Boston Non-Profit Neighborhood Villages Announces Season 4 of Hit Podcast About Child Care Crisis 

New Season of “No One is Coming to Save Us,” is Co-Produced with Lemonada Media

 

Boston, MA (August 22, 2024) Neighborhood Villages, a Boston-based non-profit that advocates for solutions to the greatest challenges faced by the early education sector, today announced the launch of the fourth season of the hit podcast, No One is Coming to Save Us,” which it co-produces with Lemonada Media. The first two episodes air today.  

Listeners will join award-winning journalist Gloria Riviera as she explores the issue of America’s ongoing child care crisis and the people impacted by it. Season 4 peels back the layers of our nation’s most pressing challenges – intergenerational poverty, homelessness, and climate change – to uncover their deep, often surprising, connections with child care. Each Thursday, Riviera will unravel these complex issues, revealing how they intersect and impact the future of our children.

“The longer we do this work, the more it becomes clear just how vital a working child care system is to a functioning society,” said Sarah Siegel Muncey, Co-Founder of Neighborhood Villages. “We are also acutely aware of the consequences of our broken child care system and its profound and lasting ripple effects on children, families, educators, and providers across our nation. We hope this podcast educates and empowers listeners to demand meaningful change as we work together to save ourselves and build a better child care system.”

Click here to listen and learn more about the “No One Is Coming to Save Us” podcast, and subscribe at https://link.chtbl.com/NOICTSU.

 

###


About Neighborhood Villages
Neighborhood Villages, founded in 2017 by Lauren Kennedy and Sarah Muncey, is a Boston-based systems-change non-profit that advocates for early education and care policy reform and implements scalable solutions that address the biggest challenges facing providers and the families who rely on them. For more information, visit https://www.neighborhoodvillages.org/our-work.

Previous
Previous

Healey-Driscoll Administration Celebrates National Leadership in Making Child Care More Affordable and Accessible

Next
Next

Americans are shelling out thousands per month on childcare. Private equity could be making the crisis worse.