Problems, solutions in BTCF study

The Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation (BTCF) has completed a survey of strengths and struggles in the Tri-state region, and has produced a summary in a booklet that was mailed to area residents this week. 

This new look at Litchfield, Dutchess, Columbia and Berkshire counties was begun in June 2016, under the leadership of Peter Taylor, who took the reins of the philanthropic organization in January 2016, following the retirement of longtime BTCF head Jennifer Dowley.

Berkshire Taconic was created in 1987 by a small group of Northwest Corner residents including Donald Warner, Robert Blum and William Olsen. They began it with $100,000; the foundation’s assets have grown over the years to more than $110 million. And more than $100 million in grants have been given to a wide range of area nonprofits and other organizations. Funds managed by BTCF support everything from cancer patients struggling to meet their daily living expenses (the Jane Lloyd Fund) to youngsters who are passionate about the arts and would benefit from a grant to help them with their education costs.

BTCF worked with Mount Auburn Associates to interview more than 2,000 people in the four counties to see where philanthropy is most needed and will be most effective.

The results of the survey are published in the booklet, titled “A Closer Look.” It gives a snapshot of life here at a time when the economy is still fairly slow, jobs are scarce, rentals are expensive and often low-quality, and as many as 44 percent of people under the age of 46 said they’re likely to move away from the area in the next three years. 

BTCF is already making plans to meet with “donors, nonprofits, business and civic leaders and residents” in the coming months to talk about how some of the problems facing the region can be ameliorated through philanthropy.

Anyone who didn’t receive the booklet can find a copy of it online at www.berkshiretaconic.org/ACloserLook.

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