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Residents and community groups join forces to fight extreme heat

Wicked Cool Mystic Team
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Let’s make the Mystic “Wicked Cool”

  The Mystic River Watershed Association (MyRWA) – in collaboration with the Cities of Everett, Chelsea and Malden, the Town of Arlington, GreenRoots, Everett Community Growers and the Friends of the Malden River – kicked off a project this February to combat extreme heat in their municipalities through ideas led by residents and community leaders.

  Wicked Cool Mystic, which is funded through the state Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness (MVP) program, is a two-year effort to meaningfully engage residents, workers and community members in designing fun and affordable solutions to help people stay cool and healthy during our increasingly hot summers. Right now residents can share how they experience heat and potential solutions by taking the Wicked Cool Mystic Heat Safety Survey. Residents need to select the survey specific to your municipality (Arlington, Malden, Everett, Chelsea – and after completing the survey earn a $25 gift card.

  The project is a follow-up to Wicked Hot Mystic, a volunteer science effort that created a map of the hottest places in the watershed. The data show that the hottest neighborhoods in the Mystic River watershed correlate closely with historic redlining and current low-income communities of color.

  Wicked Cool Mystic will work with communities experiencing the worst effects of extreme heat. Community members will lead in designing, creating and implementing community-specific cooling solutions. Eight local Wicked Cool Ambassadors, two from each of the target communities, will help lead these efforts. The Ambassadors will distribute surveys, attend various community events and lead two community events about extreme heat and cooling interventions.

  “By recruiting, organizing, and training community members to lead cooling efforts, we hope the solutions are exciting to the community and meet their specific needs,” said MyRWA Community Organizer Marissa Zampino. “This highlights the importance of residents leading the fight against climate change as they are the experts in their own communities.”

  The project will mobilize hundreds of local residents to workshop cooling solutions, such as trees, splash pads, water fountains and misting stations. The project will create pilot projects in Chelsea, Malden and Everett.

  “I am really excited to get to work on this project and lead cooling efforts in my community,” said Everett Wicked Cool Mystic Ambassador Juan Soler-Ramos. “My community is really hot, and I want to educate and engage my friends and neighbors about the importance of this issue.”

  For more information, visit https://mysticriver.org/climate-resilience.

Wicked Cool Mystic Partners
Wicked Cool Mystic Partners
Wicked Hot Mystic Afternoon Heat Model-2
Wicked Hot Mystic Afternoon Heat Model
Wicked Cool Mystic Team
Wicked Cool Mystic Team

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