expand housing opportunities beyond the detached single-family home that is the dominant land-use in most suburban and rural communities. Exclusive use of single-family zoning can result in a sprawling pattern of land-use that consumes and fragments natural habitats and watersheds.
  • Promote clean energy as much as possible in the design of housing and commercial and industrial development. In many cases, solar and wind generated energy can become at least a part of the power supply for the new development.
  • Plan regionally and consider your town’s development and planning in the wider context of the regional environmental and political boundaries and units of government.
  • Advance equity by promoting equitable sharing of the benefits and burdens of development. Provide technical and strategic support for inclusive community planning and decision making to ensure social, economic, and environmental justice. Ensure that the interests of future generations are not compromised by today's decisions. In a word, promote development that moves in the direction of sustainability.
  • Provide transportation choice by maintaining and expanding transportation options that maximize mobility, reduce congestion, conserve fuel and improve air quality. Prioritize rail, bus, boat, rapid and surface transit, shared-vehicle and shared-ride services, bicycling, and walking. Promote and invest in existing and new passenger and freight transportation infrastructure that supports sound economic development consistent with smart growth objectives.

Promoting and implementing Smart Growth and sustainability is not just the responsibility and province of Planners or Planning Board members, but includes roles for all levels of municipal government, as well as concerned citizens who can help by supporting and inspiring their communities to undertake Smart Growth efforts.

In 2006, NRWA’s Smart Growth Circuit Rider organized a two day workshop on the subjects of peak oil and sustainable development, which generated considerable public interest. Partly as an outgrowth of this workshop and a reading group that followed, several citizens of Groton, Massachusetts decided to form the Groton Local, an organization that promotes personal and social sustainability through community events, workshops, book readings, interest groups and outreach. The Groton Local undertakes local actions informed by the bigger picture of climate change, energy resource depletion and threats to food and water supplies. The NRWA has partnered with the Groton Local in organizing and hosting workshops on a variety of topics including permaculture, vegetable gardening, home insulation, solar energy and many other topics. The Groton Local itself helped to generate the Groton Sustainability Commission, which is a formal board of the Town of Groton that promotes sustainability planning, most recently through its role in updating Groton’s Master Plan.

A great resource online resource for Smart Growth planning techniques is the Massachusetts Smart Growth and Smart Energy Toolkit

If you would like the NRWA to assist with Smart Growth planning in your community, or for more information about NRWA’s Smart Growth, local sustainability, and other land use planning projects, please contact Mark Archambault, NRWA Smart Growth Circuit Rider, at (978) 448-0299, or This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

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