Last  year at this time the outcry following the tree-cutting at Housatonic Meadows State Park in Sharon was heard all the way in Hartford. The call for oversight on the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP), which had cut more than 100 trees in the popular riverside park, evolved into proposed legislation. While legislation was passed in May, it never quite met with the full satisfaction of citizen groups that had come together to not only put the focus on the problem of hazardous-tree management by the agency, but also to do something about the damage done.

Over the summer,  the Housatonic Meadows Preservation Action (HMPA), a citizen group, pressed on. Its volunteer members started with a clean-up session at the park to remove rotting wood chips from the bases of pine trees and to plan next steps. The goal was to do something about remediating the damage at the park in time for the fall 2022 planting season.

In the process, the group also hatched an unusual collaboration with DEEP and other state agency workers to restore the park. The collaborative effort resulted in real action. By mid-October, after many design sessions, state workers arrived with heavy equipment to plant 21 trees along a stretch in front of the parking lot. The Northwest Conservation District also provided engineering work to determine water runoff  needs.

Now, as HMPA prepares for more restoration work over the 2023 summer, plans are being made to again enlist volunteers to restore the riverbank and prepare for more new plantings.

Volunteers will be needed to help with weeding, watering, replanting plugs that are dislodged and other small tasks that may come up.  The riverbank will undergo an herbicidal program and more trees and shrubs are scheduled to be planted there as well as in areas excavated for rain gardens.

HMPA members Katherine Freygang and Bruce Bennett, both  of Cornwall, are working with DEEP. Bennett, who also is the tree warden in Kent, has developed a planting list with the idea that early ordering might ensure availability of plants.

Freygang said HMPA is anticipating as many as 15 volunteer work sessions at the park starting in May and running through October.

HMPA was joined by other groups, including the Housatonic Valley Association, the National Audubon Society and Trout Unlimited. The Connecticut Council on Environmental Quality also supported the groups’ testimony at hearings about DEEP’s hazardous tree approach and the need to remediate damage at Housatonic Meadows. Others at HMPA and many other citizens testified at hearings and kept the questions coming about the tree cutting at the park.

Ultimately the state’s involvement in the restoration included many departments: parks, forestry, wildlife, fisheries and park services.

These concerned citizens and the state workers who helped in the process should be saluted for their dedication to Housatonic Meadows State Park, a destination retreat just like Macedonia Brook State Park and Kent Falls State Park.   

The restoration work includes creating a swale to carry water from the parking area to a rain garden to prevent erosion of the riverbank.  Native wildflowers will be planted in the rain gardens. The project features shrubs and plants to support birds, fish and other wildlife and discourage invasive species, and a safety barrier at the river bank with berms and boulders.

Signage will inform visitors about trails and amenities at the park, making it clear where there is access to fishing, boating and picnic areas. In addition, signs will tell the story of the restoration project and also provide an ecology lesson in native plants and biodiversity.

The image of protestors stomping through the snow a year ago in January has transformed into one of citizens working with DEEP and other state agencies to restore the park — thanks to the dedication of HMPA volunteers.

Latest News

HVRHS wins Holiday Tournament

Housatonic Valley Regional High School's boys varsity basketball team won the Berkshire League/Connecticut Technical Conference Holiday Tournament for the second straight year. The Mountaineers defeated Emmett O'Brien Technical High School in the tournament final Dec. 30. Owen Riemer was named the most valuable player.

Hiker begins year with 1,000th summit of Bear Mountain

Salisbury’s Joel Blumert, center, is flanked by Linda Huebner, of Halifax, Vermont, left, and Trish Walter, of Collinsville, atop the summit of Bear Mountain on New Year’s Day. It was Blumert’s 1,000th climb of the state’s tallest peak. The Twin Lakes can be seen in the background.

Photo by Steve Barlow

SALISBURY — The celebration was brief, just long enough for a congratulatory hug and a handful of photos before the winter wind could blow them off the mountaintop.

Instead of champagne, Joel Blumert and his hiking companions feted Jan. 1 with Entenmann’s doughnuts. And it wasn’t the new year they were toasting, but Blumert’s 1,000th ascent of the state’s tallest peak.

Keep ReadingShow less
Year in review: Mountaineers thrived in 2025

Tessa Dekker, four-year basketball player at Housatonic Valley Regional High School, was named female Athlete of the Year at the school's athletic award ceremony in May 2025.

Photo by Riley Klein

FALLS VILLAGE — From breakthrough victories to record-shattering feats, the past year brimmed with moments that Housatonic Valley Regional High School athletes will never forget.

From the onset of 2025, school sports were off to a good start. The boys basketball team entered the year riding high after winning the Berkshire League/Connecticut Technical Conference Holiday Tournament championship on Dec. 30, 2024.

Keep ReadingShow less
Year in review: Housing, healthcare and conservation take center stage in Sharon

Sharon Hospital, shown here, experienced a consequential year marked by a merger agreement with Northwell Health, national recognition for patient care, and renewed concerns about emergency medical and ambulance coverage in the region.

Archive photo

Housing—both its scarcity and the push to diversify options—remained at the center of Sharon’s public discourse throughout the year.

The year began with the Sharon Housing Trust announcing the acquisition of a parcel in the Silver Lake Shores neighborhood to be developed as a new affordable homeownership opportunity. Later in January, in a separate initiative, the trust revealed it had secured a $1 million preliminary funding commitment from the state Department of Housing to advance plans for an affordable housing “campus” on Gay Street.

Keep ReadingShow less