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Wish lists for seniors at the Plant Connector on Main Street in North Adams, part of the "Be a Santa to a Senior" program in Berkshire County this year.

'Be a Santa to a Senior' Returns for Holiday Season

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff
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'Be a Santa' trees are located in all three Stop & Shop stores in North Adams and Pittsfield, as well as Wild Oats in Williamstown and the Plant Connector in North Adams. 

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The "Be a Santa to a Senior" program has returned to Berkshire County, giving residents a chance to provide a customized gift to an older adult who could use some holiday cheer.  

Last week, trees went up in five retail locations with ornaments that have a name and wish list on them.  To be a Santa, shoppers can return an unwrapped gift to the location with the ornament attached.  

Ornaments will be available until Dec. 5 so that the presents can be delivered in time for the holidays.

Administered by Home Instead Senior Care, the program has provided more than 2 million gifts to seniors across the nation since 2003. It brightens folks' days with a present and a smiling face when it is delivered to them, say organizers.

"The program is based around the idea of 'giving trees' and it's focused on seniors, so we've always partnered with organizations in the community -- senior centers, Councils on Aging, nursing homes, Meals on Wheels, that kind of thing -- and we asked them to think of seniors within their realm who were in need, for one, but the second thing was also people who were on their own or isolated during the holiday time," said Donna Smith, franchise owner of the Pittsfield Home Instead office.

"And so the giving trees obviously are an opportunity to give a gift to these people but they have typically in the past come with a delivery also so it's not only gifts but a visit at the holiday time. So that's why we think about isolated people as well."

County residents have been Santas to seniors for almost 20 years. The program took a two-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic but has returned this year.



Coordinators hope to collect 500 gifts for more than 100 local seniors this year. Commonly requested gifts are comfortable clothing and basic items such as socks, hats and gloves, snacks, and puzzle books.

Smith reported that people have been very generous, often purchasing multiple items from the wish lists. Gift givers will sometimes include a handmade card or a drawing from a child, as personal touches are always appreciated by the recipients.

"I just want to say how much we at Home Instead in the Berkshires are grateful to our community because even every year, though we've been doing it for so long, I'm blown away by their generosity," she said.

"When we first started doing it and we had gift suggestions, I thought people would pick one gift out of the suggestions, but people buy all of the gift suggestions. Their generosity touches my heart and it means a lot. Even though they don't get to see who it goes to, please know it's appreciated."

Wild Oats in Williamstown and The Plant Connector in North Adams are new program partners this year.  Giving trees can be found at:

  • Stop & Shop Supermarket, 660 Merrill Road, Pittsfield
  • Stop & Shop Supermarket, 1 Dan Fox Drive, Pittsfield
  • Stop & Shop Supermarket, 876 State Road, North Adams
  • Wild Oats Market, 320 Main St., Williamstown
  • The Plant Connector, 73 Main St., North Adams

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Berkshire Health Group Sets 8.75% Premium Rise for FY27

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires Staff
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The towns and school districts in Berkshire Health Group will see an 8.75 percent increase in health insurance premiums in the fiscal year that begins on July 1.
 
Ten of the 12 voting members on the BHG board decided Wednesday morning at McCann Technical School on a vote of 8-2 to set the health plan rates for municipal employees in the member towns and districts.
 
The hike is a little more than half of the 16 percent increase the joint purchase group enacted for the current fiscal year.
 
Wednesday's decision will come as welcome news to town managers and administrators and school superintendents who may have been fearing a repeat of FY26, but the 8.75 percent hike still likely will constrain the spending decisions that officials will be making over the next few months as they prepare to send budgets to town meetings across the county this spring.
 
The main decision point for the BHG board on Wednesday morning: how to cover Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists or GLP-1 medications, commonly marketed under trade names like Ozempic, Wegovy and Rybelsus.
 
The board decided that the weight-loss drugs no longer will be covered for all employees covered under BHG plans and will be covered only for those people who have been diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes.
 
Joseph Anderson of Gallagher Benefit Services told the Berkshire Health Group board members that demand for the GLP-1 medications has exploded in their member units in recent years.
 
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