Friday, November 29, 2013

An exercise in giving!


About 400 runners and walkers were up bright and early Thanksgiving morning to take part in the Turkey Trot 5K. Held at the LDS Church on Jordan Rd and put on by Feed The Need, the event was quite successful! Raising money and food for the Franklin Food Pantry, the donations filled the truck.


TurkeyTrot_2013_OneHappyErin
Erin Lynch, Director of Development for the Franklin Food Pantry posed by the full truckload of donations

More photos of the event can be found here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/steve_sherlock/sets/72157638175273655/with/11116316576/

The official race results will be posted to http://feedtheneed.org/


When the final tally on runners/walkers and donations is ready, it will be shared. In the meantime, thank you! thank you! thank you! This is wonderful support for our community!

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Turkey Trot Reminders



Race reminders for the Franklin Turkey Trot
Feed the Need - Turkey Trot 5K
Feed the Need - Turkey Trot 5K


Registration

  • Wednesday Night from 7-9 pm 

Avoid the lines on Thanksgiving morning and either register for the race OR finalize your registration and pick up your bib, free shirt, etc. at the LDS Church, 91 Jordan Rd, Franklin



  • Thanksgiving Morning from 7-8 am
Free T-shirts
150 shirts on a first come first serve basis. If you really want a shirt, you should come to the Wed. night registration.

Free Sunglasses
The Ironman sunglasses from last year have been kindly donated again.

Free Raffle Items
We will be having a free raffle at the end of the race following the awards ceremony. Some raffle items include Boston Harbor Dinner Cruise for two, iTunes gift cards, etc.


Race Start
8 am - Thursday morning
at the LDS Church, 91 Jordan Rd, Franklin




Race Map
To view the race map, see the PDF here




or view it online at www.feedtheneed.org



Dress Warm
It looks like it will be a cold morning!

Monday, November 25, 2013

Thanksgiving - much to be thankful for

The Franklin Food Pantry is able to perform its service due to the gracious and giving community of donors and volunteers. The next several weeks are the busiest time of the year as the holidays bring out the giving spirit. The Food Pantry is poised to serve, to give, to share, and to collect.

Turkey Trot Family 5K
1 - The Turkey Trot 5K Family Fun Run and Walk will be held bright and early Thanksgiving morning. Registration can be done online here. The registration fee is $20 per person or 20 items for the Food Pantry.  

2 - For Patriot fans, we are holding a raffle for a chance to win 5 luxury box seats and a parking pass for the Dec 8th game. Tickets are available at the Food Pantry or contact me directly. The raffle winner will be announced Sunday Dec 1 at 4:00 PM.

3 - The Franklin Food Elves will be collecting for the Food Pantry in their annual "12 Days of Giving" campaign.  "More than 60 Food Elves will be collecting goods in neighborhoods around Franklin. If you don't have an Elf in your neighborhood, you can still participate in our food drive! Look for the red collection bins at these participating FDP member businesses:

  • DCU, 500 West Central St.
  • Dean Bank, 21 Main St. 
  • Dean College, Campus Center
  • Emma's Quilt Cupboard, 12 Main St.
  • Franklin Downtown Partnership Office, 9 East Central St.
  • Jane's Frames, 11 East Central St.
  • Murphy Business, 15 East Central St.
  • Pour Richard's Wine & Spirits, 14 Grove St.
For additional information on the Food Elves visit here

4 - The dramatic performance of "The Christmas Carol Times Two" returns this year on Thursday, Dec 12th. Maybe you heard good things about this sellout performance last year. Get your tickets early this year. The easiest way is to buy your tickets online here. Or you could stop by the Food Pantry.

Franklin Food Pantry
5 - Finally, the Food Pantry webpage has updated its donation widget. You can donate securely online using a credit card or via an electronic funds transfer (EFT) from a bank account. You can make a one time or set up a recurring payment.  You can find the donation widget on the Food Pantry webpage or here on Franklin Matters. (Either way, the transaction is processed directly to the Food Pantry. The link here simply makes it easier to do so).

Thank you!

Thursday, November 21, 2013

A Christmas Carol Times Two! - Dec 12th


"A Christmas Carol Times Two!", a dramatic reading performance of Charles Dickens "A Christmas Carol" combined with traditional 19th century English Christmas carols will happen on Thursday, Dec. 12 at 7PM at the Franklin United Methodist Church, 82 West Central Street in Franklin, Massachusetts. "Englishman Thomas Hutchinson, Traveling Thespian" portrayed by actor Al LePage, complete with English accent and Victorian-era clothing, will give his dramatic reading performance based on Dickens' very own historic script as a one-man show using only his voice, facial expressions and gestures to create some 18 characters. Organist and local minister Rev. Dr. Dianne Carpenter will weave organ music between various scenes to set the tone for what's to come and entertain. This is a special benefit performance hosted by the Franklin United Methodist Church with all proceeds to benefit the Franklin Food Pantry. Admission is $10 per person and the performance is best appreciated by both adults and children 7 years of age and older. Tickets are on sale and can be purchased in advance through BrownPaperTickets.com/, either on-line or by calling their 24/7 toll-free number 1-800-838-3006, and if still available, at the door the day of event. Doors for the performance open at 6:30PM, the fun begins at 6:45PM, and seating is general admission.

"Englishman Thomas Hutchinson, Traveling Thespian" brings his one man show to Franklin, MA to help prevent hunger close to home "From Scrooge to Tiny Tim, from Marley's Ghost to Mrs. Cratchit," begins actor Al LePage, "there's howls and growls, bangs and bongs, a dance with a song, lively laughter and heartfelt tears. And when I perform, watch out, I love to improvise on the spot. Maybe just a conversation with someone in the audience, but with everyone listening in, of course! I could even ask you to join me on the stage at some part, too. Oh yes, I do believe in seizing the moment, and even I don't always know what's going to happen next. And, before each reading, in character as 'Englishman Thomas Hutchinson,' he definitely has 'his stories' to tell both in 'the year' -- this year it's '1911' -- and though he typically shares some history about the place he's performing, this year things will take a very different twist, focusing more on what the future will bring rather than what's happened in the past. All this will make this year's performance unique once again, keeping it fresh and exciting, and as usual spontaneous with full of surprises, too! One surprise may be a gift for you,” adds LePage "they'll definitely be at least one special gift given away to some lucky person, too."
Englishman Thomas Hutchinson, Traveling Thespian

But there's also a serious side to LePage and why he does so many of his shows to benefit hunger organizations. As a young man the school he'd been working at as a teacher in Boston unexpectedly closed down for good over the winter holiday break, and through no fault of his own found himself without a job, without a paycheck. His savings were meager, and deciding not to go on unemployment at the time, struggled to make ends meet. He paid his bills but had little money left over for food. So, he got hungry for really the first time in his life. He was not starving, of course, but he remembers it being winter and spring, feeling cold and hungry, and figures he may even have been slightly malnourished as time went on, too. That experience has stuck with him ever since, and that's why his primary focus is to get every penny from ticket sales for his shows donated to organizations that help prevent hunger close to home. His Franklin performance benefits the Franklin Food Pantry, with other events in Boston, Sudbury and Sherborn to primarily benefit local area food pantries close to where LePage was born and lived for nearly half his life.

“We are all in this together,” states Steve Sherlock, Franklin Food Pantry’s Board President. “There are many factors and circumstances that create food-insecurity. Hunger is something that's not very well talked about, but the need for food is something the community fortunately is very able and willing to support. So we want to continue to get the word out, continue to get that support, and this special event will help us do that."

The Franklin Food Pantry currently provides service to approximately 600 households; serving some 1590 community members, 35% of whom are children. Many of these households have at least one working adult but are still unable to make ends meet. Last year in 2012, the Pantry distributed 186,000 pounds of food, which was an increase of 35,000 pounds over the previous 2011 total. This year the Pantry has also seen a 43% increase in clients returning weekly for bread and produce.

Hunger close to home has been and continues to be a serious issue both locally and nationally. At any given time, people sometimes have to make choices between food and other critical survival factors such as heat, housing, medical care or transportation. In Massachusetts alone over 229,000 children are effected, that's over 1 in every 4 people facing hunger within the state, and nearly 40% are also from families that likely don't qualify for government programs like food stamps or free school lunches simply because they earn too much money. All that's according to Map the Meal Gap: Child Food Insecurity, a report originally issued in 2011 by The Greater Boston Food Bank (GBFB) and the national network of food banks, Feeding America. The report also notes that those who don't eat what they need for strong healthy brain development may never recover their lost potential for cognitive growth. It goes on to say that besides stunting their intellectual capacity, it could also affect learning, social interaction and productivity, diminishing what could have been a child's eventual contributions to society. And according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) report just released this September, Household Food Security in the United States in 2012, an 'estimated 14.5 percent of American households (that's over one in six) were food insecure at least some time during the year in 2012, meaning they lacked access to enough food for an active, healthy life for all household members.' And the report's summary also noted that the 'percentage of U.S. households that were food insecure remained essentially unchanged from 2011 to 2012.

"Last year's show was wonderful, a great family event, " noted Franklin resident Mary Olsson, "and we'll all be going again this year. It was a sell-out show in Franklin last year, so be sure to get your tickets early."

Dianne Carpenter weaves organ music into the show!Dianne Carpenter started playing piano at age 6, took up the violin a few years later, and by the time she was a junior in high school landed her first job as a church organist! She pursued her music education degree from Lowell State College, went on to teach music in area schools, but always remained a church organist or choir director as that "teachers second job" to make ends meet. She eventually decided to get even more serious about her life in "music ministry," went back to school to receive a Masters of Sacred Music from Boston University, but continued to teach school. A few years later, though, the economic situation for funding education statewide in Massachusetts took a turn for the worse and teaching jobs were threatened. All this forced her to do some soul-searching, and in the end she decided her journey was now to be the path of pastoral ministry. She sold her house, went back to school yet again, and eventually earned both a Masters of Divinity from Andover Newton Theological School and a PhD in Christian Social Ethics from Boston University Graduate School. She's been a minister in the New England Conference of the United Methodist Church for nearly two decades, serving in Natick, Spencer, Belmont, Hamilton and Brewster Massachussetts. She currrently serves as minister of the United Methodist Church in Franklin, MA, and continues to publicly perform both on organ and piano, typically now only playing the violin for her own enjoyment.

"We all have gifts, and God wants us to be generous with those gifts, asking us to share them," begins Rev. Dr. Dianne Carpenter, pastor at Franklin United Methodist Church. "And this event is an opportunity for the community not only to be entertained, but also become aware of the real meaning of Christmas, God's passion for the entire world as reflected in providing the resources needed by the food pantry so everyone served can celebrate the season, too."

LePage, a native of Framingham, began bringing history to life through improvised portrayals of real people from the past for over seven years at historic sites, museums, and other venues throughout the Pacific Northwest. He's written and produced his own historical dramas as one-man shows, appeared on the nationally televised PBS “History Detectives” series in roles ranging from a bartender to Robert E. Lee. Oregon Public Broadcasting Radio produced and premiered LePage's own shortened version of Dickens' Christmas Carol as his own one man one-hour radio program in 2010, its fourth annual broadcast once again this year on Christmas eve itself. He's been giving performances of the Carol to benefit charity in the United States, Canada and England since 2006. In 2011 he traveled to England to perform there for the first time beginning in the same place and for the same charity that Dickens himself did his first public reading of the Carol in Birmingham in 1853, and LePage's last performance that year was in the old stables of the historic 16th century coaching inn in Framlingham, England itself, the very same town after which Framingham, MA was so named.

“Englishman Thomas Hutchinson, a native of Framlingham, England," of course, is a fictitious character originally developed to share regional and western history. He's not only like a Frankenstein of history, being made up of the bits and pieces of people who once really did live, but also a sort of Forrest Gump of history, too, somehow always showing up whenever and wherever history is being made! He now continues to live on as a Victorian-era “Traveling Thespian” spreading good cheer and giving dramatic readings of A Christmas Carol to benefit charity. In order to make his character both believable and credible – or as incredible as the stories he tells seem to be – LePage not only meticulously researches the history of the place and “the year” he performs, but also often travels to historic sites to soak up the sights and sounds and whatever else he can, not only to better transport himself, but also audience members, back in time. Indeed, while visiting England in 2011, he not only visited the only surviving home of Dickens in London, but also went to the very locations in London where various scenes took place in the Christmas Carol story itself!


Friday, November 8, 2013

Turkey meal distribution


With the holidays approaching, the Franklin Food Pantry held its annual distribution of turkey dinners on Wednesday evening.
Two hundred dinners were put together and handed out to registered members of the food pantry. All registered members are residents of Franklin who are chosen through an application process.
volunteers happy and ready to distribute the meal kits
volunteers ready to distribute the meal kits
The dinners included a frozen turkey and all the side items such as cranberry sauce, vegetables, stuffing and more. All items are donated by the community with the help of the Franklin Interfaith Council while volunteers put together all the bags. The turkey's come from the Greater Boston Food Bank and are handed out from the back of a Garelick Farm's refrigerated truck.
"Everyone is very supportive in getting the bags put together," says Linda Sottile, Director of Operations at the Food Pantry, who helps oversee the collecting and packaging of the items and bags.
Sottile works alongside Erin Lynch, Director of Development at the Food Pantry, to make the distribution possible. Thanksgiving is the first of two dinner distributions with the second one happening early in December.

Lynch says the Food Pantry is always thankful for any donation made to make these events possible, "We're very grateful to the community."

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Healthy Futures Shelf - Wish List

The Healthy Futures Shelf is made possible by a grant from the MetroWest Health Foundation. It provides access to nutritious choices in partnership with Stop and Shop, the Hockomock Area YMCA and through generous donations from the community.





Why does the wish list have non-food items?
SNAP benefits restricts the purchase to food and these items you still need for a healthy life.


  • Print out this flyer to take with you when you go shopping.
  • Share this copy with a neighbor or friend.
  • Follow the Food Pantry on Facebook 
  • Subscribe to receive updates via email as new posts are created here (subscribe via email on the home page)



Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Franklin Food Pantry Volunteer Opportunity

Update 11/7/13 - 
Thank you for your responses, we have sufficient volunteers now. It is so good to see another example of social media doing social good for our own community!

Thank you. Thank you. Thank you!



The Franklin Food Pantry is looking for some temporary help for the upcoming months.  This person 18+ would assist with stocking shelves, carrying donations and other organizing activities.

November 7 - December 13th

Tuesdays and Thursday (not 11/14) - 9am - Noon

If you are interested in this, please send an email to:

volunteers@franklinfoodpantry.org or call 508.528.3115 and leave a message with Volunteer line