Annual Impact
Overview
Since 1999 The People’s Pantry has served the South Berkshire community, welcoming all who visit us without requiring proof of income or status. Our mission is to respectfully serve our neighbors experiencing food insecurity by distributing healthy food, locally sourced whenever feasible. By doing so, we strengthen the community. The People’s Pantry vision is to create an environment, in collaboration with individuals and other organizations in our community, which supports the building of healthy lives for individuals and families
In the early years the Pantry moved many times, until 2017 when we were offered a permanent home, free of charge and located in the center of town at Saint James Place. We are currently open late Monday afternoons and on Thursday mornings. Clients may shop once each week.
Prior to the pandemic, we served an average of 125 people (50-60 households) each week. That number soared in March and April of 2020, and has been steadily increasing ever since. The increase was initially driven mostly by unemployment during the pandemic, but now is fueled by inflation, supply chain issues, and a lack of affordable housing in our area. At this point, in the spring of 2023, the Pantry is feeding an average of 500-600 people a week, up from 300-400 in January of 2022.
Meanwhile, our costs have increased even faster than the number of clients being served. Despite generous donations of food from the local community, most food distributed by the pantry is purchased (details on that later) and, of course, both the cost and the quantity of food needed has increased. In 2021 we spent $102,531 on food. In 2022, the amount nearly doubled to $191,200, In 2023, we spent $253,294, representing 80% of our total budget. And we anticipate another large cost increase this year.
By purchasing as much locally sourced food as feasible, the Pantry pays into the local agricultural economy and helps to keep small family farms going. This also helps preserve open spaces in Berkshire County, as well as in neighboring Columbia, Dutchess, and Litchfield counties. These farms employ local workers, which in turn ultimately contributes toward reducing the number of people needing our services. And by buying locally, we reduce the Pantry’s carbon footprint.
It is important to note that the People’s Pantry is not simply a source of food for those who are experiencing food insecurity. During food distribution hours, we periodically host agencies that offer services to support the community, such as legal and health services. These groups have provided education about available assistance and have provided on-site services, such as blood pressure checks and immunizations. We have become part of an extensive network to support the marginalized residents of our area.
In years past, our minimal operating costs and local support always kept the Pantry solvent. We rely on donations from individuals, businesses, houses of worship, and community organizations. During the pandemic, as our services expanded to meet the marked growth in demand, the community stepped up and generously met our needs and more. However, now faced with rising need and rising costs, we are exploring other funding sources. In 2023 we affiliated with Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, an essential philanthropic resource in our area. This partnership not only provides us with access to a solid and dependable means of growing capital, it provides us with a more diverse means of accepting donations, while also giving us access to a wider selection of grant opportunities
Our Clients
The People’s Pantry serves local families and individuals in two ways, through food distribution at our Pantry and via food boxes distributed to the local school districts.
The Pantry opens its doors to clients two days a week for food distribution. Shoppers are allowed one visit weekly. On Monday afternoons and Thursday mornings one can find a long line of people waiting patiently for their groceries. On any given week we are feeding an average of 200–250 households (600–650 estimated individuals) in this way. The food is provided free to the shoppers thanks to local donations, food purchased locally, and food from the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts (see food source report below).
In addition, The People’s Pantry supplies local school district families with food that we order for them through the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts. Southern Berkshire and Berkshire Hills Regional School Districts provide boxes to 50-60 families (feeding 300 individuals) weekly. These school boxes are augmented by donations from other community organizations. Although we supply administrative support and labor for the school food distribution, all food supplied is free from the Food Bank and so does not come from the Pantry’s food budget.
Client Profile
Two months before the pandemic hit, we had added Monday late afternoon hours to serve a larger group of people who might be unable to come during our regular Thursday morning distribution. This two-day schedule, in tandem with the Covid crisis, resulted in a dramatic increase in the numbers served.
On average, prior to the pandemic, we served 125 individuals a week. At the height of the pandemic those numbers more than doubled to an average of 300 individuals. Demand, however, has not been reduced as the Covid crisis has receded. Dramatic increases in the cost of food, fuel, and other living costs in combination with diminished affordable housing in our region have resulted in numbers nearly four times as high as those seen pre-pandemic. Currently the Pantry serves over 500 individuals (200-250 households) weekly during pantry hours in addition to the 300 served by food boxes distributed through the school.
For 2023, of those weekly clients currently being served 14% are aged 65 and over and 30% are under the age of 18. Most of our clients, 50%, come from Great Barrington. Another 12% come from Sheffield, 6% from Lee, 4% from Pittsfield, and the rest from the surrounding area including a small number from Connecticut and New York state. Compared to last year, we are serving 45% more people.
Client Survey
We have surveyed our clients, asking what they like most and what we need to improve. We received overwhelming approval and gratitude, not only for the food offered, but also for the respectful and friendly way it is offered by Pantry volunteers. Great Barrington is, after all, a small town, where people cross paths in many ways. Some clients come early to visit with each other and help unload food as it is delivered. Other current and former clients formally serve as volunteers.
One client, a recent immigrant with 5 children, who was referred to the pantry by a nutritionist at our local hospital said "The Pantry helps me and my family. They surprise me with wonderful food. They give me everything: beef, milk, vegetables, rice, bread and soap.”
Another wrote "Thank you for the amazing work at the Pantry helping out a lot of people in need. God bless you all and all the people who are volunteering there. They are so kind.”
A third said “The pantry is so well organized, not chaotic like others I’ve seen. The line moves quickly, and the shopping carts are awesome!” (We provide shopping carts for people to take their food to their car or the bus stop.)
A fourth client, who felt her English was not good enough to express herself, wrote and translated on her phone “The people here always make me feel good. I’m very grateful. Nobody looks down their nose at me here.”
And we recently received this email from a former client:
This is a message of thanks. During the pandemic I suffered a major illness and could not work. My husband was working in healthcare in an entry level low paying position. We couldn’t make ends meet. We started to get food from the Pantry. We found a welcome and warmth there. The food was very good quality - especially the fresh fruits and vegetables. Eventually I got well and returned to work and my husband got a new job that paid better. We got back on our feet financially. We stopped using the Pantry because we could afford to buy food again but each time we drive by we are grateful for the nutritious food and warm help we received. Thank you from the bottom of our hearts.
Food Source Report
Each week 40-50 volunteers work to stock shelves, receive deliveries, and serve pantry clients who choose fresh produce, milk, eggs, meat, and cheese as well as shelf-stable canned and dry goods and hygiene products. Our commitment to serving our clients is matched by our commitment to offering the healthiest food, and the most local food, we can obtain. To accomplish this, the People’s Pantry engages with a highly evolved local food access system in Berkshire County. We have many partners, but it is essential to begin by mentioning Berkshire Bounty and Berkshire Grown. Both organizations are nonprofits funded by individuals, organizations, and grants. Participation with these organizations costs the People’s Pantry nothing.
Berkshire Bounty “fights food insecurity by collecting excess fresh produce, dairy products, baked goods and meats from supermarkets, farms and owners of fruit bearing trees” and delivers that food to pantries such as ours. They collect food for us through food drives and truck much of that donated food for us. They also transport excess food we have to other pantries in need.
Berkshire Grown is developing a Farm to Food Access program of which we are part. This program is working to formalize a buying system wherein they will establish advance purchase contracts with local farms to get fresh, locally grown food, and in turn, the farmers will deliver that food to a central location to be aggregated, stored, and distributed to participating organizations such as ours. They have built a cold storage facility that allows them to buy from farmers in season and distribute food throughout the winter. Berkshire Grown has also purchased Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) shares from local farms for us and created partnerships on our behalf with many vendors. They also subsidize the price of some of our farm products.
Berkshire Grown and Berkshire Bounty collaborate on maintaining a cold food storage facility in town that allows farmers to store crops, short or long term, prior to delivery to are pantries.
Here is how The People’s Pantry is currently sourcing food:
Donations are collected in bins at our Saint James Place location. These bins are available 24/7 for donations of anything that is shelf stable. The Kiwanis Club, local businesses, houses of worship, etc. periodically collect shelf stable goods for the People’s Pantry. Quarterly, Berkshire Bounty runs a highly successful food drive, which contributes to our shelf stock. However, we still need to shop for additional items to fill our shelves, and to do so we watch for sales at our local Big Y supermarket and buy cereal, rice, soup, dried beans, and other dry goods in bulk when possible. In addition, the Berkshire Food Coop sells pasta and pasta sauce to us at a discount.
Community drives gather donations of specific types of hygiene products, such as menstrual and incontinence products. We order toilet paper at a commercial rate from a local office supplier, Brigham, which delivers to us.
Fresh fruit and vegetables provided at the Pantry come from a variety of sources. Berkshire Grown has purchased CSAs for us from Indian Line Farm in Egremont, Massachusetts. We purchase from other local farms with partial or full underwriting from Berkshire Grown. We receive culls (products that are not suitable for sale) from the Big Y Supermarket and Guido’s Fresh Marketplace, a family run local grocer. Guido’s additionally provides us access to their Boston vendor at wholesale cost, and then trucks the produce to Great Barrington at no cost to the Pantry. Berkshire Bounty picks up produce at the grocery stores and delivers to us. Two local gardens, the farm at Bard College at Simon’s Rock and Greenagers, grow specifically for us and deliver the produce at no cost. Gideon’s Garden, operated by Grace Church, has provided large quantities of vegetables to us for years; currently they deliver to the Berkshire Grown/Berkshire Bounty cold storage facility from which we can take whatever we need. The Berkshire House of Correction donates aquaponic lettuce that they grow for us. On Saturdays, during the growing season, we receive the culls from the local farmers’ market. And there are home gardeners who donate their excess.
We get day old breads and other baked goods donated from several local businesses including Big Y, Berkshire Mountain Bakery, Barrington Bagels, Pixie Boulangerie, Fuel and Guido’s.
Our milk is sold and delivered by High Lawn Farm in Lee, Massachusetts at a discounted price. We were introduced to them through Berkshire Grown. Some of our eggs are purchased through Off the Shelf Farm in New Marlborough, Massachusetts, and Berkshire Grown pays a percentage of the already discounted price. The rest of our eggs are purchased through Guido’s from Feather Ridge Farm in nearby Elizaville, New York. We purchase Cabot cheese (a New England/New York farm cooperative) from Guido’s.
Our beef, chicken and pork all come from Tory Hill, LLC in Lakeville, Connecticut. Again, Berkshire Grown pays part of this cost. We receive occasional donations of local beef and lamb (for the cost of processing) from local farms.
The Food Bank of Western Mass delivers 4,000 pounds of food to us each month. We also have a volunteer who takes the Guido’s van, drives to the Food Bank (55 miles away) and picks up an additional 2,000 pounds/month. But the availability of specific foods is highly variable. When we can, we order frozen fish, canned tuna and chicken, cereal, and canned vegetables, beans and fruit. Occasionally, they will surprise us with the availability of local potatoes or fresh pineapples that were donated as overages by suppliers. Most of the items are from the Massachusetts Emergency Food Assistance Program (MEFAP) for which we pay only a small storage and delivery fee. We also purchase some food from the Food Bank of Western Mass. (As the Food Bank has less food available in their pipelines, they are purchasing more food which we then buy.) We do not receive food from the federal government (USDA) as the recording and separate storage requirements are not possible for us.
Lastly, The People’s Pantry receives donated cat and dog food from Irie’s Pet Pantry, a nonprofit in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.
Volunteers & Board of Directors
The Pantry is primarily an all-volunteer organization, with a working board. Each week 40 -50 volunteers work approximately 100 hours to stock shelves, receive deliveries, and serve pantry clients. This does not include the many hours of administrative work done each week, mostly by board members.
Our Donors
Abby Tovell, Adams Community Bank, Adrian Van Zon, Aiyana Foundation Inc., Alan Inglis & Elizabeth Shaker, Alan Quesenberry, Alford-Housatonic Methodist, Allan Dean, Amy Lord, Andrew and Katrina Morgan, Andrew Kriegman, Andrew Ritter, Ann Falchuk, Ann Gumbinner, Ann Henderson, Ann Hilliard, Anna Oliver, Anna Owens Smith, Anne Andrews, Anne Chase, Anne Lawlor, Anne Lawver, Anne Marie Miller, Anne Pinkston, Anne Schnesel, Anonymous, Anonymous Fund at Fidelity Charitable, Anthony Rinaldi Jr., April Burch, Aria Foundation, Arnold Eisman, Arthur Szabo, Ashley Buckley-Wright, Autobahn Service, Barbara Beach, Barbara Campbell, Barbara Crystal, Barbara Manring, Barbara Matz, Barbara Peltz, Barbara Steen-Elton and P. Nicholas Steen-Elton, Ben Hillman & Company, Benjamin Harms, Benjamin Webster, Bennett G. Picker Living Trust, Benno Friedman, Berkshire Berkshire Aviation Enterprises, Berkshire Grown, Inc., Berkshire School, Berkshire Sterile Manufacturing, Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, Bernard and Barbara Flusk, Bernard and Donna Drew, Beryl Jolly, Beryl Martin, Beth Domaney, Beth Moser, Bill Gellert, Bob Karmen, Bobbie Hallig, Bonnie Oloff, Brendan Mathews, Brian Faggioni, Brian Healey, Brian J. Coons, Bruce Shickmanter, C. Randolph and Sheila K. Thunfors, Carl Bradford, Carlson Propane, Carol and Richard Newman, Carol Kuller, Carol Mead, Carol Monacelli, Carol Penney, Carol Way, Caroline Miller, Carolyn Levine, Casella Casella Waste Services, Catamount Development Corporation, Charles & Mary Hamilton, Charles Ferris, Charles Lemmen, Chauncey Hazen, Cheryl Hutto, Chris Beede, Christ Trinity Church, Christine and Erik Rasmussen, Christine and Larry Carsman, Christine Baldridge, Christopher Rembold, Civitan Club of the Berkshires, Claire Rosenberg, Cohen Kinne Valicenti & Cook LLP, Congregation Ahavath Sholom, Constance Donaldson, Corey Sprague, Craig B. Moskowitz Livestock, Crystal Essence, Csprague Inc, Cynthia Matte, D'Amore U Know LLC, Damian Michael VanDenburgh, Darryll Graber, David Bailin, David Goddeau, David Goldstein, David Lisberg, David Morel, David Read, David Tancredi, David Tully Debbie Gangemi, Delmar Haughey, Denyse and Harold Adler, Diane C. Arnold ,Diane Finklestein ,Diane Saland, Diane Wortis and Joe Bozza, Dina Sarbanes, Don and Maggie Buchwald, Don Cardiff, Donald Brian Elitzer, Donna Fenn, Donna Meyer, Donna Meyer, Doris R. Anderman, Dorothy McTeigue, Douglas and Terry Cooper, Dr. James Fagin, Dr. Robert & Tina Sohn Foundation, E. Gawthrop, Ed & Patricia Kennelly, Edward Abrahams, Edward Denehy, Edward Lane, Edward Okun, Edwin Meek, Efrem Sigel, Eileen Lawlor, Eileen W. Mooney, Elder Services of Berkshire County, Eleanor Pryor, Elisabeth Rhodes, Elizabeth Colhoun, Elizabeth Dillman, Elizabeth Gross, Elizabeth Kasevich, Elizabeth Marino, Elizabeth Olenbush, Elizabeth Palmer and Thomas Reilly Fund at Fidelity Investments, Elizabeth Walsh, Ellen Heffan, Elwood Smith, Emily Shaw, Eric Gelman, Estate of Martha J. Shaw, Eugene Atwood, Evan Hardcastle, Evelyn Pascal, Fairview Acute Care Rehab, Fiona Cardwell, First Congregational Church of Great Barrington, First Congregational Church of Sheffield, First Congregational Church of Stockbridge, Frances O'Neil, Frank Mirchin, Fred & Anne Cogen, Frederick R. Wallhausser Revocable Trust, Gabrielle Brussel, Gail Edwin, Gary and Tess Cohen, Gary Kobran, Gary Rucinski, Gaye Weinberger, Geoffrey Maynard, George Raymond, Gerald Sussman, Gina James, Glenn Moor, Grace Church, Great Barrington Rotary Club, Gregory & Diane Eshleman, Greylock Federal Credit Union, Guy & Mary Saporito, Harry's Electric Inc., Henry and Anne Hagenah, Henry C Jadow Rev Trust of 2006, Heron Pond Condo Community of Stockbridge, Hevreh of Southern Berkshire, Inc., Highminded LLC, Hilary Dunne Ferrone, Holly Hardman, Holly Kulka-Atteson, Holly Steinberg, Housatonic Real Estate, Irwin and Judith Wrubel, James & Kimberly Obanhein, James and Anne I. Frangione, James Bruenn, James Hutchinson, James Kimball, James Murray, Jameson Family Foundation, Jamie Shenkman, Jane and John Summers, Jane Angelini, Jane W. Meisel, Janet Wolcott, Janice Sturchio, Janis Martinson and Stephen Sagarin, Jay and Yvonne Shlansky, Jeanette Mall, Jeanne Teasdale, Jeff and Beth Schneider, Jeffrey and Sarah Blaugrund, Jennifer Windram, Jessica Lustig, Jewish Communal Fund, Jewish Federation, Jim Daily, Joan Taylor, JoAnn Nowobilski, Jodie Gordon, John and Cynthia Spellman, John Adler, John and Donna Whalen, John Cheek, John Egelhofer, John Guerin and Jo Ann, John Halbreich, John Horan and Diane Singer, John J. Parker, John Jr & Paula Cummings Jr, John Squires, Jonathan Hankin, Joseph Barocio Jr, Joseph Brennan, Joseph Coleman, Joseph Crawford-Kelly, Joseph Valenti, Joyce Bernstein, Joyce Reisman, Judith and Ba Win, Judith Mareb, Judith Shaw, Judson Ehrbar, julia Ginzburg, Julia Rosenblum and Leonard Felson Fund at Schwab, Julie Fagan, Juliet Emery, Julius Wool, Karen Richards Fund at Schwab Charitable, Karen Shreefter, Karla Arria-Devoe, Katherine Dean, Kathleen Potoski, Kathleen Shipley, Kathryn C. Palmer, Kathryn Ritter Roblin, Kay Wilmette, Kenneth K. Brown, Kermit K. Pruyne, Kerry Toohig, Kim Bradley, Kim Hulett Ruffing, Kimberly Shaw, KIVA Brands, Kiwanis Club of Sheffield, Inc., Knox Lane, Kohn-Blank Fund at Schwab Charitable, Kristen Colston, Laura Dubester, Laura Gratz, Laura Ponkos, Lauren Hanafin, Lear and Raquel Levin, Lee McClelland, Leon Stutzman, Lerotheos Koufis, Leslie Miller, Linda Hankey, Linda Santos, Lior Hirsch, Lisa Chamberlain, Long & Away, a consort of viols, Lonnie Solomon Foundation, Louise Feldman, Luc Gregoire & Catherine del Guercio, Lucia Coulter Scala Charitable Fund at Schwab Charitable, Lucinda Vermeulen, Lynn Edelstein, Mactaggart Third Fund, Madeline Despres-Chen, Malcolm Fick, Malley Family Foundation, Marc Bernstein, Marc Robbins, Marc Schwartz, Margaret and Peter Barrett, Margaret Harding, Margaret Hayes, Margaret Parish, Margot Towl, Mariane Jaffe, Mariellen Lashoones, Marilyn & Michael Lebowitz, Marilyn Tebor Shaw, Marilyn Orner, Marion Rosenfeld, Marjorie Wexler, Mark Arisohn, Mark Litteken, Martha Radford, Martin Gorman, Marty Sennett, Mary & Steven Yarmosky, Mary Berryhill, Mary Blaise, Mary Edwards, Mary Ellen Foster, Mary Michele Gilligan, Mary Pope Osborne and Will Osborne, Maura Griffin, Melanie Manning Brandston, Michael & Doris Simon, Michael Benjamin, Michael Gerhard, Michael Irwin, Michael J. and Ethel M. Patterson Bandzierz, Michael Mason, Michael Smith, Michael Tobin, Mike Gertrude, Miriam Heyman, Miss Hall's School, Most Family Fund at Fidelity Charitable, Mulder Mulder Family Charitable at Fidelity, Muthiah Sukumaran, Myron Sosnow, Nancy Belsky, Nancy Duvall, Nancy F. Donovan, Nancy Harrod, Nancy Kalodner, Nancy King, Nancy Wilcox, Natacha Dockery Livak, Natalie Maroni, Natalie Narotzky, NBT Bank, Nicholas Diamand, Off The Shelf, One Mercantile, Organization Ink Inc, Pallas K. Augustine, Pamela Stebbins, Patricia B. Boland, Patricia Flinn, Patricia Frik, Patricia Leavitt, Paul & Shirley Montgomery, Paul Gibbons, Paul Hyde, PayPal Giving Fund, Peggy Cooke, Peggy Thieriot, Peter and Geri Rybacki, Peter Lindstrom, Peter Schulte, Pittsfield Cooperative Bank, Rachel Coll, Radius Fund at Fidelity Charitable, Ray and Christine Zelehoski, Raymond Murray, Rebecca Lee, Rees Shad, Rena Zurofsky, Richard and Mary Coe, Richard and Pamela Clarke, Richard and Susi Shapiro, Richard Pope, Richard Stanley, Richard Wilcox, Rob Rob Brainin & Nicola Kean Giving Fund at Vanguard, Rob Yaffe, Robert & Irene Dvorchik, Robert and Mary Felter, Robert Kraus, Robert Pearson, Robert Pohl, Robert Salzman, Robert Ulrich Remainder Trust, Roberta Gratz, Roberta Scheinmann, Roberta Silman, Robin Hare, Robin Scheman and Sam Litvin Fund at Schwab Charitable, Rochelle Holtzberg , Roger Brown, Roger Trucking Inc., Ronald Blumenthal, Ronald Miller, Roselle Chartock, Rosemary Davis, Ruth Lederle, Rybacki Donor Advised Fund at Morgan Stanley, Sandra Wilmot, Sarah Barbour, Schwab Charitable Fund, Seth Stockwell, Shad & Assocates, Shannon Maneely-Ranson, Sharon Gamsin Charitable Account at Schwab Charitable, Shawn and Kenzie E. Fields, Shawn Green, Shoval Foundation, Sibyelle Baier, Signe Schaefer, Silke Aisenbrey, Smitty Pignatelli, Split Tree Fund at Fidelity Charitable, Stacie Lane, Stanley Berger, Stephanie Blumenthal, Stephen Phalum, Steve Weinberg, Steven Rubin, Stockbridge Land Trust, Inc., Stockbridge Tennis Group, Susan Abarbanel, Susan Mackle, Susan Pettee, Susan Price, Susan Quinn, Susan Rockefeller, Susan VanSickle, Taylor Lamme, Ted and Barbara Moor, Teresa Wise, Terrence Shea, The Deann Dylandale Foundation, The Feigenbaum Foundation, The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts, The Giles Family, The Green Foundation, The Isola Fund at Schwab Charitable, The Myrin Institute, The Queenan Foundation, The Velmans Foundation Inc., Thursday Morning Club, Tom Ingersoll, Touching Humanity Inc., Town of Great Barrington, Tracy Donsky, Trisha Frey, Union for Reform Judaism of New York NY, Unitarian Universalist Meeting of South Berkshire, Valerie Coleman, Vanguard Vanguard Charitble Fund, Virginia Jackowski, VMware Foundation, Ward's Nursery, Inc., Warren and Laura Kerper, Wellness Concepts Inc, Wendy Jennis, Westwind Foundation, Wilkinson Construction, William and Linda Fields, William Dunbar, William F. Gratz, William Voiers, Zohar Lavi
Please note: We are grateful for your support and wish to accurately list our appreciation. If you feel there is missing/incomplete information listed, please email us so we can address it.