Tag Archives: Katharine Murray

Unsung Hero #421

Homes with Hope president and CEO Helen McAlinden, and board chair Becky Martin, nominate this week’s Unsung Hero. They write:

This honor perfectly reflects Katharine Murray’s extraordinary contributions to Homes with Hope, and the broader Westport community.

Katharine recently earned a well-deserved promotion to chief of staff. This newly updated title and role formally recognizes the leadership, strategic insight and operational excellence she has long brought to our organization.

Katharine Murray (center), with Homes with Hope president and CEO Helen McAlinden (left), and vice president and chief operating officer Paris Looney. (Photo/Dave Matlow)

As chief of staff Katharine plays a pivotal role in  overseeing key departments, including Development, Marketing, Grant Writing, Community Relations, and the Food Pantry.

She works in close partnership with the leadership team, as well as the entire staff she collaborates with daily. She builds trust, fosters collaboration, and supports teams across the organization.

Katharine joined Homes with Hope as a marketing and development professional in 2022, but her role quickly evolved as her willingness to step in wherever needed became impossible to overlook. Over the years she quietly and effectively took on responsibilities spanning Marketing, Development, Grants, Operations, Events, Agency Data Management, and Pantry Program Oversight.

Her promotion to chief of staff is a formal acknowledgment of the role she has long fulfilled with grace, intelligence, and tireless dedication.

With Katharine’s steadfast partnership and leadership, Homes with Hope has grown into an agency that serves more than 3,000 individuals annually.

Katharine’s impact is evident across every corner of the organization. She assumed full coordination of recent renovations to the Gillespie Center and Susie’s House. She helped source furniture and décor to ensure residents would experience not just shelter, but a beautiful, welcoming and dignified place to call home. Her thoughtful, creative and cost-effective design choices are apparent when entering either facility.

Katharine Murray (far left), with volunteers and Westport Police officers at the Homes with Hope food pantry, following a donation drive.

Her leadership is especially visible at the Gillespie Center Pantry. Last year the pantry recorded 9,150 visits, served 1,199 registered households, and supported more than 3,000 individuals.

Despite increased demand, the environment feels less like a pantry and more like a thoughtfully curated community market providing choice, quality, and dignity.”

Katharine leads by example. She drives the van, picks up food, carries supplies, stocks shelves, checks inventory, places orders, and steps in wherever help is needed. Bilingual. she regularly supports Spanish-speaking pantry participants.

Behind the scenes, she quietly delivers groceries to elderly or ill neighbors.

Katharine has significantly elevated Homes with Hope’s fundraising and community presence, helping lead events like Gather Round the Table and Stand Up Comedy Night.

Katharine Murray, at a Rotary Club/Police Department food drive.

Katharine is a familiar presence at food drives led by Sunrise Rotary, Westport Rotary Club, the Westport Police Department, and countless community organizations, faith groups and schools. Her warmth, approachability, and genuine care for others embody the spirit of Homes with Hope.

Katharine arrives early and stays late. She is present, accessible, and deeply committed to both the mission and the people who carry it forward.

We wish Katharine continued success as she partners with Helen, Paris, Jacque, Katie and the entire Homes with Hope team to move the agency forward—stronger, more resilient, and more impactful than ever.

(“06880” is proud to honor Unsung Heroes — and tell many other tales of town too. Please click here to support your hyper-local blog.)

Fresh Beginning For Food Pantry

We’ve all heard it: “When one door closes, another opens.”

What seems disappointing or the end of one opportunity, often leads to a different, better, outcome.

That’s true for Homes with Hope — literally.

Last month, their food pantry at the Gillespie Center closed for renovation. They had to find a new place to serve scores of hungry Westporters.

They moved to the Sasco Creek Village community center, at 1655 Post Road East.

Warm and welcoming food pantry, at Sasco Creek Village.

The new site is bigger. It’s brighter.

It’s fresher too — and not just metaphorically. With room now for a refrigerator and freezer, the food pantry can stock meat, bread and other perishable items.

That’s opened up whole new, and healthy, possibilities for food-insecure clients.

Ever since the new doors opened, they’ve raved about the big, bright, fresh Homes with Hope pantry.

The shelves in the community center contain everything the former location did: canned soups and stews, cereal, peanut butter and jelly, tuna fish, crackers, pasta sauce, rice, granola bars, baby food and the like.

But there’s also — in addition to all those fruits, vegetables, eggs and more — a gluten-free section.

Plenty of food in the new pantry.

Volunteers — those who donate food, and those who donate time — have always been the backbone of Homes with Hope’s pantry. All are excited about what they can donate, and give away, now.

The refrigerator was donated by the Aspetuck Health District. It had been used to store COVID vaccines.

Now that items can be kept for more than a day or two, staffers plan ahead. They print up and hand out recipes, using the healthful ingredients they know are on hand.

Recipes, using ingredients available at the pantry.

“We can now offer what people want — not what we thought they wanted,” says Katharine Murray, Homes with Hope’s senior director of marketing and development. “They really, really love the fresh foods. Now they’re ‘shopping,’ not just ‘taking.'”

Another addition: toiletries like toothpaste, razors and shaving foam; feminine hygiene products, and cleaning items. Those are vital to people on limited budgets — but not covered for those using the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly called “food stamps”).

Shoppers register once, using a short form that includes questions like family size. There is no formal income verification process. About 90 different individuals have come since the pantry relocated last month.

Clients can shop once a week. Food pantries elsewhere often limit shoppers to once a month, Murray says.

Homes with Hope marketing executive Katharine Murray (left) and CEO Helen McAlinden, with food donation.

The new location has opened up the pantry to new clients. Many come from Sasco Creek Village itself. Some use wheelchairs.

But longtime clients are served well too. Sasco Creek — one of 4 sites run by the Westport Housing Authority — is on the Coastal Link bus line, opposite Goodwill. There is plenty of parking.

That’s great for people dropping off food, as well as those picking up.

As it has since its inception decades ago, the pantry draws many donors. Some are loyal, like “Miss Jane.” She’s dropped off several bags, several days a week, for years, and continues to do so.

Trader Joe’s has become a generous donor at the new site. They’ve been very generous, with fresh vegetables, eggs, fruits and corn, and frozen meats and vegetables.

The new freezer and refrigerator, filled with healthful food. (All photos/Dan Woog)

The pantry is open to clients and donors from 1 to 4 p.m. every weekday, except Wednesday.

People sometimes stand outside at 1:00.

They are grateful that although the Gillespie Center pantry door closed last month, the new one at Sasco Creek Village opened.

Homes with Hope CEO Helen McAlinden and 1st Selectwoman Jen Tooker (front row, 3rd and 4th from left), with staffers and officials at last month’s ribbon-cutting.