
The Newsroom
Neighborhood Villages in the News

Neighborhood Villages Announces New Comprehensive Workforce Pathways Initiative for Child Care Sector with $1 Million Grant from City of Boston
Neighborhood Villages announced its new initiative to create a comprehensive approach to workforce development within the early education and care sector. The organization has been awarded a $1 million grant from the City of Boston to help launch its new Comprehensive Workforce Pathways (CWP) initiative, which includes establishing a Registered Apprenticeship Program for the early education and care workforce. | Press Release

Boston will use federal funds for free training for early educators
Those interested in teaching in the early education sector in Boston will soon be able to access free education and training programs at area institutions. The program will be funded by a $7 million allocation from the Biden Administration's American Rescue Plan Act and administered to three educational institutions: Bunker Hill Community College, University of Massachusetts Boston and Urban College, as well as Neighborhood Villages, an early education advocacy group. | WBUR

Staff shortages are crippling childcare centers across the U.S., and that’s only the beginning of the problem
“No one’s okay. No one is fully staffed. The people who are there are stressed out,” says Sarah Siegel Muncey, cofounder of Neighborhood Villages, a Boston-based childcare nonprofit that advocates for early education and care policy reform. | Fortune

Neighborhood Villages: Boston-Based Child Care Innovation Lab for Solutions that Can Scale
Bostonians Sarah Siegel Muncey and Lauren Birchfield Kennedy recognize this landscape from multiple vantage points: as mothers who scrambled to find good care for their children, as professional women working in education and health care policy, and as citizens committed to a society that works. | Early Learning Nation

‘Now we sit on the precipice of collapse’: Childcare shortages and empty classrooms could get even worse
“We’re in a workforce shortage. We’re in a wage crisis. We’re hemorrhaging people—there’s no bodies, the lights are off,” says Sarah Siegel Muncey, cofounder of Neighborhood Villages, a Boston-based childcare nonprofit that advocates for early education and care policy reform. | Fortune

Neighborhood Villages Commends Massachusetts Legislature for Passage of Economic Development Bill
Neighborhood Villages commended the Massachusetts Legislature for passage of An Act relating to economic growth and relief for the Commonwealth, which includes critical funds for the early education and care sector.

The Childcare Crisis
LAUREN BIRCHFIELD KENNEDY, J.D. ’09, and Sarah Siegel Muncey, Ed.M. ’05, met through a mutual friend when they were both pregnant. “Our babies were born within just a couple days of each other,” Kennedy says, “and like so many working moms, we thought, ‘How is it still like this for working parents? How am I supposed to figure out what my career looks like now? How am I supposed to find childcare?’ Sarah and I spent a very long time really thinking through the contribution we could make to this dialogue about the imperative to fix the childcare crisis on so many different levels.” | Harvard Magazine

Neighborhood Villages Applauds Massachusetts Legislature for Critical Investment in Early Education and Care in FY23 Budget
Neighborhood Villages today applauded the Massachusetts Legislature for prioritizing funding for early education and care in the FY23 budget. | Press Release

$52.7 billion state budget heads to Baker's desk
"Extension of the C3 Stabilization Grant Program, coupled with an investment in salary increases for early educators serving lower-income children, will be critical for retaining early educators and keeping classrooms open for children and families," Lauren Kennedy, co-president of the Boston early education nonprofit Neighborhood Villages, said. "Moreover, ensuring that state reimbursement for child care subsidies is now tied to enrollment of children, rather than attendance, marks an important change in policy, one that will help to strengthen and build the capacity of the early education and care sector." | WBUR

Despite big boost for child care, advocates say the industry needs more funding
"This is a down payment," said Lauren Kennedy, co-president and co-founder of the nonprofit Neighborhood Villages. "We're very excited at the legislature's commitment, but certainly, there remains more work to be done over the long-term." | WBUR

Neighborhood Villages Applauds Senate for Passage of Early Education Legislation in Massachusetts
Neighborhood Villages applauds the Massachusetts Senate for passing An Act to Expand Access to High-Quality, Affordable Early Education and Care. | Press Release

Baby formula shortage: ‘It’s extremely hard to find it:’ Worcester coalition raises $70K to help residents during shortage, but formula is still scarce
Aside from searching different stores around Central Massachusetts like Gonzalez, the coalition has partnered with groups like Neighborhood Villages in Boston which managed to get 700 pounds of baby formula into Boston. | MassLive

Grants that sustained state’s childcare industry set to expire
Lauren Kennedy, co-founder of Neighborhood Villages, an early education and care advocacy group, said the grants have “been really crucial to providers’ ability to sustain existing payroll and make investments in increasing salaries, which has been critical in this labor market in which there is an early education and care workforce crisis that’s built upon a wage crisis.” | Commonwealth Magazine

Mass. Child Care Grants Will Run Out at End of June Unless Lawmakers Step in
"You can not overstate how valuable these C3 grants have been to early education and care providers, to center-based care, to family care, to after school programs," said Lauren Kennedy, co-founder of the non-profit advocacy group Neighborhood Villages. | NBC Boston

Child care is in crisis. Here's what's being done about it
Fifty years later, American families have taken the leap anyway, said Latoya Gayle senior director of advocacy of Neighborhood Villages, an early education and child care nonprofit. A 2019 industry report found that roughly three-quarters of Massachusetts children under 5 are in child care for at least part of each week. “Women go to work and fathers go to work. And so who's taking care of that child?” Gayle asked. | WBUR

Child care providers concerned as state phases out COVID-19 testing support
In an email to child care providers, the state Department of Early Education and Care announced it will end the COVID-19 testing program at the end of this month. The program, which has been run by the nonprofit Neighborhood Villages, provided tests to centers each month and included a system for reporting and tracking positive cases. | WGBH

Mayor Wu directs grants to Boston family child-care providers
“It’s hard to overstate how important they have been to stabilizing our early education and care field, to keeping providers open, enabling providers to retain teachers, and making sure families have access to care solutions they need,” said Lauren Birchfield Kennedy, co-president and chief strategy officer of Neighborhood Villages, a Boston-based nonprofit. | Boston Globe

Neighborhood Villages Applauds Movement of Early Education Legislation in Massachusetts
Highlighting the need for meaningful child care reform, Neighborhood Villages — a Boston-based nonprofit that advocates for solutions to the greatest challenges faced by the early education sector — applauded the movement of early education and care legislation, which was reported out of the Joint Committee on Education today. | Press Release

MA House Passes FY23 Budget, Makes Investments to Support Families
$1 million for Neighborhood Villages to provide bilingual workforce training, instructional coaching, and COVID-19 testing. | Patch

Innovating for Long-Term Resilience
Last fall, Neighborhood Villages partnered with Massachusetts Department of Early Education and Care (EEC) and Boston-area community colleges to start Career Pathways for Early Educators, a unique program that supports educators in their attainment of advanced early education and care credentials. | Early Learning Nation