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Earth Month Reflections: Our Power is Collective
As I reflect on the last 14 months of this administration, it is easy to feel overwhelmed. So much of our work is being dismantled, and many of us wonder if we can pull ourselves back from the brink yet again. I believe we can. I have seen what we can do when we work together.
No tenemos que elegir: ¡la energía limpia es energía asequible!
En estos momentos se habla mucho de los elevados costes de la energía, y con razón. El aumento de los gastos en infraestructuras de gas está afectando a todo el mundo. Clean Water Action y nuestros socios en materia de clima y trabajo queríamos profundizar en cómo esto está afectando a los vecinos de Massachusetts, especialmente a las personas de las comunidades de justicia ambiental, por lo que lanzamos dos encuestas a nivel estatal para conocer mejor los problemas energéticos más acuciantes a los que se enfrentan nuestras comunidades.
We Don’t Have to Choose: Clean Energy is Affordable Energy!
There’s a lot of chatter right now about the high costs of energy, and rightly so. The rising expenses of gas infrastructure are hitting everyone. Clean Water Action and our climate and labor partners wanted to dig deeper into how this is impacting real Massachusetts neighbors, particularly folks in Environmental Justice communities, so we launched two statewide surveys to learn more about the most pressing energy issues our communities face.
3 Things We Loved About Winter Canvassing in 2026
Canvassing is the heart of Clean Water Action. Over a winter of relentless breaking bad news and AI-generated slop, the connections we made with our members at your front doors mattered more than ever. To everyone who stopped to chat with us about your local neighborhoods and the environmental issues that matter to you, even if only for five minutes, thank you!
Why Groundwater Matters
It has been an unusually warm winter in the Western United States, allowing meteorologists to coin the delightful and descriptive phrase “snow drought.” California is more fortunate than other western states — after three consecutive years of robust rain and snowfall, our reservoirs began the winter at or above historic averages and continue to be full. But the powerful storms of December and February aren’t reflected in the current mountain snowpack, as record-high temperatures are melting the snow almost as fast as it falls. The March 1 snow survey showed snowpack at 66% of normal levels for