According to the National Wildlife Refuge Association, “The intentional dismantling of science and conservation is happening now. Hundreds of dedicated U. S. Fish and Wildlife Services employees—many of them biologists—have been fired, gutting an already underfunded and understaffed National Wildlife Refuge System. Without them, habitats will degrade, endangered species will go unmonitored, and communities will lose vital recreation and economic benefits. This is a crisis.”

Call on Congress to reverse course and restore these critical positions. Congressional switchboard: 202-225-3121. Senate switchboard: 202-224-3121.

On February 14, 420 people were suddenly fired yesterday from the Fish and Wildlife Service, including National Wildlife Refuge System staff members. Other Department of Interior employees were cut, including 3,400 from the Forest Service, 1,000 from the National Park Service and 800 from the Bureau of Land Management. As you may have learned, other government departments have also suffered cuts.

Hard hit is the National Wildlife Refuge System. Before the recent cuts, only 2,353 employees managed 90 million acres of land and 760 marine areas. The new staffing level is a 31% decrease from FY2010.

These cuts will result in a loss of habitat management, cuts to law enforcement, and may lead to closed refuges. Work with endangered species, required by law, will be impacted.

Our local National Wildlife Refuges include Parker River National Wildlife Refuge, as well as the refuges of the Eastern Massachusetts National Wildlife Refuge Complex (Great Meadows, Assabet River, Oxbow, Nantucket, Monomoy, Mashpee, Massasoit, and Nomans Land Island). The Silvio Conte National Wildlife Refuge includes properties throughout the Connecticut River valley, including Fannie Stebbins and the Ft. River Division. Many of these are places well known and well regarded by BBC members.

These personnel cuts will lead to loss of habitat management, cuts to law enforcement, and may lead to closed refuges. Work with endangered species, required by law, will be impacted. Collaboration with states and non-profits will be limited. Cuts to everything outside of core biological mandates should be expected, including visitor services. Refuge lands may be closed. We are likely to see marine monuments downsized, and moves made to privatize or sell public lands.

Conservation is a bipartisan issue!

Now is CRITICAL – this is the time when we have to speak up for our public lands. If we who know and love these places do not step up, even more irreparable damage may take place.

MAKE THAT CALL! Urge your representatives to oppose cuts to the National Wildlife Refuge System and other parts of the Department of Interior supporting public lands. Every call counts.

THANK YOU for taking action!

What you can do:

  • Call on Congress to reverse course and restore these critical positions. Congressional switchboard: 202-225-3121. Senate switchboard: 202-224-3121.
  • Sign on to the Action Alert at Refuge System Employees — The National Wildlife Refuge Association.
  • Urge your local media outlets to cover this story.
  • Share this story with all your contacts.
  • Support organizations supporting National Wildlife Refuges and other public lands, and fighting these cuts, such as Defenders of Wildlife, and the National Wildlife Refuge Association.

From the American Birding Association’s statement on the job cuts.

“These actions have real world implications for the health and wellbeing of wild birds, particularly those on the brink of extinction. For example, the Department of Interior’s Hawaiian Forest Bird Conservation Keystone Initiative appears at a standstill, just as a critically important project of this initiative—the control of mosquitoes that carry avian malaria—is about to be implemented. The delay puts critically endangered birds, such as the ‘Akikiki, a native honeycreeper found only on Kaua‘i, at immediate risk. Also potentially impacted is the reintroduction plan for another endangered bird, the ‘Alala (or Hawaiian Crow), a small number of which were just months ago released on Maui after a lengthy period being extirpated from the wild.”

“Many other native birds at risk, such as California Condor, “Northern” Spotted Owl, and Greater Sage-Grouse, would be affected negatively as well. And ongoing migratory bird conservation work in North America and beyond, which is inherently dependent on international cooperation, is in jeopardy.”

ANNUAL REPORT 2023

The Brookline Bird Club (BBC) recorded 275 species for 2023, based upon 200 trips reported from Massachusetts, and those from out of state.  We recorded 267 species in Massachusetts, three more than 2022, with 8 [...]

ANNUAL REPORT 2022

The Brookline Bird Club (BBC) recorded 276 species for 2022, based upon 204 reported trips. Of those, 264 species were recorded in Massachusetts, with 12 additional species reported from the out-of-state trips to New Hampshire [...]

ANNUAL REPORT 2021

Brookline Bird Club 2021 Statistical and Year-End Report By David Scott, Club Statistician The Brookline Bird Club recorded 270 species for 2021, based upon 206 reported trips. Two-hundred and sixty-five species were recorded in Massachusetts, [...]

ANNUAL REPORT 2023

The Brookline Bird Club (BBC) recorded 275 species for 2023, based upon 200 trips reported from Massachusetts, and those from out of state.  We recorded 267 species in Massachusetts, three more than 2022, with 8 [...]

ANNUAL REPORT 2022

The Brookline Bird Club (BBC) recorded 276 species for 2022, based upon 204 reported trips. Of those, 264 species were recorded in Massachusetts, with 12 additional species reported from the out-of-state trips to New Hampshire [...]

ANNUAL REPORT 2021

Brookline Bird Club 2021 Statistical and Year-End Report By David Scott, Club Statistician The Brookline Bird Club recorded 270 species for 2021, based upon 206 reported trips. Two-hundred and sixty-five species were recorded in Massachusetts, [...]

ANNUAL REPORT 2023

The Brookline Bird Club (BBC) recorded 275 species for 2023, based upon 200 trips reported from Massachusetts, and those from out of state.  We recorded 267 species in Massachusetts, three more than 2022, with 8 [...]

ANNUAL REPORT 2022

The Brookline Bird Club (BBC) recorded 276 species for 2022, based upon 204 reported trips. Of those, 264 species were recorded in Massachusetts, with 12 additional species reported from the out-of-state trips to New Hampshire [...]

ANNUAL REPORT 2021

Brookline Bird Club 2021 Statistical and Year-End Report By David Scott, Club Statistician The Brookline Bird Club recorded 270 species for 2021, based upon 206 reported trips. Two-hundred and sixty-five species were recorded in Massachusetts, [...]

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Upcoming Field Trips

Slow Birding at Revere Beach

Revere Beach 21 Revere Beach Blvd, Revere, MA, United States

Led by DCR Park Staff. Come observe the beautiful details of birds and their behaviors and share observations with others in the group. Pose questions and memories that observations elicit. Birds we may see include Piping Plover, Manx Shearwater, resident gulls, with Common Tern arriving by May. Suitable for adults and children 8 years+. Children [...]

Ashby & Townsend

We will explore for nesting warblers, juncos, sapsuckers, and probably butterflies and dragonflies, possibly continuing into the afternoon. We will start in Willard Brook State Forest and probably continue to Townsend State Forest, Mt. Watatic, or the Squannacook River WMA. Some trails are steep and moderately uneven.

Belle Isle Marsh and Vicinity

East Boston - Belle Isle Parking Lot 1399 Bennington Street, Boston, MA, United States

Led by DCR staff. We will search on foot up to one mile on flat, easy terrain, for migrating or resident songbirds, raptors, shorebirds, and marsh birds at this birding hotspot and state park. This is a traveling program by car or bike. Prepare for ticks and mosquitoes. Ages: Adults and kids 8 years+ with [...]

Summer Solstice Saunter

Leader's Choice

Celebrate the beginning of summer by birding favorite patches, locally and beyond. Contact leader for details. Call or email no later than June 19.

Maine – Rangeley Lakes

Maine - Rangeley Lakes 2459 Main St, Rangeley, ME, United States

Join us for a seven-day exploration of mountains and lakes of western Maine! As always, this trip will concentrate on Maine’s boreal specialties including Spruce Grouse, Black-backed Woodpecker, Olive-sided and Yellow-bellied flycatchers, Philadelphia Vireo, Gray Jay, Boreal Chickadee, Bicknell’s Thrush and 20+ species of warbler. We also observe and enjoy flora and fauna along way. [...]

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