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Special Olympics of Massachusetts Receives $15,000 Grant from Middlesex Savings Charitable Foundation

Middlesex Savings Charitable Foundation completed its twelfth year of community-based philanthropy with two rounds of grants, announced in May and November, totaling $320,300.

Among the recipients was Marlborough-based Special Olympics of Massachusetts, which received $15,000 to support its Unified Interscholastic Program. That program brings individuals with and without intellectual disabilities together in Olympic-type sports competitions.

Director of Development Steve Huftalen represented Special Olympics at a November 5 reception for grantees at the Middlesex Savings Bank’s operations center in Westborough.

The Middlesex Savings Charitable Foundation has disbursed more than $3.1 million since its founding in 2000. During 2012, non-profit organizations with locations in 13 communities of MetroWest were recipients of foundation grants that supported a variety of causes including: care for the elderly; food and shelter for lower-income individuals of all ages; health care; legal services; housing; prevention of domestic violence; and assistance for adults and children with special needs.

Other agencies that received grants in the current year were:

•           Boys and Girls Clubs of MetroWest, Framingham Clubhouse:  $15,000

•           Caritas Communities, Bedford Veterans’ Quarters: Case Management and Counseling Support: $7,500

•           Domestic Violence Services Network, Concord; Court Program support:  $15,000

•           Framingham Downtown Renaissance; Main Street Program: $15,000

•           Homeowner Options for Massachusetts Elders (HOME); in-home counseling services to low-income elders encountering home displacement threats: $15,000

•           Making It Happen, Framingham High School; Advanced Placement Program support: $4,500

•           Neighbor Brigade, Wayland; Staffing support for volunteer services in 27 communities: $11,000

•           Reach Beyond Domestic Violence, Waltham; Community-based support services to adults and children who have suffered from domestic violence: $15,000

•           The Center for Arts in Natick (TCAN); Capacity-building for advancement program: $15,000

•           The Food Project, Lincoln; Hunger relief and youth development: $9,000

•           The Nature Connection, Concord; Transforming the Elder’s Quality of Life project: $6,500

•           Wayside Youth and Family Support, Framingham; Campus transition support: $15,000

•           A Place to Turn, Natick; Community Development Program  - Food for Families in need: $5,000

•           Boys & Girls Clubs of Assabet Valley, Maynard; “Beyond the Bell” After-School Program support: $15,000

•           Charles River Center, Needham; Funding to support additional residential facility: $15,000

•           Communities for Restorative Justice (C4RJ), Concord; Relief Fund support covering 13 communities : $15,000

•           Families for Depression Awareness, Waltham ; Teen Depression Program support: $15,000

•           Habitat for Humanity of Greater Lowell, Westford; Neighborhood Revitalization Initiative: $15,000

•           Infant Toddler Children’s Center, Acton; Tuition support for low-income, pre-schoolers in Acton, Boxborough, Harvard, and Littleton: $10,000

•           Jewish Community Housing for the Elderly (JCHE), Framingham; Fitness and Wellness Program at Shillman House: $15,000

•           Metrowest Mediation Services, Framingham; Divorce mediation training for volunteers: $4,300

•           Natick Historical Society; Documentation, relocation, and restoration planning for Sawin House, Natick’s first homestead: $10,000

•           Natick Visiting Nurse Association (VNA); Support for purchase of tablet PCs by trained practitioners: $10,000

•           Parmenter VNA and Community Care, Wayland; Support for children attending Camp Erin Bereavement program: $10,000

•           Samaritans, Inc., Framingham; Support for computerizing Suicide Crisis Helpline and upgrading teen-to-teen IM chat service: $7.500

•           Jericho Road Project, Concord; Expansion of board training and recruitment program for non-profit organizations to 33 MetroWest communities: $15,000

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