Monday, July 8, 2013
Busy Summer for Interfaith Action Initiative
Saturday, March 5, 2011
Please Support this Food Drive

As one of our friends noted recently on Facebook, there are food receptacles in a number of North Adams businesses to accumulate food for our food pantry.
The publicity for this food drive, sponsored by the North Adams Commons Nursing and Rehabilitation Center, states that it is for the Community Action Food Pantry. And in fact the Friendship Center Food Pantry is the continuation of the BCAC Food Pantry that closed. Indeed, two great people from BCAC are currently helping us each week learn the ropes and successfully run the pantry.
The food drive is running from Feb. 28 to March 11 to help stock the food pantry.
Non-perishable food will be accepted at the following businesses throughout North Adams: Price Chopper Supermarket, Big Y Supermarket, Stop & Shop Supermarket (though I did not see a receptacle there when I looked March 5th), Hoosac Bank, TD Bank, Greylock Federal Credit Union, Berkshire Bank, Legacy Bank, Landmark Credit Union, Village Pizza, Boston Seafood Restaurant, and the City Clerk’s office at North Adams City Hall.
Non-perishable food may also be dropped off at North Adams Commons Nursing & Rehabilitation Center, 175 Franklin St.
Radio show Monday
Maureen E. Goodreau, of at North Adams Commons (664-4041, ext. 243, or mgoodreau@bhs1.org) has generously invited me to appear with her on the Opinion program on WNAW at 8:30 a.m. on Monday, March 7. I in turn have invited Mark Lincourt, our food distribution coordinator to accompany me.
I hope we can explain what the Interfaith Initiative and Friendship Center are about and why as much food as possible is needed through this drive.
Items needed
In a related matter, Shirley McDonald, from BCAC, who is doing so much to help us every Wednesday, gave us a list of the most needed items for a food pantry.
Fruit juice, juice boxes, cold cereals, hot cereals, macaroni and cheese, baked beans or pork and beans, canned beef stew, canned pasta (Ravioli, etc), peanut butter, jelly, canned fruit, rice, canned or instant potatos, Bisquick/pancake mix and syrup, coffee and tea, soups, tuna, canned meats, packaged food (such as Rice-a-Roni, Lipton’s, etc.), spaghetti sauce, pasta, canned vegetables, condiments (such as ketchup, mayo, mustard, etc), cake mix, brownie mix, puddings and powdered milk.
Also needed are such things as baby food and formula, disposable diapers, shampoo, tooth paste, paper goods and toilet paper.
God bless all of you,
Mark
(At top: The receptacle for the food drive at the BigY in North Adams. Photo taken Saturday, March 5).
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Interfaith Action Initiative considers headquarters space
The Northern Berkshire Interfaith Action Initiative will meet on Friday, Jan. 21, at 10 a.m. at the First Baptist Church of North Adams. (Use the Eagle Street entrance).
At this meeting we will decide whether to accept the generous offer of free use of an 800-square-foot storefront on Eagle Street. Several members of the Initiative toured the space during the Dec. 17 meeting. This storefront includes a bathroom, room for an office and space for storage.
In addition to giving the Initiative a visible presence downtown, the space may be suited to be a distribution hub — though not a storage facility or large-scale services center — for information, food, clothing, and other necessities. All this and more will be discussed at the January meeting.
Also at the January meeting, we will have a presentation of northern Berkshire asset maps by a representative of the Western Mass. Food Bank. This likely will give us a better idea of what needs such a space might help fill and how we could go about it.
By the end of January, the Initiative hopes to have given all northern Berkshire faith communities a chance to respond to our survey on what they are doing to meet basic human needs. We see definite trends in the nature of assistance in our preliminary results, and likely will make our final findings public in early February.
Our talks about providing volunteer assistance for clients of Louison House have moved forward, and a report on this will be on the Jan. 21 meeting agenda.
At our Dec. 17 meetng, we heard from the Rev. Peter Elvin, of St. John’s Church in Williamstown, about the voucher system for people in need which had worked well in that community, but which will stop as the Williamstown Ecumenical Association ceases. Discussing the possibility of continuinig this system on a wider scale will be on the agenda for the Jan. 21 Initiative meeting.
All are welcome to participate in the Initiative. To get on the Initiative’s e-mail announcement list, send an e-mail to northernberkshireinterfaith@gmail.com or call Mark at 664-0130. To learn more about the Initiative, visit our blog at http://northernberkshireinterfaith.blogspot.com