More than 100 volunteers at the Boys and Girls Club assemble 40,000 meal kits for distribution.
Volunteers included students from Pittsfield High School's Rotary Club, two Rotary Youth Exchange students from Germany and Japan, Adams Community Bank, and one of the event's sponsors, UNICO of Pittsfield.
Rotary Club was a sponsor of the event, which was also its Day of Service.
A volunteer fills a tub wit Spanish rice. The meal kits will go to 13 food pantries in Berkshire County.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Unity can have significant impacts on a community. This was demonstrated during the Berkshire United Way's annual meal kit packing event on Saturday.
More than 100 individuals filled the Boys and Girls Club to assemble 40,000 meal kits filled with apple cinnamon oatmeal, Spanish rice, tomato basil pasta, and minestrone. Each of the kits includes seasoning packets.
The kits will be distributed to 13 food pantries across the county, including South Community Pantry, the Christian Center, and more. Berkshire Bounty, one of the event's sponsors, will be distributing kits to several pantries in South County.
"We're united for good. We're united to feed the Berkshires. We're united in order to meet our mission, to meet needs in the community," said Thomas Bernard, Berkshire United Way president and CEO, and this year's Rotary Club of Pittsfield president.
Volunteers of all ages from several organizations attended the event, including Pittsfield High School Rotary Interact Club students, two Rotary Youth Exchange students from Germany and Japan, Adams Community Bank, and one of the event's sponsors, UNICO of Pittsfield.
"We want to remind people that if you can give something, it makes a difference, because what you give, what your neighbor gives, what your community gives, all collectively, adds up to something really powerful," Bernard said.
This also served as the Rotary Club of Pittsfield's annual Day of Service.
Berkshire United Way partners with End Hunger New England, an affiliation of The Outreach Program, to put on this event.
The Rotary Club was holding its district conference in Pittsfield this year, so Berkshire United Way worked with the club to align the event with the conference. It was also one of the event's sponsors.
End Hunger New England is running 17 events in 16 days, with this Berkshire United Way event being the second largest. The goal is to feed 338,000 people during this period.
"Between now and Mother's Day, we're feeding a lot of people. One out of three people in the Commonwealth will be hungry at some point this year, and a lot of people in the Berkshires," said Matthew Martin, New England regional manager for the outreach program.
The organization has been doing this work for 15 years and aims to combat hunger by creating community connections and providing sustainable meal solutions.
"The reason we started doing it was because there were 2 million people in New England that were hungry. We got it down to a 20-year low. It took us eight and a half years, but then the pandemic shot up to as high as it had ever been. It started to go down again, and then inflation, cuts to federal government funding for food security, are causing it to go up, but we're going to push it down again," Martin said.
"It's like whack-a-mole. We're just like, doing everything we can to keep pushing hunger down, but the only way you can really do it is community. It's by living united. Berkshires have hungry kids, elderly people, veterans, college students, immigrants, refugees; there's sons of people in our neighborhoods that are hungry. We're going to unify and make this happen. Feed them. If there's more hungry people, we'll just work harder."
The need now is greater than it has been. It is skyrocketing and it's getting harder. The community is worried about cuts to school programs, SNAP, and other benefits people receive, Bernard said.
"We're meeting a need, but we're also building community. You can see it at the tables. You can see the connection," said Bernard.
"I love the friendly competition that comes into all of this. As people, keep score of how many boxes and where they are going, but it's all because at the end of the day, we're going to put these meals on trucks, and people are going to pick them up, and they're going to go to pantries throughout the Berkshires."
The organization's motto is End Hunger New England. However, it could also be called Enriching Lives New England because the community that's created when feeding all the hungry neighbors in the area enriches everyone who's involved, Martin said.
The National Association of Letter Carriers has organized food drives around Mother's Day, and churches collected significant amounts of food for Thanksgiving, often enough to last six months, Martin said.
Currently, food pantries receive such donations but find them depleted within a month. As a result, there is a continuous effort to assemble and stock meals for the remaining 10 months of the year.
This is not the only volunteer initiative for Berkshire United Way. Next Saturday, May 10, it is partnering with the postal carriers for the annual Stamp Out Hunger food drive.
Volunteers help unload mail trucks as they come to the post offices with food donations, weigh everything, and then load it into vehicles for distribution to 12 area food pantries.
All food collected in Dalton and Pittsfield is brought to the Pittsfield post office and distributed to pantries throughout Pittsfield and Dalton. Shifts are available from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. More information here.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
Your Comments
iBerkshires.com welcomes critical, respectful dialogue. Name-calling, personal attacks, libel, slander or foul language is not allowed. All comments are reviewed before posting and will be deleted or edited as necessary.
No Comments
Friday Front Porch Feature: A Move-in Ready House
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Are you looking for a family home in a nice neighborhood? Then this might just be the home for you.
Our Friday Front Porch is a weekly feature spotlighting attractive homes for sale in Berkshire County. This week, we are showcasing 149 Kittredge Road.
This four-bedroom, 2 1/2-bath raised ranch was built in 1970 and is 2,140 square feet on a third of an acre.
It is listed for $465,000 with Lammachia Realty.
The main floor includes a kitchen, a living room and dining room, and three bedrooms, including the master. The fully furnished basement has the fourth bedroom, a half-bath, and another living room with a fireplace and a sliding glass door to the outside. A deck is off the kitchen.
Comes with range, double wall ovens, refrigerator, washer and dryer; heat and hot water are natural gas.
The two-car garage is under the main floor and accessed through the basement.
The yard is spacious enough for events or family fun.
The City Council is backing state legislation that updates the funding model for community media, including Pittsfield Community Television, to account for declining cable revenues. click for more
Nolan Booth scored the go-ahead goal with 6 minutes, 22 seconds left in the third, and Ben Harris made 20 saves to give McCann Tech the crown. click for more
Police used a combination of on-scene investigation and community surveillance footage to find a suspect in the hit-and-run that killed 69-year-old William Colbert last week.
click for more
Community members want Home Depot's leadership to take a stand against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids around their stores.
click for more