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Jessica Sweeney thanks the community that overwhelmingly supported her small downtown North Adams business. She raised $10,000 in three days to keep her doors open this winter.

Savvy Hive Thrift Shop Saved by Community Donations

By Breanna SteeleiBerkshires Staff
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NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — Four days ago, Jessica Sweeney reluctantly posted a plea to her community: her small downtown business wouldn't survive the winter. 
 
Coming back from an unpaid maternity, Savvy Hive was "facing financial strain and at serious risk of closing," she wrote on Facebook. "I shouldn't have to choose between bringing my child into the world and keeping our community-rooted business open — yet here we are."
 
She started a thrive campaign and the community overwhelmingly answered her call, hitting her $10,000 fundraising goal by noon on Thursday. 
 
"I was hitting the iceberg, and I got really scared. To be honest, this year has been, overall, really challenging on the business because of the wider climate that we're under, but also because I was pregnant and then on maternity leave," she said. "And as much as my maternity leave was unpaid, it also meant that I had to pay staff. It was way more than it could afford. And, in particular, September was considerably down compared to year over year, and couldn't cover the costs for me to be away."
 
Savvy Hive is a clothing thrift store that also sells vintage and secondhand clothing and local artists' goods. Sweeney started as a pop-up in 2021 inside Berkshire Emporium and then moved a couple doors down to 53 Main St. a year later. 
 
With the birth of her second child, she had to rely on paid staff to keep the operation going. Sweeney said the fragility of the local small businesses has been a topic at their monthly meetings.
 
"A lot of us have been talking about like we're just one maternity leave away or we're just one illness away from closing our doors and like that is scary," Sweeney said. 
 
In fact, it was one of her small-business neighbors, Emilee Yawn at the Plant Connector, who encouraged her to consider a Thrive drive as she wrestled with the reality of closing her doors. 
 
"I did not expect this level of success with this campaign," she said, adding it won't solve all the problems, "but it is the part that I need the help with, like those other parts that I think the business will be able to solve, and it felt like a really big ask, and to receive the support back so quickly is wild to me in the best way."
 
Sweeney was shocked by the donations she's gotten from around the country. It helps to see people being so supportive of a small business, she said, especially at a time when small businesses need the help.
 
"To see people who have been customers since day one, to see my friends, my family, but also like perfect strangers — I look at this list of donors and I don't know a lot of these people — just be willing to help support a business in this way is really reaffirming and validating," she said. "That this community, and or at least a lot of people, really care about our small businesses, that is so important right now in the greater context of the world, because we need our small businesses."
 
Sweeney said small businesses are the backbone of the community and if they're not set up for success, the downtown will be dead. 
 
She estimates Savvy Hive keeps 90 percent of its dollars in the community, hires local people and keeps reams of clothing out of landfills. Beyond retail, it distributes free clothing to people in need, and provides a place for local crafters and makers to sell their work. 
 
In her post, Sweeney wrote "Closing our doors would impact much more than me, it would ripple across our community."
 
With the pressure somewhat off, she's trying at new options to ensure Savvy Hive's survival, such as doing regional markets, offering alterations, clothing rentals and establishing an online storefront. 
 
Seeing the success of her campaign, she plans to start a  North Adams Small Business Winter Fund, creating an emergency fund for other small businesses in the community who may need help.
 
"We have been hearing a lot from different businesses, not just in North Adams, but in the Northern Berkshires, about the challenges that they're facing right now," Sweeney said, adding she's already invested in community organizing and as North Adams is "sort of bailing me out," she'd like to share the wealth as it were.  
 
"If there's a way that I can extend that arm to all the people who are way too scared to admit that they're struggling, then I want to do that."
 
With her recent scare, she decided to research ways to improve policies for small-business owners since many have to find help and insure themselves.
 
"I also want to take this opportunity to work with local agencies to really talk about how we solve the unpaid work, unpaid leave, benefits, challenge of owning a small business," she said. "I think there's very real solutions that can come to the table with that through collective organizing."
 
Sweeney wants everyone to know small businesses are in need and it's OK to ask for help. She hopes more people recognize and utilize their local businesses and help in any way they can.
 
"I challenge the community to think about how they're supporting small businesses in January," she said. "I challenge the city of North Adams to think about how they're strategizing the support structures for our small businesses. And I challenge the small businesses who are struggling to say something. 
 
"We can support you before you have to close. Don't be afraid to tell someone, I'm proof that when we ask for help, we can receive it."

Tags: donations,   small business,   thrift store,   

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Why the Massachusetts Art Community Is Worth Continued Investment

By James BirgeGuest Column
How do we quantify the value of art on society and culture? Even eye-popping figures, like the $100 million estimate for the jewels stolen from the Louvre, or the record auction last fall that saw a piece by Gustav Klimt sell for more than $236 million can't fully account for the value of the history, stories, and emotions behind the creations themselves. But beyond that, there is a measurable financial, cultural and social benefit of the arts that is often taken for granted. 

Closer to home, arts and cultural production in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts totals nearly $30 billion annually, representing more than 4 percent of the state's economic output, according to the Mass Cultural Council. All told, more than 130,000 jobs are spread across the commonwealth creating a vibrant and thriving artistic community for us all to enjoy. 

Despite the obvious impact, these figures are under threat. A recent survey by MassCreative compiled recent federal cuts to the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Institute of Museum and Library Services and identified 63 grants canceled and $4.2 million in grant funding rescinded across New England so far this year. 

The dollars, of course, are important. But they also only scratch the surface on what they bring to the community. Today, we risk losing part of the culture and identity many now take for granted. 

While others choose to look past these less tangible, but just as vital benefits, we're doing the opposite. Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts is all in to ensure the next generation retains their access to works of art, while also being empowered to create themselves. 

Last fall, MCLA officially broke ground on the new Campagna Kleefeld Center for Creativity in the Arts, which will serve as a new hub for the campus and the local community for arts programming. When complete in fall of 2027, our students will benefit, but so will all of Berkshire County and artists in the surrounding area. 

This exciting new facility is just one of the many forthcomings our region can enjoy in the coming years. Just a few miles away, anticipation builds for the Fall 2027 anticipated opening for the Williams College Museum of Art. Years in the making, the museum likewise grows from an enduring commitment to the arts, both in curriculum and in practice. Exciting times are also underway for the Clark Art Institute with the construction of a new facility to house a collection of 331 works of art, including paintings, sculptures, drawings and other works. Their wing is scheduled for completion in 2028. And listeners will no doubt enjoy the sounds and melodies from Mass MoCA Records, the latest endeavor to foster creativity and artistic pursuits through music launched in October as well. Of course, many are also awaiting the reopening of the Berkshire Museum anticipated this summer, after a tremendous renovation process to rejuvenate the experience for visitors. 

So much time, energy, and yes, dollars, have already been invested in taking these facilities from ideas and sketches and making them reality. But they represent much more than new buildings. They represent new opportunities to cultivate and accelerate the thriving arts community in Massachusetts and the northern Berkshires. 

Art, regardless of the medium, is a reflection of who we are, where we've been, and what we aspire to be. It can be inspired by hopes or fears and chronicle collective triumphs as well as tribulations. The goal of art is not only to document history, but to inspire those positioned to change it and to feel something new or even to provoke us to revisit our own assumptions or misconceptions. 

As unfathomable of a number as $30 billion can seem, boiling down the impact to any number inherently discounts the unknowable downstream effects our graduates will bring to the community and the broader world after they leave our institutions. Likewise, rescinding $4.2 million now removes a huge chunk of that growth potential.  

Justification for making these investments today when simply boiled down to dollars and cents still places us on solid ground strictly from a financial perspective that forgoes all of the intangible, but no less valuable, benefits as well.  

The arts are still worth our support. And our community will be richer for it. 

James Birge, PhD, is president of Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts in North Adams.  

 

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