2023 Highlights
Thanks to your continued action and support, MyRWA is setting our goals higher
than ever before. Within all our programs, we are becoming more inclusive, bolder,
and more effective to have a greater impact for all watershed residents.
We are committed to connecting people to the watershed and working so that all
residents, no matter who you are or where you live, have access to a healthy
environment.
S M A L L A C T I O N S L E A D T O B I G C H A N G E S
T O G E T H E R F O R T H E M Y S T I C
Here are a few things we accomplished together this year →
Top: Participants enjoying the Mystic Greenways and breakfast at our Bike to Work Day event with Bike to the Sea (Karl Alexander). Left to Right: Open
house for Little Mystic Channel Park in Charlestown (Karl Alexander); Water chestnut removal community volunteer day (Daria Clark), MyRWA Climate
Resilience and Environmental Science & Stewardship Fellows at our Annual Champions Breakfast (KC Coryatt); Harvard students clean up trash along
the Alewife Brook Greenway (Sushant Bajracharya)
Projects are in the works to restore
wetlands in Belle Isle, Everett, Reading,
Stoneham, Winchester, and Woburn.
Hundreds of residents showed up at
outreach events to learn about these
projects and share their thoughts.
Strengthening these important habitats
will provide ecological and climate
resilience and bring new recreational
opportunities to the area.
Advocating for a watershed full of nature and free of pollution, with
access to welcoming parks, waterways, and paths
Restoring
Wetlands
Fighting
Against
Sewage
Along with our partners, we
advocated at the local and state
levels for the elimination of
combined sewer overflows (CSOs)
into Boston area rivers. Community
members getting informed and
speaking up about this public health
issue is moving the needle on
reducing this major pollution source.
Credit: Daria Clark
Credit: Video via CRWA
Providing impactful education and volunteer programs that are fully
accessible to all people of all abilities
Place-based
Education
We engaged with nearly 2,000
students in 15 watershed communities
through interactive programs on
biodiversity, stormwater pollution,
climate change, and nature-based art.
With the help of education program
volunteers and our 6 new part-time
community educators, we are
bringing the watershed to more youth
than ever before.
Adopt-A-
Drain
Launched this summer, Adopt-a-Drain
has taken the watershed by storm. 611
residents have adopted drains —
volunteering to keep them clear of
debris. This simple action reduces street
flooding and helps keep our waterways
pollution free. A side-benefit of this
program has been the creative names
people have given their drains like
“Drain the Rock Johnson” and “Insane in
the Mem Drain.”
Credit: Daria Clark
Credit: Daria Clark
Supporting and upholding residents most affected by climate change,
pollution, and other environmental injustices as the leaders in the
development of solutions
Wicked
Cool Mystic
Wicked Cool Mystic Ambassadors
reached residents in person at 23
events and collected over 800 survey
responses about how people want to
cool their communities in the face of
rising heat due to climate change. The
top 3 cooling solutions — trees, shaded
bus stops, and more water features —
will be explored through pilot
projects in 2024.
Tackling Air
Pollution
This year, MyRWA took our work to
monitor environmental pollution to the air.
In the winter and spring, we worked with
Malden A-VOYCE on a project to explore
their air quality questions and talk about
air pollution with their peers. In the
summer, we launched CLEANAIR — a three
year EPA-funded project to monitor air
quality at community-identified locations
in Charlestown, East Boston, Everett, and
Malden.
Credit: Emma Ishida
Credit: Marissa Zampino
Building a board and staff, who represent the rich diversity of the
watershed, leading an organization with the capacity to create
meaningful change
New Team
Members
We added six new full-time staff to
the MyRWA team in 2023. Isaiah
(Outreach & Media Manager),
Karina (Project Manager),
Mariangelí (Climate Resilience
Manager), Marja (Project Manager),
Michelle (Operations Manager),
and Ranida (Grant Writer) bring
creativity and expertise to help
MyRWA reach our goals.
Increasing
Capacity
We are energized by a new strategic plan
and advisors to guide our organization to
deeper levels of equity, justice, and
belonging. MyRWA staff and board are
putting in the work personally and
professionally to best serve the diverse
communities in the Mystic River
watershed.
Credit: Dave Queeley
Credit: Patrick Herron
2023 Highlights
To all who have donated, volunteered, read, wrote, called,
and more — THANK YOU for supporting this work and the
watershed we love.
T H A N K Y O U !
2,634
Volunteer hours
dedicated to
stewardship
1,921
Youth engaged
in education
programming
$90M
In private, state, and
federal grants secured
by Resilience Mystic
Collaborative
communities
~470,000
River herring in the
Mystic, the 2nd largest
herring migration in
MA in 2023
B Y T H E N U M B E R S
Left to Right: Volunteers plant trees in downtown Malden (Daria Clark); River herring at the Scalley Dam, where a new fish passage will soon make it
easier for the fish to enter Horn Pond (Jennifer Delgado), over a dozen stormwater infiltration trenches were installed in 2023 to reduce phosphorus
pollution in our waterways with more sited for 2024 (MyRWA), the Three Rivers Report Cards highlight the need for local, state, and federal
collaboration to close the remaining gaps in water quality across the greater Boston watersheds (Daria Clark)

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Mystic River Watershed Association 2023 Highlights

  • 1. 2023 Highlights Thanks to your continued action and support, MyRWA is setting our goals higher than ever before. Within all our programs, we are becoming more inclusive, bolder, and more effective to have a greater impact for all watershed residents. We are committed to connecting people to the watershed and working so that all residents, no matter who you are or where you live, have access to a healthy environment. S M A L L A C T I O N S L E A D T O B I G C H A N G E S T O G E T H E R F O R T H E M Y S T I C Here are a few things we accomplished together this year → Top: Participants enjoying the Mystic Greenways and breakfast at our Bike to Work Day event with Bike to the Sea (Karl Alexander). Left to Right: Open house for Little Mystic Channel Park in Charlestown (Karl Alexander); Water chestnut removal community volunteer day (Daria Clark), MyRWA Climate Resilience and Environmental Science & Stewardship Fellows at our Annual Champions Breakfast (KC Coryatt); Harvard students clean up trash along the Alewife Brook Greenway (Sushant Bajracharya)
  • 2. Projects are in the works to restore wetlands in Belle Isle, Everett, Reading, Stoneham, Winchester, and Woburn. Hundreds of residents showed up at outreach events to learn about these projects and share their thoughts. Strengthening these important habitats will provide ecological and climate resilience and bring new recreational opportunities to the area. Advocating for a watershed full of nature and free of pollution, with access to welcoming parks, waterways, and paths Restoring Wetlands Fighting Against Sewage Along with our partners, we advocated at the local and state levels for the elimination of combined sewer overflows (CSOs) into Boston area rivers. Community members getting informed and speaking up about this public health issue is moving the needle on reducing this major pollution source. Credit: Daria Clark Credit: Video via CRWA
  • 3. Providing impactful education and volunteer programs that are fully accessible to all people of all abilities Place-based Education We engaged with nearly 2,000 students in 15 watershed communities through interactive programs on biodiversity, stormwater pollution, climate change, and nature-based art. With the help of education program volunteers and our 6 new part-time community educators, we are bringing the watershed to more youth than ever before. Adopt-A- Drain Launched this summer, Adopt-a-Drain has taken the watershed by storm. 611 residents have adopted drains — volunteering to keep them clear of debris. This simple action reduces street flooding and helps keep our waterways pollution free. A side-benefit of this program has been the creative names people have given their drains like “Drain the Rock Johnson” and “Insane in the Mem Drain.” Credit: Daria Clark Credit: Daria Clark
  • 4. Supporting and upholding residents most affected by climate change, pollution, and other environmental injustices as the leaders in the development of solutions Wicked Cool Mystic Wicked Cool Mystic Ambassadors reached residents in person at 23 events and collected over 800 survey responses about how people want to cool their communities in the face of rising heat due to climate change. The top 3 cooling solutions — trees, shaded bus stops, and more water features — will be explored through pilot projects in 2024. Tackling Air Pollution This year, MyRWA took our work to monitor environmental pollution to the air. In the winter and spring, we worked with Malden A-VOYCE on a project to explore their air quality questions and talk about air pollution with their peers. In the summer, we launched CLEANAIR — a three year EPA-funded project to monitor air quality at community-identified locations in Charlestown, East Boston, Everett, and Malden. Credit: Emma Ishida Credit: Marissa Zampino
  • 5. Building a board and staff, who represent the rich diversity of the watershed, leading an organization with the capacity to create meaningful change New Team Members We added six new full-time staff to the MyRWA team in 2023. Isaiah (Outreach & Media Manager), Karina (Project Manager), Mariangelí (Climate Resilience Manager), Marja (Project Manager), Michelle (Operations Manager), and Ranida (Grant Writer) bring creativity and expertise to help MyRWA reach our goals. Increasing Capacity We are energized by a new strategic plan and advisors to guide our organization to deeper levels of equity, justice, and belonging. MyRWA staff and board are putting in the work personally and professionally to best serve the diverse communities in the Mystic River watershed. Credit: Dave Queeley Credit: Patrick Herron
  • 6. 2023 Highlights To all who have donated, volunteered, read, wrote, called, and more — THANK YOU for supporting this work and the watershed we love. T H A N K Y O U ! 2,634 Volunteer hours dedicated to stewardship 1,921 Youth engaged in education programming $90M In private, state, and federal grants secured by Resilience Mystic Collaborative communities ~470,000 River herring in the Mystic, the 2nd largest herring migration in MA in 2023 B Y T H E N U M B E R S Left to Right: Volunteers plant trees in downtown Malden (Daria Clark); River herring at the Scalley Dam, where a new fish passage will soon make it easier for the fish to enter Horn Pond (Jennifer Delgado), over a dozen stormwater infiltration trenches were installed in 2023 to reduce phosphorus pollution in our waterways with more sited for 2024 (MyRWA), the Three Rivers Report Cards highlight the need for local, state, and federal collaboration to close the remaining gaps in water quality across the greater Boston watersheds (Daria Clark)