Archive for October, 2008
Sterling Engineering “honored” to present REAS with 1K Challenge Check
Friday, October 31st, 2008
Jennifer V. Morrison (left) - president and founding partner of Sterling Engineering – presented the REAS Foundation with a $1000 challenge check yesterday 910/30/08), signifying the success of the REAS 10K Circle of Businesses program.
On July 15th, the REAS Foundation announced two fundraising programs for senior energy assistance. One program, the 10K Circle of Businesses, hoped to raise $10,000 in donations from local businesses. Sterling Engineering kicked off the program with a 1K Challenge, whereby they would match donations from businesses up to $1,000.
“On behalf of Sterling Engineering, I am extremely proud to be presenting our check to the REAS Foundation, and we are honored by the overwhelming response from the business community in support of Sturbridge seniors”, Ms. Morrison said.
Ms. Morrison, who also serves as the Chief Administration Officer for the REAS Foundation, went on to say “…as a member of the Foundation, I am thrilled to be involved with such a meaningful, community-minded program, providing service and hope to our seniors”.
REAS Chairman of the Board - Scott Garieri (right), accepted the check on behalf of the foundation, expressing “deep appreciation to Ms. Morrison and those who answered Sterling’s call to action, in support of Sturbridge seniors”. Mr. Garieri added that, “…the residents and businesses of Sturbridge have created a grass roots approach to addressing the energy needs of our seniors”.
The Sterling donation brings the REAS Foundation and the Sturbridge community of donors to the 123% mark of its 2008 fundraising goal.
Southbridge Credit Union Joins the REAS Team!
Wednesday, October 29th, 2008
The REAS Foundation is pleased to announce that Southbridge Credit Union has joined the REAS Foundation as a member of our Associate Board of Directors. Citing the “need to expand our capability, in order to provide additional energy assistance resources to seniors, Thomas J. Smalarz - President and Chief Executive Officer of Southbridge Credit Union – acknowledged that Daniel Matte, an SCU Board member “would serve as SCU’s representative”.
Demonstrating their commitment to be a part of the solution, Mr. Smalarz (far left in photo) and Dan Matte (far right in photo) presented REAS Board Chairman Scott Garieri, (2nd from right in photo) and Vice-Chairman Jim Malloy (2nd from left in photo) with a $1250.00 donation on behalf of Southbridge Credit Union.
REAS Board Chairman Scott Garieri “welcomed the partnership between SCU and the REAS Foundation” and expressed his “gratitude on behalf of the organization for SCU’s willingness to play such a meaningful role in addressing the needs of our seniors”.
Vice-Chairman Jim Malloy, thanked SCU for its “generous commitment to our senior community and its willingness to maintain on ongoing role as a member of our Board. This strengthens our ability to provide meaningful assistance to Sturbridge seniors in need of energy assistance”, Mr. Malloy added.
“We are honored to be partnering with SCU, and are grateful for their commitment to this endeavor. They have expanded our ability to serve Sturbridge seniors in need, and have surely demonstrated their dedication to our community”, said Thomas R. Creamer - Executive Director of the REAS Foundation.
Mr. Matte expressed his “excitement to be a part of such a meaningful grassroots effort that is already providing very real solutions to the very real challenges faced by seniors. Mr. Matte went on to say that he “is proud to be representing SCU as part of the REAS team”.
The donation from Southbridge Credit Union pushes the REAS Foundation up to 118% of its fundraising goal for 2008.
REAS Meets Fundraising Goal - Demand May Be Increasing, However
Tuesday, October 28th, 2008The following article was published in today’s (10/28/08) Southbridge Evening News.
BY CHRISTOPHER TANGUAY
NEWS STAFF WRITER
STURBRIDGE — The Residential Energy Assistance for Seniors (REAS) Foundation has reached its goal, and then some. That may not be enough however.
In a letter to the Southbridge Evening News Monday, Executive Director of the REAS Foundation, Thomas Creamer wrote, “Three weeks shy of our Nov. 15 fundraising deadline, the community of Sturbridge residents and businesses have passed the $20,000 goal by three percent, with donations still coming in and yet to be tabulated.”
On Saturday Oct. 18, at the annual Sturbridge Harvest Festival, Creamer said that whereas the organization has received an overwhelming amount of support from members in the community, the need for additional support is becoming apparent. “We’re going to have to make every effort to increase our amount,” Creamer said. (more…)
Over the TOP!
Saturday, October 25th, 2008
And just like that, its happened. Four months ago a group of Sturbridge residents got together and decided to do something. A little something based upon a simple premise; local problems are often best addressed with local solutions. Certainly not a ground breaking thought process, yet one that can be lost to even the most community-minded folks during such turbulent economic times, where everyone is struggling to adjust.
These individuals came from all walks of life, (lawyers, business owners, bankers, teachers, professional administrators, police officers, CPA’s, moms, dads, retirees, etc.); yet, they all came with a common theme - the overwhelming desire to do something meaningful for the most vulnerable members of our community, our seniors.
Thus, with little more than high hopes, dedication, and faith in the community, this group of residents set out upon uncharted waters to raise awareness, support, and money. On July 16, 2008, a press conference was held to formerly introduce the Residential Energy Assistance for Seniors (REAS) Foundation. At that time, they had $75.00 in a checking account and a goal to raise $20,000 by November 15th.
By way of two programs, the 10K Circle of Friends – $10,000 raised by $10.00 donations from 1000 residents, and the 10K Circle of Business - $10,000 raised from business donors, the group was confident that Sturbridge would answer the call to care for its own.
And answer that call – you - the residents and businesses of Sturbridge certainly have. As of yesterday, October 24, three weeks shy of our November 15th fundraising deadline, the community of Sturbridge residents and businesses have surpassed the $20,000 goal by 3% with donations still coming in and yet to be tabulated.
This is nothing short of amazing on the one hand, yet predictable on the other. Amazing, in that a group of residents with little experience in a project of this undertaking were able to so quickly and efficiently establish an organization to address the issue of energy assistance for seniors. Predictable in that the amazing community we live in is one in which fellowship is the foundation of our daily lives. Yes, the principles of fellowship, compassion, and empathy are the very things that ultimately bind this community together, despite any differences we may share on other matters.
Each of YOU, who have joined the REAS family, understands well the importance and necessity of reaching out to those in need and rallying around them in common support. This endeavor has certainly galvanized members of our community, and has demonstrated the power of change that love and compassion can achieve in such a short period.
We are honored to serve as a vehicle of your love, your generosity, and your selflessness, and we thank you for allowing us to partner with you. We still have much to do as the need is growing weekly; yet we are ever more motivated to continue this great work on YOUR behalf.
Thomas R. Creamer - Executive Director
REAS Foundation
Doubling Up on the 1K Challenge
Thursday, October 23rd, 2008
A second anonymous donor has stepped forward to issue yet another 1K Challenge. Citing the desire to “do as much as we can”, this new challenge will make it possible for the REAS Foundation (on your behalf), to help an additional five qualifying Sturbridge seniors with energy costs.
For every donation received (regardless of size), in direct response to this additional 1K Challenge, the sponsor of this challenge will match it dollar for dollar, up to a grand total of one thousand dollars. As was our practice with the previous 1K Challenge, the REAS Foundation will only count those donations specifically designated as 1K donations towards this new challenge. This enables us to maintain the spirit of the 1K Challenge.
In response to this challenge, we will be implementing a new graph on the front page of our website, which will display a figure representing a senior for each $400 received in combined donations. This amount represents the mid-range grant award issued by the REAS Foundation on your behalf.
So, let the challenge begin and let’s see just how quickly we can get those figures up on our front page.
Thomas R. Creamer - Executive Director
1K Challenge Met
Thursday, October 23rd, 2008
The recent 1K Anonymous Challenge featured in the October Sturbridge Times Magazine has been matched as donors quickly flooded the REAS Foundation with 1K Challenge checks.
Donations ranging from the challenge minimum of $25 up to $250 have been streaming in quickly matching the 1K Challenge. In order to ensure that checks received were in fact “challenge” inspired, only those checks that specifically stated 1K in the memo line or were verbally qualified by the donor as a 1K Challenge donation, were credited against the challenge.
It was an incredibly inspiring experience to witness donations being generated so quickly in response to the 1K Challenge and surely, the anonymous challenger must be excited and quite grateful about the response.
We at the REAS Foundation would like to extend our deepest gratitude to the 1K donor who issued this challenge, and certainly to each of you who stepped up to meet that challenge.
The most exciting aspect of this challenge is that once received, the 1K Challenge Check will bring us just over the top of our goal, which will equate to enough funds to provide meaningful energy assistance to approximately 45 seniors right here in Sturbridge. That’s 45 of our neighbors, 45 of our friends, 45 members of our community who have sacrificed so much during their lives and now find themselves teetering on the edge.
You have thrown them a lifeline, and one that is surely a difference-maker in their lives.
Thomas R. Creamer - Executive Director
In The Words of Those You’re Helping
Tuesday, October 21st, 2008
There is much that could be said about the immense compassion Sturbridge residents have exhibited in support of its seniors. Great stories could be written about the amazing fellowship we’ve all been witness to here in town. No doubt, one could easily exhaust a thesaurus, detailing the unparalleled generosity demonstrated these past months.
Yet nothing is as poignant, nor as telling, as the sentiments and words expressed by those you’ve helped. Nothing better conveys the overwhelming sense of desperation replaced now with hope, due solely to the compassion of Sturbridge residents helping their own. At the very moment you settle to read this, there is the quickened beat of grateful hearts that rumbles throughout Sturbridge. It is a sound that grows louder each day, as those seniors whose burden you’ve lightened, breathe a sigh of relief. (more…)
Boy Scout Troop 161 announces can drive to support REAS
Thursday, October 16th, 2008Boy Scout Troop 161
Sturbridge Mass.,
Sponsor: Sturbridge Firefighters Benefit Association
2008: Our 54th year of Scouting in Sturbridge
Press Release: Immediate
Boy Scout can drive to support REAS
Sturbridge: Boy Scout Troop 161, sponsored by the Sturbridge Firefighters Association will be holding a can drive during the month of November in support of the REAS Foundation. REAS is the Residential Energy Assistance for Seniors Foundation a nonprofit group established to assist Sturbridge Elderly with heating assistance this winter. All returnable bottles and cans collected by the Scouts during the month of November will be donated to the REAS foundation.
The Can drive will run the full month of November and residents can drop off their donations at the collection box at the Sturbridge Recycling Center or at the community wide can drive to be held on Saturday, November 22, 9 am to 1 pm at the Sturbridge Public Safety Complex on 346 Main Street. Scouts as well as members of the Sturbridge Fire Department will be on hand to collect returnable bottles and cans.
Tom Chamberland firefighter and Chartering Organizational Representative to Boy Scout troop 161 said “I am proud the troop decided to participate in supporting REAS and the senior citizens of Sturbridge. The troop routinely collects cans to fund their trips and the boy scouting program in Sturbridge. Helping others is a key premise of the Boy Scouts of America, and this is a great lesson and community project for the scouts.”
Thomas Creamer, Executive Director of REAS, said of the Boy Scout involvement “The fact that the Boy Scouts wanted to pitch in and be part of this important community fund raising opportunity was no surprise to us. The selflessness with which they are approaching the project is what we all hope to see in all of our young people. We are gratified and encouraged by their participation.”
Tom Chamberland
25 Bennetts Rd
Sturbridge MA 01566
Save Energy on Heating; Tips From National Grid
Monday, October 13th, 2008The following is taken directly from the National Grid website:
https://www.nationalgridus.com/non_html/brochure_heatcool.pdf
Ways to manage your heating costs
Tune up for efficiency
- Maintaining an efficient heating system is an important step to conserving energy. Have your heating system serviced annually, and never try to repair it yourself.
- If your heating system has a filter, clean or replace it every monthduring the heating season.
- Your furnace or boiler needs air to work properly (and efficiently). Don’t close it off with walls, debris or other obstructions.
Turn down for savings
- For every 1° F you set your thermostat back, you can save one to three percent on your annual heating costs.
- Turn down the thermostat every time you leave the house for two or more hours, and every night before you go to bed. It takes less energy to warm up a cool house than to maintain a warm temperature all day and night.
- Installing a programmable thermostat is an inexpensive, easy way to maintain comfort and cut heating costs. You can program it to turn the heating system up and down at preset times
Sturbridge Police Media Advisory: Senior Police Academy
Thursday, October 9th, 2008Media Advisory
For immediate release Contact: Officer Carol Benoit
October 6, 2008 508-347-2525
The Sturbridge Police Department will be holding a senior police academy, to be held and conducted at the Sturbridge Senior Center, 480 Main Street in Sturbridge. This class, free for all participants, will cover various topics in law enforcement, specifically, the Sturbridge Police Department, such as motor vehicle and criminal laws, Departmental policies and responsibilities and other assorted materials. Participants will also be eligible to ride along in a police cruiser during a patrol shift.
Classes will be held on the following dates, and are open to anyone 55 years of age or older:
Tuesday October 21 and 28 9:30-11:30 AM
Tuesday November 4, 18, 25 9:30-11:30 AM
Wednesday November 12 1:00-3:00 PM
Tuesday December 2 9:30-11:30 AM
Wednesday December 10 1:00-3:00 PM
Graduation will be held on December 16th, from 9:30 until 11:30 AM
To sign up, or to obtain additional information, please contact either Officer Carol Benoit at the Sturbridge Police Department 508-347-2525 , or Barbara Search-Miller, Senior Center Director, 508-347-7575
Applicants from outside the town of Sturbridge are welcome
####