BTCF Reich Fund provides Grant to Elder Services' Meals on Wheels Program

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Berkshire County - Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation’s Joseph H. and Carol F. Reich Fund provides grant for Elder Services ’Meals on Wheels Program'

Elder Services of Berkshire County has received a grant in the amount of $6,860 from Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation’s Joseph H. and Carol F. Reich Fund, which was created to improve the quality of life for residents of the southern Berkshires.

The funding is in support of Elder Services’ Nutrition/Meals on Wheels program, which provides hot, nutritious meals to over 1,000 Berkshire seniors each weekday. This past year, Elder Services has served over a quarter-million meals - over 200,000 were delivered as Meals on Wheels to frail homebound seniors who might not otherwise have had a hot meal or a friendly visit. The remaining meals were served to seniors attending Elder Services’ 14 group lunch sites, located throughout Berkshire County.

The Nutrition/Meals on Wheels program has been dangerously under-funded for years, even as cost of preparing, serving, and delivering the meals continues to grow. Community organizations such as the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation provide Elder Services with much-needed support to address the program deficit.

This grant from the Joseph H. and Carol F. Reich Fund will help ensure that south county seniors who need home-delivered meals will continue to receive them.

Elder Services Meals on Wheels program is essential to the agency’s mission to provide Berkshire seniors the opportunity to live with dignity, independence and self-determination, and to achieve the highest possible quality of life.
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Pittsfield Council Passes $232.7M Budget

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The City Council unanimously approved a $232.7 million budget for the upcoming fiscal year. 

It is a modest, almost 2.9 percent increase from FY26. 

"I do want to give the community kind of a heads up as we move forward on budgets. What we see coming out of the federal government that's trickling down to the states, it's going to be harder and harder for us as a community to meet our needs under the Proposition 2 1/2," Councilor at Large Alisa Costa said. 

"We're going to have challenges, as we've seen communities across the state trying to override the Proposition 2 1/2, because we have dwindling amounts of money coming from the state and federal government." 

She pointed out that, at the same time, utility bills are going up for both residents and the city, as are the costs of pavement and other items. 

The amended budget of $232,777,720, down from the $232,782,090 originally proposed, includes cuts to the Department of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and the restoration of funds for councilors to attend the annual Massachusetts Municipal Association conference. 

The Pittsfield Public Schools' $86,855,061 budget includes $68,886,061 in state Chapter 70 funding and $18 million from the city. With $345,000 in school choice and Richmond tuition revenues, it totals $87,200,061 and is an approximately $300,000 increase from the Pittsfield Public Schools' FY26 budget of $86.9 million. 

The district's budget will fund 13 schools, as Morningside Community School will retire in the fall, and includes the middle school restructuring. 

Councilors also approved the use of $2 million in certified free cash to reduce the tax rate, and appropriated $450,551 for parking-related expenditures. 

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