Volunteers, Wild Oats Market staff and Williamstown Police help distribute food as part of the Williamstown Food Pantry's and Wild Oats' Families Feeding Families program on the Tuesday before Thanksgiving.
Butternut squash is ready for distribution to recipients at the Williamstown Food Pantry last week. The cars started lining up at 7:30 outside the pantry.
Side dishes prepared by the staff at Wild Oats Market in Williamstown are packaged for delivery to families in need.
Some of the items that went into the Williamstown Food Pantry's Thanksgiving boxes.
The Williamstown Food Pantry distributed Thanksgiving baskets to 93 families.
Volunteers Carol DeMayo, left, and Carin DeMayo-Wall organize distribution from Williamstown's Sts. Patrick & Raphael Parish twice each month.
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — For several hours on a recent Wednesday morning, Carol DeMayo and the volunteers of the Williamstown Food Pantry distributed Thanksgiving baskets to 93 families.
The bundles included a turkey, canned goods, fresh squash, the ingredients for a homemade pumpkin pie … and a side of empathy and respect.
DeMayo, well into her fourth decade organizing the local non-profit, knew many if not most of the recipients who started lining up at 7:30, well before the announced 9 a.m. start of distribution.
And she took the time to get to know the ones she did not know and check in for updates on the lives of those she did.
There is the family that should have two incomes but for the fact that one of the parents has suffered three heart attacks and cannot work.
"They don't know how they're going to make it," DeMayo said. "It's just scary. They never thought they would be in this situation."
There is a woman whom DeMayo said has to be around 80 years old but still had her independence, until her car gave out.
"She's frantic," DeMayo said. "She's so frantic she's not going to have food when the family comes at Thanksgiving, and she wants everything to look fine."
The Williamstown Food Pantry is there for residents of Williamstown, New Ashford, Hancock and Pownal, Vt., all year round, distributing food and personal care items twice a month from its headquarters at Sts. Patrick and Raphael Parish on Southworth Street. DeMayo and her daughter, Carin DeMayo-Wall, also make house calls in between distribution dates, helping families through crises that arise.
At the holidays, the pantry runs a couple of special initiatives — the Thanksgiving baskets that were distributed on Nov. 15 and a partnership with Wild Oats Market for the "Families Feeding Families" initiative.
From Oct. 23 through Nov. 17, Wild Oats collected monetary donations from its shoppers to fund the purchase of prepared meals to be distributed to members of the community in time for the holiday.
A $30 donation funded an assortment of sides, including stuffing, mashed potatoes, glazed carrots, brussels sprouts, gravy, rolls, cranberry sauce and pumpkin pie — all prepared on-site by the staff at Wild Oats. A $50 donation supported those sides plus two pounds of roasted turkey.
Wild Oats Marketing and Member Relations Manager Amy Carey said the monthlong donation drive funded 50 meals for distribution.
On Tuesday morning, Wild Oats staff, Food Pantry volunteers and Williamstown Police officers helped load cars filled with holiday food for transport from the market to the pantry for distribution.
DeMayo said recently that the Williamstown Food Pantry this fall saw a rise in demand for its twice-monthly food distribution. A program that regularly expected to see 40 to 50 families on a given Wednesday started seeing 60 recipients in need.
"It was just the increase by numbers that took us by shock — not surprise, shock," she said. "We were scraping our cabinet."
Fortunately, the pantry was able to restock its shelves in time for the holidays.
"We put out the call, and, boy, did people react," DeMayo said, pointing in particular to regular donation drives at local houses of worship like First Congregational Church and First Baptist Church.
"We couldn't believe how they reacted. We asked for donations through the church, St. Patrick's, and on Facebook."
The Food Pantry uses its Facebook account not only to put out calls for urgent donation needs but also to spread the word about other agencies helping the community, like the Family Center of Northern Berkshire County (Child Care of the Berkshires) in North Adams that runs free programs for families with young children and a free children's clothing exchange program, and the Berkshire Food Project, which held its Thanksgiving meal on Monday.
DeMayo also makes sure that recipients who show up in person to Food Pantry distributions learn about agencies that can help.
Sometimes, she helps by just lending an ear in the moment.
"When you look in the car, you never know, sometimes they have Grandma back there and she doesn't say a word, but when you talk to them, they're so happy," DeMayo said. "Things like that pull at your heart."
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
Williams College Projects Underway on Main Street
By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
WILLIAMSTOWN, Mass. — A busy summer construction season around town got a little busier this week with the advancement of two unrelated projects near the Williams College Museum of Art.
Both the entrance and exit to Lawrence Hall Drive are seeing some changes in the coming weeks.
Earlier this summer, the college removed several large juniper bushes near the east side of Lawrence Hall Drive (the exit onto Main Street) as part of a larger project to make the area more safe for pedestrians.
"The College is replacing broken and deteriorating sections of sidewalk that are a safety issue," Williams Horticulture and Grounds Manager Tim Roberts wrote in an email responding to an inquiry about the work. "The old junipers have been damaged over time and constantly need to be pruned back off the sidewalk.
"I will be replacing the junipers with a plant to be determined later. The walkway will be widened three feet using a crushed stone material to accommodate large trucks that use this entry."
Roberts said the existing junipers in the Town Green needed to be removed to allow for the sidewalk widening.
He said, depending on weather, that the project should take about two weeks.
A busy summer construction season around town got a little busier this week with the advancement of two unrelated projects near the Williams College Museum of Art. click for more
Crust has been serving up classic and specialty pizzas since its opening in 2020 in Pittsfield, and for over a year now in Williamstown.
click for more
The town is seeking approval from the Conservation Commission for a project to replace the 2,100 square foot skate park on Stetson Road with an up-to-date concrete park on roughly the same footprint. click for more
On Wednesday, the trustees held the latest in a series of meetings to discuss the deed restriction that will keep those four homes affordable to people making up to 60 percent of the area median income.
click for more
Remedy Hall, which began its life in space at the First Congregational Church, this spring moved east on Main Street (Route 2) to 620 Main St., two doors west of Aubuchon Hardware. click for more