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5 Mile Walk for Hunger
The 5-mile Walk for Hunger
is scheduled for Memorial Day weekend – Saturday,
May 31, 2007, beginning at 10:00 a.m. at St. John’s gym. The walk will
follow the same route as the annual Tribute Road race. Prizes will be given to
the individuals and group who collect the most donations. Learn
more »
Welcome to the H&R Block Non-Profit Program!
For each new client referred to have their taxes done by
H&R Block, H&R
Block will provide a program reward to WHEAT Community Services.
Download the flyer (PDF, 556K)
View the terms and conditions (PDF, 20k)
WHEAT’s
mission
To promote the well being of
low-income children, adults and families in the communities we serve:
Berlin, Bolton, Clinton, Lancaster and Sterling.
What WHEAT does
Most people have experienced some type of crisis
at some time in their lives: a lost job, financial difficulties,
medical bills, or a tragedy such as fire or loss of a family member.
WHEAT helps community members who need help--with food, clothing,
referrals, transportation, and assistance getting back on their
feet. Read More »
How you can help WHEAT
WHEAT serves hundreds of your neighbors each
month, and we rely on contributions and volunteers to do our work.
We truly cannot do it without you! Read through some of the ideas
below to see how you can help. Our communities are filled with people
who reach out to each other in times of need, from community members
who donate endless hours in volunteer activities throughout the
years, to corporate sponsors of our fundraising events, to a little
girl who recently donated the four quarters she had saved and said
that she would start over and be back. This is what the spirit of
community service is all about. Our clients depend on us, and we
depend on you. 15 things you can
do to help »
The history of WHEAT
In the late 1970’s, several significant
events were to deeply impact the town of Clinton and surrounding
towns. The day after the historic visit of President Jimmy Carter,
the Colonial Press closed its doors forever. Marine Plastics moved
out of town, ITT had layoffs, public transportation from Clinton
to Worcester had been terminated, and an influx of people into the
area to fill jobs that no longer existed taxed the available low-income
housing. High Street was looking very sparse. Read
more » |