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Neighborhood Villages in the News

Neighborhood Villages Hosts Event with Early Education Leaders from Across the Country to Discuss Government Solutions to Child Care Crisis
Neighborhood Villages hosted a virtual event with change-makers from across the country to discuss what local governments can do now to ensure that all children have access to a high-quality early education and all families have access to the care solutions they need to thrive. | Press Release

Neighborhood Villages and Strategies for Children Urge Legislature to Prioritize Grant Funding for Child Care in FY23 Budget
Neighborhood Villages and Strategies for Children are urging the Massachusetts legislature to prioritize this grant funding for the child care sector in the FY23 state budget and to appropriate $480 million dollars to extend the program through the fiscal year. | Press Release

Neighborhood Villages Announces Launch of Podcast About Child Care Crisis Featuring ABC’s Gloria Riviera
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 second season of the podcast, “No One is Coming to Save Us,” in partnership with Lemonada Media. | Press Release

State-run program to provide COVID tests to daycares could expire this summer
Since last summer, the state has been ramping up a program to provide free COVID tests for thousands of daycare operations, but the contract for that program is up in the summer, and the state has not yet committed to extending it. That worries some experts who fear that COVID cases may rise again in the fall. | WGBH

Neighborhood Villages Hosts Black Mothers Matter Event on Child Care and Racial Justice Featuring Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley
Yesterday, Neighborhood Villages, a Boston-based nonprofit that advocates for solutions to the greatest challenges faced by the early education sector, hosted a virtual discussion on the impact of the child care crisis on Black children, families, and educators, centering the voices and experiences of Black mothers. | Press Release

Neighborhood Villages Commends Boston Mayor Michelle Wu for Creating New Office of Early Childhood
Lauren Birchfield Kennedy, Co-President and Chief Strategy Officer at Neighborhood Villages, a Boston-based nonprofit that advocates for solutions to the greatest challenges faced by the early education sector, issued the following statement after Boston Mayor Michelle Wu announced the creation of a new Office of Early Childhood. | Press Release

Omicron is still causing chaos in the US, and parents of kids too young to get vaccinated feel left behind
While the women behind Neighborhood Villages do what they can to keep childcare centres open, co-president Lauren Kennedy warns the pandemic has only exacerbated existing problems confronting the sector. | ABC Australia

"Nobody wins. Everyone suffers": High cost of child care strains families
"We don't look at parents and ask them how they're going to afford the cost of their education for their 8-year-old," Lauren Kennedy, co-founder of Neighborhood Villages, told CBS News. "Why should they bear the full responsibility for the cost of their 2-year-old?" | CBS News

Mass. Day Care Centers Say New COVID Testing Program Brings Relief
Neighborhood Villages is administering Massachusetts' new COVID-19 testing program at child care centers, which are now eligible to receive free antigen tests in an effort to keep facilities open | NBC 10 Boston

Massachusetts child care programs will get free rapid COVID tests later this month, Gov. Charlie Baker announces
Licensed Massachusetts child care programs can start receiving COVID-19 rapid antigen tests later this month, Gov. Charlie Baker announced on Wednesday afternoon in a growing effort to protect the state’s youngest residents from the surging omicron variant. | MassLive

Mass. unveils ‘first-in-the-nation’ COVID testing initiative for child care programs
The Baker Administration on Wednesday unveiled a new, statewide COVID-19 testing initiative for child care centers that officials touted as a “first-in-the-nation” approach to help keep more kids safely in programs as virus spread remains high. | Boston.com

Mass. Launches Program to Give Early Education Centers Rapid COVID Testing Options
A new program in Massachusetts will give more COVID-19 testing flexibility and get rapid antigen tests in the hands of early education centers, part of an initiative to make testing widely available and keep staff and students in school and child care programs, Gov. Charlie Baker announced Wednesday. Programs can sign up through the nonprofit Neighborhood Villages, which has been partnering with the Department of Early Education and Care to give child care centers access to testing options. | NBC Boston 10

COVID-19 rapid tests to be distributed to Massachusetts child care centers, Gov. Baker announces
Massachusetts child care centers will soon begin to receive allotments of COVID-19 rapid tests, Gov. Charlie Baker announced Wednesday. "Rapid tests for these two programs will be free and the distribution will be supported by Neighborhood Villages. Programs must be enrolled with Neighborhood Villages to receive free tests," Baker said. | WCVB

Baker announces launch of state’s ‘test and stay’ program for child care providers
Early education leaders are working with the state Department of Public Health to craft protocols for the test-and-stay program that will look different from how it works in public schools. The state partnered with Neighborhood Villages, a Boston-based nonprofit that provides scalable solutions for early education providers, to distribute 40,000 rapid tests for child care workers this week. | Boston Globe

Testing for Child Care Providers to Keep Children in Care
“We are excited about these enhancements to the testing program. They will offer child care providers across the state multi-pronged testing strategies and additional support,” said Neighborhood Villages Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer Sarah Siegel Muncey. “Testing in early childhood is one of the fastest, most effective investments we can make right now to keep child care centers open and our educators, children, and families safe - while also allowing our parents to continue to work. I want to thank Governor Baker and his Administration for their ongoing partnership and commitment to this important issue.” | Press Release

Omicron Child Care Woes Could Be Alleviated If Massachusetts ‘Test and Stay’ Program Successful
A Boston nonprofit, Neighborhood Villages, has been enlisted to help the state distribute 40,000 rapid tests to child care workers. As of late last week, about 2,100 of the state’s 7,000 child care providers were enrolled to receive the tests. | Yahoo Finance

Mass. to launch ‘test and stay’ program to help child care centers remain open
“We know that our families are relying on child care to go to work,” said Samantha Aigner-Treworgy, Massachusetts’ commissioner of early education and care. “So we do want to provide alternatives to pulling children out of care for quarantine, but making sure we do so safely.” | Boston Globe

Early childhood teachers getting help with rapid COVID-19 antigen tests
As the testing crisis stretches on in Massachusetts, there is new help for early child care providers across the state. Most educators in K-12 schools got rapid test kits already, and now tests are being made available at no cost to people who work in licensed Massachusetts early education and childcare. | WCVB

The pandemic compounded existing labor issues in child care and early education
The COVID-19 pandemic has brought new challenges and exacerbated long-existing problems in early education and child care, from labor shortages to the industry’s low pay scales. Lauren Kennedy, the co-founder of the affordable child care advocacy group Neighborhood Villages, joined Boston Public Radio to share how early education and child care workers and advocates have fared throughout the pandemic. | WGBH
‘An incredibly important tool’: Omicron could mean more COVID-19 testing for day care centers
Every employee at Ellis Early Learning, an early childhood education and care provider serving more than 250 kids in the Boston area, is tested weekly for the coronavirus. The free screening has paid off: In part by detecting positive cases early, Ellis has managed to avoid internal spread at its centers since it started regular testing about a year ago. The screening, possible through what's now a statewide child care testing program in Massachusetts, has proved especially valuable given the omicron-driven surge in cases – as well as the challenge of working with young children who struggle to maintain social distance and wear masks. | USA Today