Freetown Police deliver 43 Christmas baskets to residents

“Christmas baskets were once again a huge success! We would like to give a huge THANK YOU to everyone who donated to help make this possible. This year, we were able to provide 43 baskets to Freetown residents! The FPA would like to give special recognition to the following individuals and organizations:

– Market Basket of New Bedford
– Kevin and Lori DesMaris and all of the Town of Freetown Town Hall Employees;
– Gil-Den Inc.;
– Juniors Convenience Store; and,
– K.R.R.

On behalf of the FPA entire membership, we wish you all a Merry Christmas, Happy Holiday and safe and happy New Year. #is2020overyet.”-Freetown Police.


Freetown Police photo.


Freetown Police photo.




Fall River’s “Forever Paws” shares “Wyatt” the homeless dog’s letter to Santa

“Dear Santa,

My name is Wyatt, and I am a Staffordshire Terrier. I was was 10-12 months old when I arrived at the shelter on February 5th, and I do not understand why.

I am staying with my friends at New England Dog Training and learning every day. Each day I watch all the other dogs get picked up by their families who are laughing and smiling and are so happy to see them, and I wonder- will that EVER be me? Will I meet my new family today? All I want is the chance to be greeted like that and loved unconditionally. I am so happy to see them with their families because it is proof that that love exists, but I can’t help but wonder -Why Not Me?

Santa, my request may be a large one, but I am asking you for a Christmas Miracle. On your travels this Holiday Season, could you PLEASE help me find my forever home? I would be great in an adult home, or as a companion to a single person, I just need to be the only pet. I have a TON of love to give, I just need the chance.
This is my Christmas Wish.

Love,
Wyatt

P.S. If you could have the elves pass this letter around, and let anyone who might want to take a chance on me email asilva@foreverpaws.com , I will make sure I leave some cookies for you!”

All photos by Forever Paws:




Massachusetts State Police escort convoy for “Wreaths Across America”

“Yesterday, troopers assisted in escorting a convoy for Wreaths Across America, as the convoy entered Massachusetts with agencies from Maine and New Hampshire.

Troopers escorted the convoy to the City of Worcester, where a short parade through the city occurred, then Worcester Police joined our team to the Connecticut state line, where Connecticut State Police took over the escort, where they continued on to eventually arrive in Washington D.C.

To learn more about Wreaths Across America, go to https://www.wreathsacrossamerica.org/.”

All photos my the Massachusetts State Police:




Massachusetts State Police appeal to public for extra help with “Toys For Tots” this year

“The Bristol County Toys for Tots program is asking for extra help this year, as that region still has many families in need of toys.

The Massachusetts State Police D Troop Barracks will be accepting new, unwrapped, non-violent toys for boys or girls, ages infant to 14. These are the barracks in Yarmouth, Norwell, Middleborough, Bourne, Dartmouth, Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket.

These Barracks will be accepting toys until December 21. Thank you in advance for helping bring a Merry Christmas to these families.” -Massachusetts State Police.




Massachusetts State Police deliver “care buckets,” each containing a winter coat, hand sanitizer, and masks

Troopers from the Massachusetts State Police Boston Barracks recently delivered “care buckets” collected through the Massachusetts Military Support Foundation’s Coats4Veterans program to the New England Center and Home for Veterans on Court Street in Boston.

Each bucket contains a winter coat, hand sanitizer, and masks. The MSP and other law enforcement agencies picked up the buckets for distribution last week at Gillette Stadium (the Patriots, other Boston pro sports teams, Home Depot, and other organizations are supporting the charity along with numerous police departments).

Seen in the photos are Chris Schafer, the operations manager for the center, and two veterans from the home. They accepted the buckets from MSP Troopers David DiCrescenzo, Mark Bartholomew, and Christopher Brandon.

In addition to serving the citizens of our state, the three Troopers also have served our nation with honor and distinction: Trooper DiCrescenzo is a Major in the Massachusetts Army National Guard, serving as the Operations Officer for the 211th Military Police Battalion; Trooper Bartholomew is a US Navy veteran who served on a counter-piracy task force as part of an F/A-18 Super Hornet squadron; and Trooper Brandon is a Second Lieutenant in the 1st Squadron, 172 Cavalry Regiment of the Vermont National Guard. We are indebted to all veterans for their service to our country, and are honored to be able to assist the Massachusetts Military Support Foundation in this most worthy effort.


Massachusetts State Police photo.


Massachusetts State Police photo.




Massachusetts AG Healey to make access to food pantries easier for immigrants and homeless during pandemic

As the COVID-19 public health crisis continues to cause financial hardship for residents across the state and food insecurity is on the rise, Attorney General Maura Healey has issued an advisory to assist food pantries to ensure those seeking assistance do not face barriers to accessing food.

The pandemic has led to a near 60 percent increase in food insecurity in the state, the largest relative increase in the nation, and the percentage of children who don’t have enough to eat has more than doubled. The advisory from the AG’s Office, drafted in collaboration with The Greater Boston Food Bank, Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, and Central West Justice Center, aims to help food pantries adopt best practices to reduce barriers to access to food assistance for vulnerable residents. Specifically, the AG’s Office advises that food pantries should not require photo identification or Social Security cards; should carefully consider their policies for collecting information about those seeking assistance; and should share information about other resources available to address food insecurity.

“Food insecurity has emerged as one of the most pressing issues facing our state, and we need to do everything we can to prevent more families from going hungry,” said AG Healey. “My office is committed to supporting agencies and organizations that are addressing this need. Food insecurity is everyone’s issue in this Commonwealth and now is the time where we all have to pitch in.”

“The Greater Boston Food Bank’s mission is to end hunger and work with our nearly 600 pantries, meal programs and mobile markets, to make food accessible to anyone in need in Eastern MA,” said Catherine D’Amato, president and CEO of The Greater Boston Food Bank. “That includes providing guidance and best practices to remove barriers and reduce stigma and fear for our clients. We appreciate the thoughtful approach in partnering with the AGO, DESE and MDAR, and our sister food banks, in issuing guidance to the emergency food network. We look forward to continuing the collective action to encourage a safe and welcoming environment for individuals and families to seek food assistance without hesitation.”

“We are pleased to have joined forces with Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey to draft this timely guidance,” said Patricia Baker, Senior Policy Analyst at the Massachusetts Law Reform Institute. “We know that food pantries are doing their best to feed as many as residents of the Commonwealth as possible. Ensuring that vulnerable families and individuals with few resources are not required to clear unnecessary hurdles is a critical step to addressing the food insecurity crisis exacerbated by the pandemic.”

“With hunger on the rise in the Commonwealth, we at CWJC are happy to work with the office of the Attorney General in ensuring that our immigrant neighbors can access food resources without barriers,” said Gina Plata-Nino, staff attorney at Central West Justice Center.

“The COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent economic fallout has exacerbated food insecurity in communities, particularly those with people of color and with lower incomes. The Commonwealth’s COVID-19 Command Center Food Security Task Force was established to immediately address food assistance needs, and to strengthen our food system and increase access, and leveraging existing nutrition resources,” said Health and Human Services Secretary and COVID-19 Command Center Director Marylou Sudders. “We appreciate the support of the Attorney General’s office to enforce laws to maintain the critical food access lifeline that food pantries provide, especially in this time of increased need.”

“The Baker-Polito Administration has made addressing food insecurity a critical priority in its response to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and its impacts on families across the Commonwealth, including direct support to food banks and food pantries through the Massachusetts Emergency Food Assistance Program (MEFAP), increasing the program’s annual funding allocation by $9 million over the past year,” said MDAR Commissioner John Lebeaux. “The Administration welcomes Attorney General Healy’s clarifying advisory, which will support the excellent work taking place at hundreds of food pantries throughout Massachusetts and increase access to food for our most vulnerable residents.”

“The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts believes that everyone has a right to healthy food regardless of their circumstances,” said Christina Maxwell, Director of Programs, The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts. “We envision a day when no one goes hungry and everyone has access to nutritious food. The emergency food network in western Massachusetts and across the Commonwealth welcomes anyone and everyone who is in need of food assistance. We realize that it can often be difficult to ask for help, so it is crucial that we limit the barriers that are placed between people and the healthy food they need to live a full and active life.”

“Nutritious food is a basic human right and fundamental to health and so much more,” said Jean McMurray, CEO of the Worcester County Food Bank. “Worcester County Food Bank and its network of food pantries welcome and help any individual and family in need with food and information on other resources. Together with hunger-relief partners across the state, we are working to ensure that no one goes hungry in the Commonwealth.”

“We at the Merrimack Valley Food Bank and our counterpart food banks realize that our member pantries and food providers on the front lines experience significant challenges, so you can ensure that all of your guests receive the lifesaving food and other services they need,” said Amy L. Pesia, Executive Director of the Merrimack Valley Food Bank. “We appreciate the Attorney General’s help in removing the barriers that exist, whenever possible, including requirements for guests to provide documents to receive food. Requiring documents could provide a barrier for these vulnerable neighbors, as well as those are new to the emergency food system, as they’ve never needed to ask for help before now. They need food and need our help.”

“Families who are most in need should not have to confront unnecessary requirements in order to receive assistance from food pantries,” said Isabel Lopez, Founder and Director of the Brockton Workers’ Alliance. “We reported this issue to the AG’s Office because we saw the significant impact these policies were having on lower income people of color in our community. Through the recommendations in this guidance, food pantries can help to address the systemic racism that their clients too often face.”

“We are ground zero for the pandemic in Chelsea, and the need for food assistance for our community has rapidly grown since March,” said Gladys Vega, Executive Director of La Colaborativa. “The lines for food and other needed items stretch down multiple city blocks. In these times, we all need to work together and this guidance from the AG’s Office will help ensure our residents don’t face unnecessary obstacles when seeking the food they need to survive.”

To reduce barriers, food pantries should not require photo identification or Social Security cards from clients seeking food, according to Healey.

“Many vulnerable residents may not have a photo ID or Social Security card. For example, immigrants often lack state IDs, driver’s licenses, or Social Security numbers. They may also fear providing these documents because of their immigration status. Homeless residents also face difficulty in obtaining these documents.”

Food pantries that distribute food through the Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP) and the Massachusetts Emergency Food Assistance Program (MEFAP) are prohibited from asking clients to produce photo identification and Social Security cards in order to receive food from these public programs, according to a July letter from the state Department of Elementary and Secondary Education and the state Department of Agricultural Resources.

The AG’s advisory also notes that requiring pantry clients to provide photo identification and Social Security cards also may violate Massachusetts anti-discrimination law, as the requirement may have a disproportionate impact based on national origin or race.

According to the advisory, organizations that collect sensitive information from individuals including their names, along with their Social Security numbers, state ID numbers or driver’s license numbers are required to adopt security safeguards to prevent identity theft.




New Bedford Police Department kicks off annual “Fill The Bus” toy drive

“It’s time to fill the bus!

As part of the annual Safe Zones Fill the Bus toy drive we’re inviting you to drop off “new and unwrapped gifts” to any of our stations across the city up until Christmas!

A school bus will be parked at NBPD Headquarters, 871 Rockdale Ave., on December 19 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.

We’re looking forward to again partnering with Jerry Pinto and bringing light into the lives of so many children in New Bedford. For more information, please email: Ricard.Rezendes@newbedfordpd.com.

Please give us the gift of sharing this post featuring a few Officers from a previous year!

#nbpd #communitypolicing #newbedford #safezones #fillthebus”-New Bedford Police Department.




Bristol County Sheriff’s Office: “It’s all about the kids.”

“It’s all about the kids.”

It’s hard to argue with Connie Sampson, our receptionist who’s been organizing our Giving Tree every Christmas for more than a decade.

Every year, Connie puts tags on the tree with a gender and age and staff stop by, grab a tag, and buy a gift to match. The result this year is more than 100 presents wrapped and ready to make the holidays brighter for local children in need.

We’ve partnered with some local organizations to make sure children in need get these presents on Christmas morning. We’re working with the New Bedford Fire Department, local veterans’ organizations, and families receiving services from the YWCA this year, as well as giving presents to the families involved in the Thanksgiving fire on Washburn Street in New Bedford.

It’s an annual tradition for our staff to drop off some presents for the Giving Tree and snap a picture. Our Special Investigations Unit (Maj. Perry and Sgts. Salgado, Taber, Cardoso, Fortin, Morel and Allard) worked together to drop off a bunch of gifts and smile for the camera the other day, and other BCSO staff members have been doing the same.

Thanks to Connie and everyone else who helped with this annual tradition. Between the Giving Tree and our K9 toy Drive, it warms our hearts knowing that hundreds of local children in need will have a brighter holiday season.


Bristol County Sheriff’s Office photo.


Bristol County Sheriff’s Office photo.


Bristol County Sheriff’s Office photo.




New Bedford Police receives special visitors

We had such special visitors yesterday that one pic isn’t enough!

Six-year-old Sydney Leandro, her brother, Jack, and their parents, Adam and Lyndsey, stopped in for a visit. While here at HQ, Robert Fahey from Cops for Kids with Cancer presented them with a $5,000 check.

When Sydney mentioned she wants to be a veterinarian when she grows up, a trip to Animal Control was in order.

Chief Joseph Cordeiro and PIO Scott Carola welcomed the family. Animal Control Officers Shelley Avila-Martins, Branden George, and Manny Maciel were on hand at Animal Control.

#nbpd #communitypolicing #copsforkidswithcancer”


New Bedford Police Department photo.


New Bedford Police Department photo.




Bristol County Sheriff’s Office collects and distributes a “ton of toys” to brighten the holidays for local children

“Many of them have never seen a Christmas tree or gifts.”

That’s what JRI Program Director Robert Costa told us in Berkley Tuesday afternoon as we dropped off a ton of toys to brighten the holidays for local children receiving adoption and foster care services from JRI.

Through an amazing amount of support from inside and outside the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office, our K9 team collected and delivered hundreds of toys for those children in need.

“I’m really at a loss for words,” Costa told us Tuesday afternoon. “We can’t thank you enough.”

Most of the toys were collected from the annual K9 Toy Drive last weekend, where, in the pouring rain, cars kept coming by to drop off toys for kids in need. We had record numbers of support from the BCSO staff and their families, and we can’t thank them enough for their generosity.

We also owe big gratitude to Dr. Cynthia Comstock of Chase Farm Veterinary Hospital, South Coast Towing, Aaron Pools & Spas, Fairhaven Firestorm of South Coast Girls Softball, as well as the Palmer, Cambra and Larrabee families.

“Our K9 team did an amazing job and the support they got from the community, especially the BCSO family, was unbelievable,” Sheriff Hodgson said. “No child should grow up never seeing a Christmas tree or a present, and we all take tremendous pride in knowing we helped these kids in need have a nice Christmas.”

If you’ve seen our K9 team around in the community the last month or so, you may have noticed some beards growing on their faces. They, along with Supt. Steven Souza participated in No Shave November and collected donations which were given to Mr. Costa on Tuesday in addition to the toys. Lt. Kenneth Almeida presented Mr. Costa with more than $1,700 to make the holidays extra bright for those kids getting foster care services.

From our K9 team and the rest of us at the BCSO, we were proud to take part in this and we wish all those children, and the rest of the people in Bristol County, a very happy and safe holiday season.

All photos by the Bristol County Sheriff’s Office: