Tuesday, October 2, 2012

We Prepare for Saturday's Clothing Sale


On Tuesday morning a group of very hardworking volunteers moved clothing for our sale to benefit the Friendship Center Food Pantry from Pat Cumberbatch's house in Williamstown to the St. Elizabeth Parish Center in North Adams. Here, sale leader Fran Berasi-Boisjolie, carries many items into the center.

The sale will be held on Saturday, Oct. 6, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the St. Elizabeth Parish Center. There will be an enormous selection of all types of clothes, linens and even jewelry!



Amy Hubner arrives, her truck loaded with items for the sale.


Rich Davis carries in two big bags of clothes.




This photo, with Rich Davis, Barbara Tassone, and Amy Hubner in it, shows the enormous amount of clothing still to be upacked and put up for sale. Don't miss it. It will be an awesome sale!


Here's a close-up of just one bag of clothes, filled to overflowing!

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Six Important Upcoming Events


Here are some important announcements that have come our way. I am pleased to pass them along:

1). Our Friend Cathy Chapman of the Berkshire Dream Center has informed me that the Dream Center is hosting an event this Saturday, Sept. 29, at 10 a.m. at The North Adams Movieplex. 

"We are having a special showing of the movie 'Won't Back Down,' which is being released Friday night. It is a feel-good family movie based on a true story about two parents who take on a school system to get better education for their children. There will be free
raffles for Hub gift certificates and movie tickets. We are also showing a promo video of the Dream Center. We would like to invite you and all the members of the Interfaith Initiative to attend. Tickets are $10 and can be purchased Friday night at our new mobile location at The First Congregational Church from 5-7. Tickets can be purchased at the door or by calling Cathy at 413-475-0616 to reserve a ticket.

2). The April 4th Coalition invites the public to a panel discussion on the 2012 Election and its economic impact (including the areas of tax reform, entitlement reform, and healthcare) and  the political ramifications for worker’s rights and collective bargaining.

The event will take place on Thursday, Oct. 4, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., in Murdock Hall, Room 218, Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. The event is free and open to the public. Attendees are encouraged to tell their stories and bring questions for the panelists.

Panelists for the forum will include John Weissman, director of the Western Mass Jobs with Justice; Nancy McGovern, AFSCME Council 93 Legislative Representative, and Daniel Bosley, former state representative and president of the North Adams Steeplecats. The moderator for the forum will be Dr. Robert Bence of the MCLA Political Science Department. 

"The April 4th Coalition is a collection of Union Representatives and concerned citizens located in Northern Berkshire county and our mission is to support collective bargaining and workers rights and to oppose tax breaks for the wealthy and corporations that outsource American jobs. If you would like to learn more about the April 4th Coalition or learn the location and time of our next meeting, visit us on Facebook or at our Website."

3). A Clothing and Linen Sale to benefit the Northern Berkshire Interfaith Action Initiative's Friendship Center Food Pantry will be held on Saturday, Oct. 6, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the St. Elizabeth Parish Center in North Adams.

Clothes of all types and for all seasons will be offered.

Those wishing to donate clean, gently used men’s, women’s and children’s outdoor clothing, including jackets, parkas, hats, gloves, socks and boots for the sale may still do so.

Options are: 1). Drop them off during business hours next week at the Northern Berkshire Community. Coalition/Family Place at 61 Main St., Suite 218, North Adams. 2). Or drop them off at the Friendship Center Food Pantry, 43 Eagle St., North Adams, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. or 4 to 6 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 3. Phone: 664-0123. 3). Or bring them to the Parish Center between 2 and 6 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 5. 4). Or call Mark Rondeau at 664-0130 and leave a message to arrange for pickup.

Volunteers are still needed and welcome: email deniseakrutiak@yahoo.com or fber@comcast.net.


4). The Berkshire Community Action Council (BCAC) is holding a Dinner Fundraiser to benefit its emergency services for senior citizens and those in need in Berkshire County. It is sponsored by the Orchards and its executive chef, Chris Bonnivier, along with several other Berkshire Chefs.

It will be held on Tuesday, Oct. 9, at 6 p.m. at the Orchards Hotel on Route 2 in Williamstown. Tickets are $50 per person (includes buffet and drinks). To buy a ticket, contact Barbara Bonnett at BBonnett@bcacinc.org or 413-446-5883.

5). The New Hope Methodist Church, working at the First Congregational Church Kitchen 134 Main Street, North Adams, will host an eat-in or take-out dinner to benefit the Friendship Center Food Pantry on Saturday, Oct. 13, from 5 to 6 p.m.

The menu will be Baked Pork Chops & Rice with Broccoli, Applesauce, Corn Bread and Halloween Cake for Dessert. The price will be: Adult, $9; Child, $4.50. Proceeds from this Dinner to Benefit The Friendship Food Pantry. To attend or pick up, please enter through Summer Street kitchen door.

They will also DELIVER to Adams, North Adams, Clarksburg and Williamstown Please reserve your dinner in advance by 5 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 11.

Call 413-663-7585 for reservations Leave a message on the answering machine with your name, telephone #, number of dinners, if you will eat-in or pick up. If you need delivery, please also leave your address and phone #.

6). Winter Blitz is an annual one-day weatherization event, where about 150 student volunteers from Williams (and this year, hopefully also from MCLA) weatherize homes of community members. 

"We provide basic services such as storm window installation, pipe wrapping, weather stripping, door sweeps, gasket insulation, and caulking of cracks, but no sophisticated structural work. All supplies and other costs are covered by the Zilkha Center at Williams, so there is absolutely no cost for homeowners. This year, the event will be held on November 10th, and we're seeking homeowners who would be interested in having their homes weatherized that day. Homeowners interested in the program should call 413-889-1735 or e-mail williamswinterblitz@gmail.com."

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

All Welcome to Interfaith Meeting Friday, Sept. 28


Here's the agenda:

Northern Berkshire Interfaith Action Initiative
Meeting, Friday, Sept. 28, 2012, 10 a.m. to noon
First Baptist Church of North Adams

1). Welcome/Introductions.

2). Moment of silent prayer.

3). Faith sharing.

4). Brief announcements.

5). 10:25 a.m. Fundraising event with BCAC? 

6). 10:40 a.m. Discussion with Kathy Quinn and colleague of NAMI Berkshire.

7). 11:35 a.m. Sarah Rowe and others: Williams College Winter Blitz free weatherization event. Nov. 10.

8). 11:50 a.m. Oct. 6 Clothing Sale preparations and discussion.

9). Adjourn.

Next meeting: Here on Friday, Oct. 19, at 10 a.m. Main topic to be determined.

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Fall: Serious Meetings, Fun Events




Wendy Krom appears on “In the Company of Friends” on Channel 15.

In this post: A discussion of Buddhism on our TV show; outdoor clothing and volunteers needed for our Oct. 6 sale;  NAMI Berkshire County featured at our Sept. 28 meeting; our August 17th meeting was dynamic and challenging; recent food pantry statistics; next year: Annual Meeting, CROP Walk.

A good friend on ‘In the Company of Friends’


Wendy Krom, who is the Northern Berkshire Neighbors Coordinator with the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition is the guest this month on “In the Company of Friends,” which is now airing on Fridays at 5 p.m. and Mondays at 1 p.m. on NBCTC Channel 15.

“First of all, to be asked that question is really a wonderful thing,” she said of being asked to be on the show.

“One of the things that I love so much about coming to the Northern Berkshire Interfaith Action Initiative meetings is the faith sharing that you have and the way the meeting begins is always with a moment of silent prayer and then sharing of faith,” Wendy said. “So there's been a couple of times where I’ve brought a reading... so it's really an honor and a privilege to be asked to be asked to be on the show to talk about this.”

Wendy was not originally a Buddhist. When she had to fill out a medical form asking for religious affiliation, “the first time I put ‘Buddhist’ was 'wow, that'’ something.’ So the question is, how does a nice Methodist girl like me become a Buddhist.”

She had long been interested in Native American spirituality and done a lot of reading in that area. Later, she starting reading about Eastern thought, philosophy and religion. “Interestingly enough, the first book that I read that was in the Buddhist tradition was ‘Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism’  by Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, who was in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition and is founder of the lineage that I study and practice. And he was one of the first monks to bring Buddhism to the West.”

For more of Wendy’s spiritual journey, watch the program. Our conversation on air went by much too quickly. She had brought many books to the show but was able only to share about one or two of them on-air.

As always, thanks to my co-host and co-producer Mark Lincourt and to our friends at Northern Berkshire Community Television Corp., especially the incomparable Paul Marino.

Interfaith group to discuss mental illness on Sept. 28


The Northern Berkshire Interfaith Action Initiative (NBIAI) will hold its September meeting on Friday, Sept. 28, at 10 a.m. at the First Baptist Church of North Adams. (Use Eagle Street entrance).

We will discuss the mission and work of the Berkshire County Chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness with Kathy Quinn, a family advocate with NAMI Berkshire County. Part of this discussion will be the role faith communities can play to acknowledge the issue and offer support to individuals and families. In addition we will discuss ways our group might mark Mental Illness Awareness Week, Oct. 7-13. 

Kathy sent me a 15-page packet of information related to these issues and I hope to have a few copies of it available at the meeting. It is excellent material.

We also will make final preparations for our benefit clothing sale on Oct. 6.

The NBIAI is  a group of people of various faiths working with others of good will to serve our community. It operates the Friendship Center Food Pantry at 43 Eagle St. in North Adams and an emergency voucher system for Northern Berkshire County. Our monthly meetings include a moment of silent prayer and a time for faith sharing. To read posts on several different developments, visit our blog at http://northernberkshireinterfaith.blogspot.com



Clothing donations, volunteeers and customers needed!


On Saturday, Oct. 6, the NBIAI will hold a sale of fine, gently used clothing at St. Elizabeth of Hungary Parish Center in North Adams to benefit the Friendship Center Food Pantry. The sale will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Admission is free. Featured will be men’s, women’s and children’s clothing, both for summer and winter, underwear, footwear, outdoor winter clothing and linens, all at bargain prices.


Clothing donations


In conjunction with the sale, organizers are now accepting donations of clean, gently used men’s, women’s and children’s outdoor clothing, including jackets, parkas, hats, gloves, socks and boots from now until Oct. 3. Donations may be dropped off at the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition/Family Place at 61 Main St., Suite 218, North Adams. They also may be dropped off at the Friendship Center Food Pantry, 43 Eagle St., during hours of operation on Wednesdays, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 4 to 6 p.m. Or to arrange for pick-up, call the Friendship Center at 664-0123 and leave a message, call Mark at 664-0130 and leave a message, or email Fran at fber@comcast.net.

Volunteers needed


Volunteers are needed the day of the sale. We need cashiers, baggers, clerks, and crew for set up and cleanup, Friday Oct. 5, for setup, and on Oct. 6, the day of the sale, between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. Those who can’t volunteer the entire time on Saturday are encouraged to volunteer for some portion of the day. Those interested in volunteer should email fber@comcast.net or deniseakrutiak@yahoo.com.

The all-volunteer-run food pantry currently has about 1,050 member families, each eligible to receive food every two weeks, in North Adams, Clarksburg, and Florida. For more information, call Mark at 664-0130 or email markrondeau@earthlink.net.

Some Friendship Center Statistics


In the 20 weeks from the beginning of May to the second Wednesday of September, the Friendship Center Food Pantry served a total of 2,483 households on 19 Wednesday and one Thursday (July 5) sessions. This is futher broken down into 1,601 households in our first session and 882 in our second session.

This averages out to 80 households per week in our first, three-hour session and 44 per week in our two-hour afternoon session, with an average of 124 households a day. Serving 124 households in the 300 minutes that fill five hours averages to serving one household every 2.4 minutes.

But as the volunteers know, there are rushes at the start and lulls near the end. At our very busiest, I would estimate we serve one household every 1.5 minutes. Our desk people and baggers are wonderful. So are our stock people and our people up front.

By the way, we keep adding members every week. It shows no sign of letting up! 

25 people discuss the Initiative at Aug. 17 monthly meeting


Our August Interfaith meeting was a wonderful discussion with 25 people with varying perspectives about the Interfaith Action Initiative. 

With the help of Denise Krutiak and Wendy Krom taking notes, the entire group compiled a list of what is going right and what could be immproved upon. Suggestions not only included the Friendship Center Food Pantry, but other things we could be doing. First, here is the list of What Do We Do Right? What was written down is in black, with my added comments in plain type in brackets.

1. Lots of volunteers. 

2. How we do our work. [See no. 3].

3. Volunteers do their jobs with love. [In fact, one of our members at the meeting told us that we did a good job treating our pantry visitors witih respect and not as "pariahs."]

4. Number that we serve. [Now up to around 1,050 households in North Adams, Clarksburg and Florida.]

5. We are Northern Berkshire and communicate with other pantries. {In addition to staying in touch with others pantries and food sources, we are in particularly close contact with the Berskhire Food Project, which serves meals, and with the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition, which is our fiscal agent.]

6. Accept everyone. [We do not turn people away who come from communities we don't ordinarily serve. Rather, we make sure they know where the pantry in their community is,  or how to contact it, and give them food to tide them over.]

7. We have community support. [The food and financial support we have received for the pantry has been tremendous. Each of us could tell many stories of the generousity of our community. North Adams and the surrounding communities have a tremendous big-heartedness and deep sense of what really matters. This was most recently on display, I
think, with the return of the remains of PFC Michael Demarsico II and the deeply respectful manner in which residents reacted.]

8. People will do extra above and beyond. [I've said it many times and will continue to say it: We have the best volunteers in the world.]

9. Donated space! [The Friendship Center would not exist without this, and our Steering Committee recently took our great landlords, Mike and Lois Daunis out to lunch at the Hub to thank them.]

10. Creates an inner glow. [This describes what many of our volunteers feel from being of service to our sisters and brothers at the Friendship Center. I know what they mean — I feel it too!] 

11. Voucher system has become well-organized. [Thanks to the fine work of Stuart Crampton, Rich Davis, with help from Corinne Case and others].

12. We are a good example to other pantries. {In fact, we have been told more than once that we are pointed to by the Western Mass. Food Bank as a prime example of how a pantry should operate].

13. Coming together as people of faith. [From the very beginning, we have described the NBIAI as people of various faiths working with others of good will to find ways to serve our community. The Initiative does have a faith component. We begin each pantry session
with a prayer. We have a rack up front where each house of worship can put its literature or bulletin. And our monthly meetings with begin with a time of silent prayer and then faith sharing.  Some of our faith sharing activities have been deeply moving. I should also add that from the perspective of our Initiative and pantry leadership, personal prayer plays a vital part in our planning process. It helps in determining with each new development and idea whether it comes from above (or in secular terms has deep validity) or is an attempt at self-aggrandizement, or is unnecessary, or is a non-productive imitation of other programs, etc. In my case, daily Scripture reading also provides an important point of refrence in evaluating current events. You get the idea.]

14. Multiple sources of food supply. [In short, the Food Bank, donations, and our own regular monthly spending on food to supplement what we get from other sources.]

Of course, this is only half the story. What can we do better? What more can we do? Here’s that list:

1. Fundraising Concern: How can we be sustainable? [Being new, the Food Pantry has been quite successful in raising money. Will this last? How can we make this last? One way is to arract younger donors/volunteers. We also mentioned fundraising events. Our upcoming Oct. 6 clothing sale is one example.]

2. As emergency food becomes less available (from the government), consider new sources, such as fresh produce, involve legislators, advocacy.

3. The Sperry Avenue Garden didn't go well from the standpoint of getting our friends involved. 

4. Room to improve, use creative thinking about other food sources. Collaboration with other efforts such as Hoosac Harvest and Many Forks Farm, and gleaning and the "Grow a Row" program. 

5. Collaborate with the Salvation Army food pantry in North Adams.

6. Be aware of volunteer commitments. Get more volunteers involved in newer projects such as a gardens.

7. Think about capacity, ie. storage limitations. Need of bigger space. "Be planful"

8. Approach houses of worship to help more, adopt the pantry, grow gardens and donate therefrom to the pantry.

9. Communication and coordinator. Perhaps a monthly newsletter or calendar of events.

10. Use the Initiative to shine a light on the housing issues. [We had a meeting about this a year ago, and it was very gratifying].

11. Transportation: Consider coordinating with agencies who may help us transport food to people [or otherwise help us support those in need. By the way, would a dealiership like to give us a van?].

12. Working on employment/economic development.

13. Outreach to more "people of good will" ... and younger people through such programs as UNITY, school groups, service clubs, that foster a spirit of service. Especially transition age, 18-26

14. Consider 501c3 status. [I am  not in a big hurry to do this. I like the grassroots, collaborative nature of the Initiative as it now stands. Not to rule out official non-profit status in the future.]

15. Tracking system, regarding history of need or amount of food. Is it possible to predict the future?

I could add one or two more things, but this is quite long enough. I thank for God for all His blessings on me and on the Interfaith Action Initiative and all our Friends.

Mark

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Clothing donations, volunteers and customers needed!






Oct. 6 Clothing Sale to Benefit Friendship Center Food Pantry

On Saturday, Oct. 6, the NBIAI will hold a sale of fine, gently used clothing at St. Elizabeth of Hungary Parish Center in North Adams to benefit the Friendship Center Food Pantry. The sale will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Admission is free. Featured will be men’s, women’s and children’s clothing, both for summer and winter, underwear, footwear, outdoor winter clothing and linens, all at bargain prices.

Clothing donations

In conjunction with the sale, organizers are now accepting donations of clean, gently used men’s, women’s and children’s outdoor clothing, including jackets, parkas, hats, gloves, socks and boots from now until Oct. 3. Donations may be dropped off at the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition/Family Place at 61 Main St., Suite 218, North Adams. They also may be dropped off at the Friendship Center Food Pantry, 43 Eagle St., during hours of operation on Wednesdays, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 4 to 6 p.m. Or to arrange for pick-up, call the Friendship Center at 664-0123 and leave a message, call Mark at 664-0130 and leave a message, or email Fran at fber@comcast.net.

Volunteers needed

Volunteers are needed the day of the sale. We need cashiers, baggers, clerks, and crew for set up and cleanup, Friday Oct. 5, for setup, and on Oct. 6, the day of the sale, between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. Those
who can’t volunteer the entire time on Saturday are encouraged to volunteer for some portion of the day. Those interested in volunteer should email fber@comcast.net or deniseakrutiak@yahoo.com.

The all-volunteer-run food pantry currently has about 1,050 member families, each eligible to receive food every two weeks, in North Adams, Clarksburg, and Florida. For more information, call Mark at
664-0130 or email markrondeau@earthlink.net.

Monday, August 6, 2012

MCLA LEAD Academy Visits Again




For the second year in a row, students from the MCLA Lead Academy came to the Friendship Center to learn about what we do. Today, Aug. 6, Mark Lincourt (front, right), Sue Walker (behind Mark), Al Nelson (behind Sue), and Mark Rondeau spoke to two groups of students. The second group is above. The first group is below.

The students take a tour of the city and visit varied agencies such as the Berkshire Food Project and the Northern Berkshire Community Coalition. On Tuesday and Wednesday, some of these students will be helping out at the Friendship Center, just as did some students last year.


Friday, July 6, 2012

Berkshire Dream Center Visits Interfaith Action Initiative




Cathy Chapman of the Berkshire Dream Center holds up the book The Church That Never Sleeps by Pastor Matthew Barnett, founder of the Dream Center in Los Angeles.

I wish more people could come to our monthly interfaith meetings. We had 15 people at our June meeting, but our conversation and presentations were so interesting and moving that I wish many more could have been present.

On Friday, June 29, we had two great faith sharings, one by Sue Walker and one by Wendy Krom, from the Christian and Buddhist traditions respectively. Then we had three great presentations: on the Berkshire Health System Outreach Van by Michelle Sylvester, on the Berkshire Dream Center by Cathy Chapman, and on harmful products meant to hook kids on tobacco by Corinne Case.

The Berkshire Dream Center

I hope to attend the Berkshire Dream Center Orientation and Training on Saturday, July 14, from 2 to 3:30 p.m. at the Vietnam Veterans Center on River Street in North Adams. (The newest location the Dream Center is working from in the city).

Come and learn more about the Dream Center and see how you can be involved. Call 413-522-3495 or email berkshiredreamcenter@gmail.com with any questions.

The Berkshire Dream Center started three years ago in Pittsfield with an adopt-a-block effort in the Morningside neighborhood. A year ago a landlord gave them use of a renovated space on Cherry Street. Volunteers have been doing outreach on Chase Avenue and River Street in North Adams since last October.

Cathy Chapman, who grew up in Clarksburg and now teaches in Greenfield, is the assistant director. She came to the June 29 meeting at our invitation to tell us about the Berkshire Dream Center, which she did movingly with much humor.

Her daughter, the Rev. Katelynn Chapman, is the director.

Cathy Chapman told us that the project had its origins from when she and her daughter took a mission trip five years ago to the Los Angeles Dream Center. She recommended the book “The Church That Never Sleeps” by Pastor Matthew Barnett. “It really changed our view and perception of what it means to be a church in ministry.”

The LA Dream Center, founded by Barnett, is called, as the book title indicates, “the church that never sleeps.” It’s open 24 hours a day, has 200 ministries and has really revolutionized the neighborhoods in Los Angeles, she said.

Of her experience in Los Angeles: “They just put you right to work in their ministries,” Chapman said. “They dropped us off at midnight on Sunset Blvd to minister to prostitutes. As the van lieft, I remember thinking, ‘The van’s leaving. I grew up in Clarksburg ... This is not my element.”

It all worked out. “We had an amazing time. The thing that really really changed our view is called “adopt a block, “which is what we’re doing today, because they took us out into the neighborhoods where the LA riiots took place...And we went door to door with ex-gang leaders – if I can talk about this without crying, I’ll do a good job — ex-gang leaders who had accepted Christ and were now leading people to Christ.”

Chapman said to her daughter, “We’ve got to do this at home, if it works here how much more would it work in Pittsfield.”

Though it started with an Assemblies of God church in Pittsfield, the Berkshire Dream Center has morphed into a non-denominational effort. As noted above, they work in the Morningside neighborhood in Pittsfield. 

“Our pastor left the church and the church changed and we all ended up at different places but we kept the non-denominationall Christian group going for three years and we went door to door.”

“And basically with adopt a block you just knock on the door, and you’re just getting to know people. You build relationships with them. The agenda,  it isn’t like sometimes people are waiting for the ohter shoe to drop, we don’t go with Bibles our agenda is not to convert you or tell you about God, it’s to get to know you,” she said. “And through that process over a course of time they ask questions about God. They know we’re Christians and we are able to share our faith, but it’s relationship building.” 

The first day of doing adopt a block in Pittsfield they ran into a local landlord. Two years later he gave them use of a renovated space on Cherry Street.

Chapman said they have worship services and discussion groups at the site. They give out bags of 12 non-perishable food items two times a week; they also have a clothing room. They have a nice office, which is also a meeting space.

So they no longer have to work out of the trunks of their cars as they did when starting out.

Coming to North Adams last year, the first thing they wanted to do was to adopt a block: “Our philosophy is that we go out. We believe that Jesus as the Son of God could have sat in the temple 24/7...but He didn’t. He went out,” Chapman said.

She recalled that when she taught at Conte Middle School she brought a boy home one night toa house on Chase Avenue. “He got out of the car, and he looked at me before he shut the door, and he said, ‘Miss Chapman, don’t ever come down here at night.’ And I said, ‘I have no reason to, honey, but thank you.”

So in coming up to North Adams last year to look at possible streets for their work, she stopped by Chase Avenue. “And so I did and I felt the same thing the first time I drove over Cherry Street, just that feeling that this is the one, if it works here it’s going to work anywhere.”

“So we started with Chase Avenue and River Street in October and with what we feel are wonderful results. There are some peoplle, of course, who don’t want to be bothered and you have to be respectful but the majority of people are interested, want to know your story, They want you to know their story, so very well received,” she said.

They have been working at the COTY Center at St. Elizabeth Parish Center and giving out food and clothing. They also have a neighbors helping neighbors program, where people can donate things such as beds, which are a much needed item. “Of all the things that we’ve ask for since we opened our doors that’s number one. There are so many people that sleep on the floors you’d be amazed.”

“Eventually what we’re looking for is a space that can be our space,” she said. “it doesn’t have to be forever but a place where...like we have in Pittsfield, we can set it up, and it’s our home.” 

In North Adams the Dream Center is at the COTY Center at St. Elizabeth Parish Center Fridays from 5 to 8 p.m. and on the second and fourth Saturdays of the month at the Vietnam Veteras Center at 30 River St.

I was happy to give Cathy a tour of the Friedship Center Food Pantry and I and other members of the IAI hope that our two groups will find ways to work together going forward.

Here is the local Dream Center blog: http://www.berkshiredreamcenter.blogspot.com

Here is the website for the Los Angeles Dream Center: www.dreamcenter.org


Berkshire Health Systems Community Outreach Van




The Community Outreach Van in a photo taken from the Berkshire Health Systems website.

Our friend Michelle Sylvester from WIC tolld us about the Berkshire Health Systems outreach van, on behalf of Kim Kelly, health education coordinator Berkshire Health Systems, who planned to attend our meeting but was unable.

Michelle said the van travels all over Berkshire County. It’s a 39-foot, air conditioned van. They will do blood pressure screenings, tobocco education, prostate cancer education, cholesterol screenings and more. “It’s whatever that area would like. And because we all work with at-risk populations, the service is for free,” she said.

People can get referrals to area hospitals and sign up for MassHealth coverage.

We discussed the possibility of having the van come up and do blood pressure screenings at the Friendship Center. We all agreed that parking the van on Eagle Street would not work, but we could sponsor a special event., and maybe park it in the big city lot behind 85 Main.

The van was in North Adams for last year’s Downtown Celebration. 

Here is some information about the van from the BHS website:

“The Berkshire Health Systems Community Outreach Van was purchased with grant funding in late 2007 and has been on the road throughout the Berkshires, providing important free health information, health screening services and community resource referrals. The van is staffed by professionals from BHS and is equipped with two state-of-the-art treatment and exam rooms, both of which provide a confidential space for visitors to receive information on available health insurance enrollment programs or to be screened for high blood pressure, cholesterol and other health risk factors. 

“The Community Outreach Van visits several public locations each month, including supermarkets, shopping centers, community organizations and more. To schedule the Community Outreach Van, contact Kimberly A. Kelly, Community Health Education Coordinator at 413-395-7976 or kkelly3@bhs1.org.”

Oppose Underhanded Tobacco Tobacco Tactics




Corinne Case gives her presentation on tobacco products aimed at children, some of which can be seen on the table.

Also at the June 29 Interfaith meeting, NBIAI Steering Committee member Corrine Case gave a presentation on insidious tobacco products meant to hook kids on tobacco. She gave a lively presentation with plenty of examples of the products. 

She also had petitions available for people present to express opposition to the products. I think I’ve signed it twice – and would be happy to do so again!

According to the website http://oppose.ning.com 

“The tobacco industry depends on kids’ impulse buys. The impulse control part of adolescents’ brains is not fully developed, leaving them vulnerable to making decisions without thinking them through. The industry takes advantage of this, encouraging impulse buys through three tactics: attractive packaging, widespread availability, and low prices.”

Products aimed at kids include: Little cigars and tip cigars; Blunts and blunt wraps; “Snus”; Dissolvable tobacco; Electronic cigarettes; Make /Roll your own tobacco products; and other novel nicotine products.

The tobacco industry is pricing these products very inexpensively to encourage impulse buys by young people. Some single cigars are sold for as low as 25 cents.

Corrine would be happy to make her presentation to other community groups. For more information, contact Joan G. Rubel with Berkshire AHEC, 413-447-2417.

Well that’s about as much writing as I can handle on a Friday night. God Bless and hope to see you soon,

Mark