Serving those who serve us

WINSTED — One local business has stepped up to the plate to help raise funds for local nonprofit groups — literally.

Kelly’s Kitchen, 438 Main St. in Winsted, has opened its doors to area charity organizations as a new local hot spot to host benefit dinners and other fundraising events.

The struggling economy has made fundraising efforts over the past several months very difficult for many community-based groups.

Kelly McCarthy — who co-owns and operates the restaurant with her husband, Bob — said she hopes a new venue will be just what Winsted-area groups need to jump-start their efforts.

“We are willing to host for anyone who is a nonprofit who needs assistance and help to raise money,� McCarthy said.

The restaurant held its first benefit dinner Thursday, April 15, for the Beardsley & Memorial Library.

“We just thought it would be a good way to help the library,� McCarthy said.

McCarthy said she and her young daughter are at the Winsted library as often as three times a week. Earlier this year, she decided to do something to help the nonprofit organization.

“They are always underfunded ... and so I got together with Linda and we decided to do a benefit [dinner] in April,� she said of the library’s director, Linda Senkus.

At this week’s fundraiser, the restaurant offered diners their choice of chicken asiago, pan-seared scallops, prime rib au jus or vegetable florentine for an entree, various soups or salads for a starter, and chocolate peanut butter cake, apple crisp or cheesecake for dessert — all for $25 per person.

McCarthy said 25 percent of all proceeds raised during the event went to the library.

Senkus told The Journal fundraisers such as this are crucial to the library’s bottom line, as the organization’s endowment only covers yearly costs for smaller capital expenditures, such as general maintenance and repairs.

“Any operating expenses come from town fees, grants and fundraisers,� Senkus said.

Beardsley & Memorial is not a town-owned library. Instead, it is a regional library that serves the towns of Winchester, Barkhamsted and Colebrook. Each of the three towns pay a yearly subscription fee to allow their residents to take advantage of its programs and services.

State law requires that each municipality either operate its own library or subscribe to a regional facility.

At Beardsley & Memorial, the towns’ subscription fees cover the library’s annual staff salaries, utility bills and the purchase of new borrowing materials, Senkus said.

When those fees are cut or reduced, however, that means that expenditures that might have gone to fund the library’s various programs and services — the vast majority of which are free and open to the public — are affected.

But Senkus said she hopes fundraisers such as Thursday’s benefit dinner will help the library preserve many of the services and materials its patrons have come to depend on, and enjoy.

“This will certainly help us with our operating budget,� she said.

McCarthy said with so many local nonprofit groups still struggling, she hopes this week’s benefit dinner will be the first of many monthly fundraising events at the restaurant.

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