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Giving Garden volunteer Missy Bowler harvests tomatoes. The garden provides 9,000 pounds a year of fresh, organically grown vegetables to local pantries and kitchens.

Giving Garden Uses Grant Funds to Increase Produce Donations

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Giving Garden at Pittsfield Church of Christ is expanding to feed more community members thanks to a nearly $11,000 grant from the state.

Garden coordinator Gordon Clark said the two small hoop houses put up through donations has really increased what it can offer. The grant will fund a large hoop house should help provide even more vegetables for local food pantries.

"This grant is an incredible gift to our garden and to our community," said Clark. "When food budgets are tight, choices are often limited to inexpensive carbohydrates and processed foods. But during our growing season our neighbors who rely on food pantries can select fresh, local, organic produce. We're looking forward to offering those choices for more of the year."

The garden will build and equip a 30-foot by 96-foot hoop house, a type of greenhouse made by draping heavy plastic over an arched frame. This structure us estimated to increase food output by 25 percent on the Valentine Road property.

The 2,800-square-foot greenhouse will add several weeks to the growing season in spring and fall as well as protect the garden from local pests and animals.

The funds will provide the structure for the larger hoop house, but all of the construction will be volunteer work. Currently there are about 6 full-time volunteers and an additional 10 during harvest time.

Clark said food security in the area isn’t getting any better, so Giving Garden needs to amp up its production to supply larger amounts. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many people are facing job layoffs and already at-risk community members are being further devastated.

The Food Infrastructure Grant Program aims to increase sustainability and resiliency of the state's food system in the COVID-19 pandemic. The Giving Garden was included in the program's first round of awards that included 26 organizations.

More than $6 million has for been distributed across the state for investments in technology, equipment, and increased capacity and distribution. Food insecure communities were of priority in these funds, which total $36 million.

The Giving Garden is an all-volunteer nonprofit organization that grows vegetables and produce for families and individuals in the community that struggle to put fresh food on their tables.

It was created in 2012 when members of the church had a vision to help others by planting a garden.  The garden now stretches over about 2.5 acres with a tractor, rototiller, cultivator, and seed planter for the volunteers' use.


Each year, the Giving Garden provides 9,000 pounds of fresh, organic vegetables to local food pantries.

Harvesting is done on Tuesday evenings for delivery to the food pantries it supplies to ensure its fresh as possible.

The Food Pantry at South Congregational Church in Pittsfield is one of these pantries and coordinator Mary Wheat is thankful for the garden.  

"It is such a gift to be able to distribute these fresh vegetables from spring into late fall to the 525 families we currently serve," she said in a statement. "We are deeply grateful for the Giving Garden's hard work to better the lives of people in our community."

Giving Garden also donates to St. Joe's Kitchen at the church, which serves meals to the homeless, as well as to the Christian Center.

“When people don't have a lot of money they buy more comfort and quick foods, and really good fresh vegetables aren’t purchased," Gordon said. "We consider the pantries are doing a great job at distribution all we want to do is grow and supply them."

Giving Garden has received a couple of other grants this year including one to help fix its machinery and one to help complete another hoop house. It also received a small greenhouse as a donation from Hillcrest Educational services.


Tags: food pantry,   gardens,   state grant,   

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North Adams Regional Reopens With Ribbon-Cutting Celebration

By Tammy DanielsiBerkshires Staff

BHS President and CEO Darlene Rodowicz welcomes the gathering to the celebration of the hospital's reopening 10 years to the day it closed. 
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The joyful celebration on Thursday at North Adams Regional Hospital was a far cry from the scene 10 years ago when protests and tears marked the facility's closing
 
Hospital officials, local leaders, medical staff, residents and elected officials gathered under a tent on the campus to mark the efforts over the past decade to restore NARH and cut the ribbon officially reopening the 136-year-old medical center. 
 
"This hospital under previous ownership closed its doors. It was a day that was full of tears, anger and fear in the Northern Berkshire community about where and how residents would be able to receive what should be a fundamental right for everyone — access to health care," said Darlene Rodowicz, president and CEO of Berkshire Health Systems. 
 
"Today the historic opportunity to enhance the health and wellness of Northern Berkshire community is here. And we've been waiting for this moment for 10 years. It is the key to keeping in line with our strategic plan which is to increase access and support coordinated county wide system of care." 
 
Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield, under the BHS umbrella, purchased the campus and affiliated systems when Northern Berkshire Healthcare declared bankruptcy and closed on March 28, 2014. NBH had been beset by falling admissions, reductions in Medicare and Medicaid payments, and investments that had gone sour leaving it more than $30 million in debt. 
 
BMC was able to reopen the ER as an emergency satellite facility and slowly restored and enhanced medical services including outpatient surgery, imaging, dialysis, pharmacy and physician services. 
 
But it would take a slight tweak in the U.S. Health and Human Services' regulations — thank to U.S. Rep. Richie Neal — to bring back inpatient beds and resurrect North Adams Regional Hospital 
 
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