Local Banks, Credit Unions Emphasize Corporate Responsibility
More Than Writing Checks

A community bank should be about, well, the community.
That’s the prevailing thought, anyway, among bank and credit-union leaders throughout the Western Mass. region when it comes to philanthropy, volunteerism, and other activities under the broad umbrella of corporate responsibility.
“It’s identifying the needs of the communities we serve. We’re very consistent with that mission,” said Matt Garrity, president and CEO of Florence Savings Bank, who was quick to name several areas of focus for the institution’s giving-back strategy, including affordable housing, food insecurity, financial literacy, education, substance abuse, health and human services, and community redevelopment. “These are issues that impact the lives of people in the communities we serve.”
To that end, Florence funded close to 400 requests in 2024, and it’s far from alone in meeting those needs.
“For mutual banks and community banks here in Western Massachusetts, giving back to the community really is a core value,” Garrity said. “And it’s local — the overwhelming majority of the giving we do is centered on supporting communities in Hampshire, Hampden, and Franklin counties.”
UMassFive College Federal Credit Union focuses on the word ‘wellness’ a lot, said Craig Boivin, vice president of Marketing.
“That can mean different things. Obviously, financial wellness is the biggest thing. We’re a credit union, so we’re making sure we educate people on financial matters, with webinars and workshops on budgeting, understanding credit, and paying down debt. But another bucket of wellness has to do with basic necessities.”
That’s why UMassFive works with local survival centers, helping them meet needs and spreading the word to others, like through an annual coat and winter clothing drive that brought critical supplies to Amherst Survival Center, the Gray House in Springfield, and Net of Compassion in Worcester.
In fact, UMassFive partners with a host of area nonprofits on various giving and volunteering initiatives, including Community Involved in Sustaining Agriculture, the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts (through participation in Will Bike 4 Food), and health-focused organizations like the UMass Cancer Center (through the UMass Cancer Walk).

Matt Garrity says Florence Savings Bank prioritizes community needs including affordable housing, food insecurity, financial literacy, education, health and human services, and community redevelopment.
Dan Moriarty, president and CEO of Monson Savings Bank, says his institution is dedicated to enriching lives in the cities and towns where it does business, and surrounding communities as well, helping organizations that serve a host of constituencies, from senior citizens to veterans to people in need of health services and basic needs.
“Obviously, a bank can’t solve all the area’s problems, but when we do things along with other good corporate citizens, we feel we make a difference in people’s lives,” he noted, noting that the bank has adopted “when we all give back, we all move forward” as its philanthropic tagline.
“We are a community bank, and we’ve been doing that for over 150 years now. As we continue to grow and expand our market footprint, we expect to help with more needs in the community.”
Matt Bannister, vice president of Marketing and Corporate Responsibility for PeoplesBank, has said many times that his bank’s guiding philosophy is to give a little to a lot of groups.
“Obviously, a bank can’t solve all the area’s problems, but when we do things along with other good corporate citizens, we feel we make a difference in people’s lives.”
“Some organizations will give a lot to a few groups. If a hospital is building a new cancer wing or an emergency room or something like that, those tend to be very large donations because they are very large projects. We take the opposite approach. We want to be in as many places as we possibly can.”
As a result, PeoplesBank gave away $1.6 million last year to 550 different nonprofits, Bannister noted. “You do the math, and it’s about $2,500 or $3,000 per grant, which doesn’t mean much to a large corporation that’s building a hospital … but it does mean a lot to a small nonprofit with a shoestring budget. So the ability to impact many organizations as possible is the route that we choose.”
Making the World Better
That said, corporate responsibility goes well beyond writing checks, Bannister explained.
“Corporate responsibility, to me, means standing for something that benefits the public at large. It’s a way to telegraph the values that a company has, and a consumer can use that information to make decisions. One of the factors when they’re purchasing a product or a service is, ‘who am I buying this from, and what do they do that makes the world a better place,’ as opposed to ‘what are they not doing, or what are they doing that makes the world a worse place?’”
So, that extends not only to philanthropy, but to what vendors and suppliers a bank partners with, and whether they share similar values.
“You might say a certain percentage of the vendors of a company should be minority-led organizations or women-led organizations. So it’s not only how you telegraph your values, but how you put them into action; are you, as a company, spending money to encourage what we think are beneficial programs for society?”
That approach extends to volunteerism as well — an area of community support that virtually every bank based in this region emphasizes.

Dan Moriarty (left, with Veronica Garcia, CEO of Latino Marketing Agency, and John Perez, project office manager at the Hispanic-American Institute) enjoys taking many of these big-check photos each year with organizations that benefit from Monson Savings Bank’s giving.
“When employees of a company volunteer in the community, that’s another way the company adds value to the community,” Bannister said, which is why PeoplesBank — and the other institutions that spoke with BusinessWest — pays employees to take volunteer days.
“So United Way has Days of Caring, where teams [of volunteers] will come out, or Habitat for Humanity has a build, where teams will come out, and that’s good for team building. But the company is also saying, ‘you’re not going to do your job today; we’re going to pay you to do something out in the community.’”
That makes a statement about corporate values, which is why Monson Savings Bank recently codified it.
“We’re launching a community service day policy where we pay our full-time employees to donate eight hours of a day, or two half-days, to an organization or a nonprofit,” Moriarty said. “We’ve done that kind of unofficially; now it’s an official policy. We allow employees to donate their time during the work week, and we pay them to go out and support the community. It’s a great thing.”
Such activities also expose employees to the good work being done in the community, and they can be enjoyable, he added. “We’ve had fun helping Revitalize CDC on volunteer projects, or helping out organizations from the United Way to Martin Luther King Family Services to I Found Light Against All Odds, and many others.”
The bank also collects $5 donations from employees every Friday for the ability to wear jeans to work, and those donations are pooled and given to local organizations as well.
At Florence, “volunteerism is a big part of what we do. We encourage it highly in our organization, and we’ll continue to do that,” added Garrity, noting that employees have recently volunteered at organizations including Hampshire Regional YMCA, Greater Springfield Habitat for Humanity, Square One, Caring Health Center, and many more.
At UMassFive, Boivin said, “the level of engagement of our employees is high — it’s the culture here to support others in the community, especially with fundraising that we do with Will Bike 4 Food and the Cancer Walk and Run. We raised over 25 grand combined for those two organizations this year.
“And a lot of that comes from grassroots stuff the employees are doing,” he added. “They’re selling baked goods, they’re creating artworks and selling them in the branches, they’re talking to their families and friends, and they’re donating themselves. We really support the causes we care about.”
UMassFive’s community support also extends to elevating local businesses, as it did when it partnered with UMass Athletics and UMass Sports Properties on a recent contest to recognize a small business that demonstrates service, innovation, and community involvement.
The winner, Sexton Roofing & Siding, received an ad package worth $10,000, allowing it to be featured on digital displays, radio reads, email blasts, and tabling opportunities during and surrounding the university’s sporting events. “That’s another way to practice corporate responsibility, by amplifying other businesses,” Boivin said.
Moving the Needle
And then, there are the votes.
Two local banks — Florence Savings Bank, through its Customers’ Choice program, and Monson Savings Bank, through its Community Giving Initiative — just finished another annual round of voting by customers and community members on what organizations they’d like the banks to support with donations.
“We began this back in 2010. We’re aware of a lot of different nonprofits that are doing a lot of good work, but not all of them,” Moriarty said, and since its inception, the program has grown significantly. “It’s exciting — now we have nonprofits say, ‘hey, Dan, when do we launch the CGI initiative, so we can get the information to voters?’ It’s been a great program for us, and we’ve met a lot of great organizations across the Pioneer Valley.”
Florence Bank’s program is in its 23rd year, and the most recent round of voting drew more than 7,000 ballots, Garrity noted. “We’ve even tried to provide, for the benefit of a lot of our nonprofit organizations, tips on how to get the message out to their supporters around Customers’ Choice. It’s really been something the community has embraced.”
Readers have probably noticed the word ‘community’ repeated often throughout this article — more than two dozen times, in fact. But there’s a good reason for that.
“The word ‘community’ can be overused, but it really does feel like we’re a community of people helping others in the community,” Boivin said. “Our whole mission is set up to help people. The biggest way we do that is in the financial world, but there are a lot of other pillars here.
“When you think about the budgets we have for marketing and outreach, they are not as big as some of the community banks in our area,” he went on. “And, yes, we write checks and donate money, but a lot of it, for us, comes down to volunteer efforts and fundraising and spreading the word about events organizations are having, or participating in those events when they have them.
“A lot of it is a boots-on-the-ground effort,” Boivin added. “We don’t just write checks; we show up. That’s an internal mantra of ours.”





