Stanton Home Awarded Funds Toward Garden Project

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Stanton Home has received $5,000 toward its North Plain Garden Project.

GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass. — Stanton Home has been awarded $5,000 by the Berkshire Charitable Life Foundation for the further development of its garden education programs.

A New England farm turned therapeutic facility, Stanton Home is located on a working organic farm.

The North Plain Garden Project will provide a participatory, life-enhancing gardening program for special-needs residents throughout Southern Berkshire County. The garden project will be administered by Stanton Home, formerly known as Life Needs Coop, a longstanding community leader in special needs co-housing.

The project will offer specialized instruction on greenhouse and garden bed preparation, planting, composting and harvesting, engaging students in discussions and preparation techniques that highlight nutrient content, health benefits, and use of various herbs, vegetables and fruits. Similar special-needs programs across the country have proven that gardening enriches the quality of life. It expands nutritional knowledge, improves eating habits and increases physical dexterity — vital to an individual's well-being.



"With nature as the primary teacher, the students learn responsibility, connection and teamwork. The support of Berkshire Charitable Life Foundation will allow us to broaden our services and offer their benefits to those with special needs in Southern Berkshire County," said Peter Stanton, executive director. "An expanded garden project represents a vital piece of the range of therapeutic opportunities that we offer, which we aim to make both educational and enjoyable."

The North Plain Garden Project will take place April through September 2014, and will feature two 4-hour classes per week.

Since 1986, Stanton Home has been dedicated to offering enriching activities, therapeutic day programs and communal living for people with special needs.


Tags: assisted living,   gardens,   special needs,   therapeutic,   

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Pittsfield Subcommittee Supports Tax Incentive for St. Joe's Project

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The developer of the former St. Joseph's Central High School dreams of a glass rear that floods light into the auditorium and allows for more parking. 

On Tuesday, the subcommittee on Community and Economic Development unanimously supported a proposed 10-year tax increment exemption agreement to redevelop the former Catholic high school. 

They heard details about the plan to convert the shuttered school into a 70 percent residential, 30 percent commercial building with 20 percent of the 19 apartments designated affordable. It is expected to be an 18-month project once begun. 

Over the last decade or so, developer David Carver, of Scarafoni Associates & CT Management Group, has been involved with several overhauls of churches, school buildings, and even a firehouse into apartments. 

"I've always been interested in older historic buildings, especially in downtowns, and as the economy changes, we know there are lots of older buildings, worthy buildings that need a new life, and I've always found it interesting and a challenge to save them and turn around," Carver said. 

"Most of these buildings, I will say, are generally better built and more attractive than some of the new buildings that are built everywhere, and I've always been drawn to that, and it's almost like public art to me."

In 2017, the 120-year-old school ceased operations. After the COVID-19 pandemic hit, it sheltered people without homes before The Pearl, a 40-bed downtown shelter, was finished a few years ago. 

The TIE would freeze the current property value base, starting at 100 percent forgiveness in the first year, decreasing by 10 percent annually over the agreement's 10-year period. 

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