Local community garden takes root to combat hunger

North Shore Bank employees donate $1,500 to Be Fed Foundation

Date: January 9, 2024

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In 2020, Vanessa Hurley, a teller at North Shore Bank, started the Be Fed Foundation, a non-profit whose mission is to end hunger and food insecurity by specializing in community garden projects where all the produce grown is donated to local homeless shelters and food banks.
What began as a seed of an idea ultimately grew into the planting, harvesting and donating of produce for those in need. While on a trip into Boston, Hurley and a group of friends found themselves driving on Massachusetts Avenue, when they were taken aback by the number of homeless people on the sidewalk, many sitting against buildings and all of them in need of help.
Homelessness, hunger, addiction — and a combination thereof was very evident, and Hurley wanted to find a way to help.
Through research, she quickly realized the enormity of a project involving addiction. That realization prompted Hurley to focus on one aspect of the situation she thought she could affect – food insecurity. It was then that she began sharing her ideas with her Bryant College friends and began reaching out to resources in her hometown of Middleton and surrounding communities.
As an employee of North Shore Bank, Vanessa’s organization was an ideal candidate for the bank’s monthly Jeans Day program.

For a small donation of $5 a week, North Shore Bank employees are allowed to wear jeans to work each Friday with the funds collected, pooled and then donated to a local organization.
Since its inception in 2015, the Bank’s Jeans Day program has now raised over $108,000 for local non-profits and charitable organizations.
Recently, the Be Fed Foundation received a contribution of $1,500 through the program.
Hurley is grateful for the donation made by her colleagues.
“Because of their support, we will be using the funds to purchase new equipment, better fertilizer, and produce more variety in what we plant,” she said. “We are so excited and always looking for more help either through volunteering or donating resources.”
As their garden expands, the organization is planning to increase the variety of what is grown and in return what will be donated to local food pantries and homeless shelters. To engage the community and build interest in learning about sustainability, in 2024 Be Fed Foundation will allow individuals to rent out section of their garden to grow vegetables for personal use.
For more information on the Be Fed Foundation, visit www.befedfoundation.org.

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