When Anne Diemand Bucci heard about a nonprofit in Franklin County, Mass., that helped people after they'd been in trouble with the law, she thought, "Oh, my God," she tells Mass Live.
But the Foundation for Community Justice didn't actually exist until two decades ago, and since then, it's helped thousands of people through its small grants, which range from paying for basic needs like gas cards to helping people get to medical appointments, to educational programs, to helping families repair property damage, it explains on its website.
"Our mission is to help our neighbors with tangible support and encouragement in their time of need, through small grants that can make a big difference," it says.
"One of the mini-grants we provided that illustrates how small funds can make a big difference was for someone that needed to have follow-up drug testing to maintain custody of her children," Diemand Bucci, board president of the volunteer group, tells Mass Live.
For example, when a woman needed to have another drug test, the group paid for it.
"She knew she was sober, but the testing site doesn't retest upon request," Diemand Bucci says.
"We paid for another test and it
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