ReStore will not be accepting any donations on Saturday as volunteers from Lenox High School will be helping clean up discarded items from the property.
The lot is under surveillance and the stores is considering cracking down on dumpers.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — The Central Berkshire Habitat for Humanity ReStore won't be taking any donations on Saturday — because it's already overloaded with items dumped on its property.
ReStore on Hubbard Avenue sells donated furniture, building supplies and home improvement materials to help keep bulky items out of landfills and to raise money for Habitat for Humanity.
But people have been dumping their unwanted items on the property without an appointment and sometimes after hours. That's left a pile of trash for the nonprofit to deal with.
"So people just, you know, came and even if it's closed, I personally catch several people in the camera out of hours," said ReStore general manager Alex Valdivieso.
Valdivieso has been the general manager for less than a year but says last summer was a big problem with dumping and with the weather getting nicer, people have started to come again to dump their unwanted items.
To help get rid of the waste, 20 to 25 teens are volunteering from Lenox High School to help fill dumpsters and clean up the lot that's now littered with items needing to be thrown away.
Valdivieso says he has two 30-foot-long trash roll-offs that will be filled this weekend.
"I will say like 80 percent of all the items that are outside was because dumping," he said. "People dumped there a lot and we just need to keep moving it some way, somehow."
The store has a rolloff that needs to be dumped once a month but he has been asking Casella to come more often because of how fast it's being filled up.
"At least three times a month. So we increase it most on the summertime and we try to push a little bit, you know, but we went for as, I said on an average ... it was like maybe 14 times a year," Valdivieso said. "We went up like 20, but just for summertime."
But hauling the trash more frequently is costing the nonprofit more money.
"It's going to be like at least a couple thousand dollars because this is out of schedule," Valdivieso said of Saturday's planned cleanup.
ReStore may have to start taking legal action if people continue to dump on the property.
"We never did it before as in terms of like just go to police and say, 'hey, listen, this is what they do,' and we didn't do it that, but I think we're going to do this to establish something," he said, so people know they cannot do it."
Valdivieso is asking that people make an appointment to drop off items and send the store pictures of what they want to donate to see if the store wants it.
"We have a donation line service, which is managed by a coordinator. So what they do is provide pictures of the items so they will get evaluated and checked on that and then we have two systems — one that you can drop off into the store and also we provide a pickup service," he said.
ReStore has a truck that goes out four times a week to different parts of the county and will schedule a pickup of items at no cost.
ReStore is open Wednesday through Sunday, 9 to 5; contact the store at restore@berkshirehabitat.org or 413-443-2106. Information on how to donate goods or schedule a pickup can be found here.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
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New Camp Is Safe Place for Children Suffering Loss to Addiction
By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
Last year's Happy Campers courtesy of Max Tabakin.
PITTSFIELD, Mass. — A new camp is offering a safe place for children who have lost a parent or guardian to addiction.
Director Gayle Saks founded the nonprofit "Camp Happy Place" last year. The first camp was held in June with 14 children.
Saks is a licensed drug and alcohol counselor who works at the Brien Center. One of her final projects when studying was how to involve youth, and a camp came to mind. Camp had been her "happy place" growing up, and it became her dream to open her own.
"I keep a bucket list in my wallet, and it's right on here on this list, and I cross off things that I've accomplished," she said. "But it is the one thing on here that I knew I had to do."
The overnight co-ed camp is held at a summer camp in Winsted, Conn., where Saks spent her summers as a child. It is four nights and five days and completely free. Transportation is included as are many of the items needed for camping. The camp takes up to 30 children.
"I really don't think there's any place that exists specifically for this population. I think it's important to know, we've said this, but that it is not a therapeutic camp," Saks said.
She said the focus is on fun for the children, though they are able to talk to any of the volunteer and trained staff. The staff all have experience in social work, addiction and counseling, and working with children.
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