No guarantees to nonprofits seeking funds from municipality in the coming fiscal year

SHARON — Towns and boards are struggling now to keep their spending plans for the coming year at a bare minimum — and chances are that many nonprofits will lose funding from municipal budgets.

Representatives from Greenwoods Counseling Referrals in Norfolk felt the pinch at a meeting of the Sharon Board of Selectmen on Tuesday, Jan. 20. Representatives from the service made a presentation to the board and asked the selectmen to please keep them in the town’s upcoming budget.

“This is part of an effort to talk to each of the towns in Litchfield County,� Greenwoods Board of Directors member Patsy Stroble said. Stroble said the organization offers a referral system that offers reduced and affordable mental-health care to residents of Litchfield County.

“What we do is act as a direct connection for people who need mental health care,� she explained. “For 15 years it’s been accessed by Sharon social workers, clergies, doctors and individual citizens.

“Because our organization does not charge for our referral service we rely entirely on donations,� she said. “The donations support our office staff and the clinicians who do our assessments of patients. It also supports a subsidy for the patients who need it. We are asking each town in Litchfield County for $750; but we spend more than that in Sharon.�

While First Selectman Malcolm Brown commended the service, he said he could not make any promises.

“We will do what we can,� Brown said. “But we are under tremendous stress this year. The state senators and representatives have told us that they are going to be happy if they can finish the budget by May. I keep thinking to myself ‘My word! This is getting to be a lot like living in New York.’�

Brown said the state is currently facing a $6 billion to $8 billion hole in the budget over the next two fiscal years that will certainly impact the municipalities.

“The towns are going to suffer,� Brown said. “I honestly don’t know what’s going to happen.�

Stroble told Brown that Greenwoods does not get federal or state funding.

“It’s strictly donations,� she said. “More people are coming to us because they are in crisis. Just in the last month or so I’ve seen more people coming to us including people who have lost their job or have been laid off.�

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