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Community Developers Join Forces at People & Places 2025

August 20th, 2025 by Molly Marshall

Community Developers Join Forces at People & Places 2025

We’re excited to let you know about a vital gathering for the community development field. Five national networks are uniting to co-host the People & Places Conference and an influential Capitol Hill Day. We encourage you to attend and add your voice.

Who: Community developers from across the nation, partners, and funders

What: The People & Places Conference & Capitol Hill Day

When: October 5–7, 2025

Where: The Capital Hilton in Washington, DC

Why:
✔️ Gain knowledge and strength from each other.
✔️ Deliver a powerful message to Congress.

Explore the conference sessions, which examine how community developers can continue to provide affordable housing, strengthen local economies, and support communities in these challenging times. Interactive sessions and activities will nurture connection and well-being.

Plan to participate in Capitol Hill Day. Advocate for key policy priorities and deliver an urgent message to Congress about the local impact of community development funding cuts. You’ll receive virtual training before arriving in DC, plus training during the conference.

Help build the future of community development. You’ll head home with new strategies, a sense of solidarity, and renewed energy to serve your communities.

Learn more and register by September 14.

 


August 2025 Health Equity Updates

August 20th, 2025 by Elana Brochin

Health Equity Committee Field Trip 

Fourteen people attended our fourth annual Health Equity Field Trip on August 13th. The group met at Dorchester Bay EDC to learn about the work of the Fairmount Indigo CDC Collaborative as well the work of the CDCs that make up the Collaborative: Southwest Boston CDC, Codman Square CDC, and Dorchester Bay EDC. The group had the opportunity to discuss the ways in which these MACDC members are working at the intersection of Climate Justice and Health Equity. Everyone had a great time and learned a lot! 

 


 

Massachusetts Community Health and Healthy Aging Fund 

  

Ahead of the next application cycle for the Funds in January 2026, the Massachusetts Community Health and Healthy aging fund is accepting idea submissions from eligible MA-based entities working to address social determinants of health and the root causes of health inequities. The idea phase is open to organizations considering applying for funding for work on Policy, Systems, and Environmental (PSE) change, Healthy Aging, and Community Health Improvement Planning (CHIP) processes. This is an opportunity to receive feedback about alignment with the Funds’ purpose before submitting a full application. The second round for idea submissions will be open from August 11th to September 8th. Visit Idea Submission Phase Self-Assessment to take a self-assessment to determine if your organization is eligible and to learn more about what they are looking for, or head directly to mahealthfunds.org/apply to submit an idea. 


 

Congratulations to JPNDC and Codman Square NDC! 

Congratulations to Jamaica Plain NDC and Codman Square NDC who are receiving funding as part of City of Boston and the Boston Public Health Commissions Live Long and Well population health equity agenda to close the life expectancy gap in Boston by 2025. Codman Square will be working with others in Dorchester to support economic mobility services including housing and credit-building support, financial coaching, workforce development, and resources for childcare, transportation, and food access. JPNDC will work with others to expand Upham’s Community Care’s outreach vans to visit several Dorchester and Roxbury sites two days a week, with the goal of serving 3,480 people over two years. In addition to basic primary care services, the vans will provide access to economic mobility coaches and community food services.     

 


 

Equity Initiative Updates 

MACDC’s Housing Quality and Health Equity Initiative (“The Equity Initiative”) team are beginning work in a second cohort of Gateway Cities, including Lynn, New Bedford, and Worcester. The goal of this work is to identify local concerns and to identify ways to support work to improve housing quality concerns in these cities. The Equity Initiative team also held its second multi-city gathering for individuals from the first cohort of Gateway Cities, Brockton, Holyoke, and Springfield, in order to continue to support the work in these cities. In response to suggestions from the first cohort of Gateway Cities, the Equity Initiative Team also recently published their first Better Health Through Better Housing newsletter. Please contact Elana at elanab@macdc.org if you’d like to learn more. 


August 2025 Economic Development Updates

August 20th, 2025 by Yari DeJesus

Economic Development Updates

by Yari DeJesus

 

 

Supplier Diversity Program Launch Recap 

On July 23rd, MACDC hosted an introductory meeting to relaunch and expand our Supplier Diversity Program statewide. The program aims to strengthen MBE and WBE participation in CDC-led real estate projects by providing tools, monthly convenings, and a data collection framework. Over 30 CDC staff joined the kickoff, where we shared program goals, walked through new resources available on Boardable, and gathered thoughtful feedback to guide the implementation. Monthly meetings will begin in August, with data reporting starting later in 2026. We strongly encourage all participating CDCs to join the Boardable platform, which will serve as the central hub for accessing program resources, participating in group discussions, and staying connected. 


MACDC Staffing update 

Yari DeJesus, MACDC’s Director of Economic Development, will be out on maternity leave starting at the end of August as she welcomes her first baby. During her leave through the fall season, Supplier Diversity Program convenings and related communications will be managed by Don Bianchi, Director of Housing and Gracie Theobald-Williams, Data and Equity Specialist. We thank you in advance for your support during this transition and look forward to Yari’s return after the fall season. 


Final Report from the Massachusetts Poverty Commission Released 

After more than a year of in-depth research, public hearings, and stakeholder engagement, the Massachusetts Special Legislative Commission to Study Poverty has released its final report: Pathways to Possibility – A Ten Year Roadmap to Expand Economic Mobility in Massachusetts. Yari DeJesus, MACDC’s Director of Economic Development, proudly served as one of 32 appointed commissioners contributing to this statewide effort. The report offers a comprehensive framework to reduce poverty through targeted policy recommendations across four key areas: access to essential support, stability for individuals and families, opportunity for economic mobility, and systems coordination. It also includes data on the state of poverty, lived-experience testimony, and spotlights on recent legislative achievements. The final report reflects extensive commissioner feedback and is designed to guide legislative and programmatic actions toward a more equitable and economically secure Commonwealth. 

You can access the full report HERE: 

 

Virtual Brownfields Roundtable 

On September 9th, MassDEP in partnership with MassDevelopment will be hosting a virtual Brownfields ‘Roundtable’ webinar for everyone who is interested in learning about current funding and technical assistance available from: MassDevelopment, UConn Technical Assistance to Brownfields, the US EPA, and MassDEP. 

Please register to attend this 90-minute meeting at 6:00 PM EST on the Zoom platform [prior registration is required].  

Registration Link: https://lnkd.in/eEnuCRnd 


August 2025 Housing and Real Estate Updates

August 20th, 2025 by Don Bianchi

Housing and Real Estate Updates

by Don Bianchi, Director of Housing

 

 

State’s Rental Round Awards Will Create or Preserve 1,245 Homes 

MACDC Members on Track to Develop 513 Rental Units 

 

On July 31st, in Winchester, Governor Healey, Lieutenant Governor Driscoll, and Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities (EOHLC) Secretary Augustus, announced the award of $182 million in low-income housing tax credits and other subsidies to 21 affordable rental housing projects. 

 

These 21 developments will create or preserve 1,245 rental homes across the Commonwealth. MACDC Member organizations received 10 of these awards, to create or preserve 513 apartments, 41% of the total apartments that will be developed. In the 2024 rental round awards announced last summer, 31% of the homes to be developed were by MACDC Member organizations- meaning MACDC members’ share of the awards increased by 10% from the prior year! 

 

Of the 10 projects containing 513 rental units which will be created by MACDC Member organizations, 487 affordable units (95% of the total) will be affordable- and 188 of these affordable apartments will be affordable to extremely low-income (ELI) households- many of them homeless- with incomes below 30% of area median income. 

 

Four of the ten MACDC Member projects will be in the City of Boston: 

  • Southwest Boston CDC will preserve and rehabilitate 68 Homes, a scattered-site family housing project. Of the 68 rental units, 67 will be affordable, and 22 of these will be further reserved for ELI households. 
  • 250 Seaver Street, sponsored by Commonwealth Land Trust, will provide 16 single-room occupancy units for homeless individuals, who will be able to access supportive services. 
  • VietAID will preserve and refinance 1392 House/19-21 Faulkner in Dorchester, to continue providing 18 units of both affordable family housing and single-room occupancy housing for homeless individuals, with extensive supportive services provided. 
  • Mildred Hailey 2, a new construction project for families in Jamaica Plain, will be developed by Jamaica Plain NDC. This phase of the Bromley Heath public housing redevelopment will consist of 65 affordable apartments, and 17 of these further reserved for ELI households. 

 

Three MACDC Member projects will be in Western Massachusetts: 

  • Home City Development will newly construct Ferry Street in Easthampton, on a site including former mill buildings. The project will offer 96 rental units, including 91 affordable apartments, with 27 of these reserved for ELI households. 
  • EconoLodge Redevelopment in Hadley is the adaptive reuse of a closed hotel as permanent supportive housingValley Community Development will produce 50 affordable apartments, with 31 of these units further reserved for extremely low-income households, primarily homeless individuals. 
  • Hearthway will newly construct Eagle Mill Phase II in Lee, in partnership with Rees-Larkin. The project will provide 44 units, including 24 affordable apartments, with 8 apartments reserved for ELI families. 

 

Three MACDC Member projects will be located in Eastern Massachusetts, outside of Greater Boston: 

  • Asian CDC will newly construct 213 Main Street in Malden, which will offer 20 affordable family units. Of these, 5 units will be reserved for ELI households. 
  • HSL Stoughton, a new construction project for seniors in Stoughton sponsored by Hebrew Senior Life, will provide 96 units affordable to seniors, with 36 of these apartments reserved for ELI seniors. 
  • NeighborWorks Housing Solutions will newly construct Cranberry Manor Phase II in Wareham. All 40 units will be affordable to seniors, with 8 of these homes reserved for ELI seniors. 

 

Emily Haber, MACDC’s President & CEO, attended the award announcement in Winchester, and noted the following: “MACDC is proud that of the 21 projects funded in the recent Rental Housing round, 10 of them are being developed by MACDC members, resulting in the production and preservation of 487 units of affordable rental housing. We are excited to see so many of our members recognized by the Administration in this important funding round as we know MACDC members are making a difference addressing the affordable housing crisis in communities across the Commonwealth. 

 

On June 20th, Governor Maura Healey and Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities Secretary Ed Augustus announced the Healey-Driscoll Administration’s award of $227 million to create and preserve 1,874 rental units, with 1,731 of these homes being affordable. 

 

Nine of the 27 projects awarded funding are being sponsored, or co-sponsored, by MACDC Members. These projects will provide 586 rental units, of which 541 will be affordable. They include the following: 

 

  • 10 Sunnyside Avenue in Arlington, sponsored by the Housing Corporation of Arlington, involves the new construction of 43 affordable homes. 
  • Paco East Boston Refinance, sponsored by Neighborhood of Affordable Housing (NOAH), will rehabilitate and preserve 111 units, including 76 affordable units, in East Boston. 
  • Mission Hill Neighborhood Housing Services will construct 94 affordable units in its Parcel 25 Phase 3 project in Boston’s Mission Hill Neighborhood.
  • Housing Assistance Corporation, in partnership with Preservation of Affordable Housing (POAH), will newly construct 45 units, including 35 affordable units, at Spring Rock Village in Brewster. 
  • 4 Mellen, sponsored by Homeowners Rehab (HRI) is a combined new construction and adaptive reuse project that will provide 29 affordable units in Cambridge. 
  • Mariner Mill 4A in Lawrence, sponsored by Lawrence Community Works, is the adaptive reuse of a large-scale vacant mill building, and will provide 72 affordable units. 
  • Commonwealth Land Trust will newly construct La Casa in Lynn, to provide 40 affordable homes. 
  • Somerville Community Corporation (SCC) will rehabilitate and preserve 60 affordable units at Bow Linden in Somerville. 
  • SCC, working with POAH, received an award for the second phase of the multi-phase redevelopment of public housing in Somerville, involving the new construction of 92 affordable units. 

 

Congratulations to our Members for their tireless work to create and preserve affordable housing for the Commonwealth’s residents, and appreciation to the Governor and Secretary Augustus for their commitment to addressing our affordable housing crisis. 

 

 


August 2025 Public Policy Updates

August 20th, 2025 by

Policy & Advocacy Updates

Nathanael Shea, Director of Public Policy

 

June State House Briefings 

 

In early June, MACDC co-organized two legislative briefings at the State House. One presented the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA), helping to dispel myths and to educate new lawmakers and their staffs on the benefits of this policy that has come so close to passage multiple times over the past few legislative sessions. See a post about the briefing here. The other briefing walked legislators and their staff through various options for raising revenue to invest in climate justice. MACDC’s Director of Public Policy presented at this hearing on behalf of the AHEAD Act. See here for some information about the event, and you can find the slide deck from the presentation here, with what was presented on AHEAD and the other two great bills 

 


 

July Hearings on MACDC Priority Bills 

 

On July 15th, MACDC testified at two important State House hearings. In the first, the AHEAD Coalition rolled out 3 panels before the Joint Committee on Revenue, highlighting how raising our uncompetitively low deeds excise fee should be a crucial tool in our toolbox to fight our interrelated housing and climate crisis. You can watch the hearing here – our portion starts at the 42 minute point in the video. Big thanks to our coalition partners MAPC, Fairmount Indigo CDC Collaborative, CHAPA, Better Future Project, Conservation Law Foundation, the Boston Climate Action Network, and the MA Alliance of HUD Tenants for joining the panels. The hearing was a great success, and the coalition is now meeting with individual members of the committee to lobby for support of the bill. And if you wish to submit testimony in favor of the bill yourself or on behalf of your organization (or both!), you can use these templates or for a super quick click-and-send version use this Action Network link produced by our partners at FICC 

 

Later that day, we also joined our friends at LISC and Power Options to testify before the Joint Committee on Environment and Natural Resources, to testify in favor of adding a Zero Carbon Renovation Fund to the new environmental bond bill that the Governor has filed (the Mass Ready Act). You can view the (very long!) hearing here, and if you want to skip right to us, our panel comes in right around the 3 hours and 2 minutes mark.  

 


 

What’s Ahead in the Fall 

 

The coming fall promises a lot of Beacon Hill activity. There are still a few of MACDC’s priority bills awaiting their public hearings Local Option Real Estate Transfer Fees, TOPA, and the stand-alone Zero Carbon Renovation Fund bill. In addition, there is likely to be a continued revisiting of our state budget, depending on how deep an impact the impending federal cuts make on our fiscal landscape here. So stay tuned for opportunities to advocate! 

 


 

Lobby Day Photos 

 

Thank you to everyone who joined us for MACDC Lobby Day in the spring. Please see here for photos that were taken at the event. You’re welcome to use them in your materials, and if you do we just ask that you give photo credit to Liese Jones Photography 


Public Policy Update June 2025

June 13th, 2025 by

The Legislature’s Joint Committee on Housing held two by-invitation informational hearings last month. Our Director of Public Policy, Nathanael Shea, and our board’s Policy Chair, Jay Coburn of Community Development Partnership, delivered testimony on behalf of MACDC. You can find our full testimony here (which was submitted as written testimony after the hearing). You’re able to watch archived streams of the two hearings here (this is the one we testified at) and here (this is the follow-up hearing). In addition to MACDC, there was fantastic testimony delivered by many of our affordable housing allies, including CHAPA, MAPC, MA Law Reform Institute, Homes for All, Abundant Housing MA, and many others 

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Economic Development Updates June 2025

June 13th, 2025 by Yari DeJesus

Join The Mel King Institute and Our Partners for Fundamentals of the Opportunity Finance Industry

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Please note: this course is for MassDevelopment Grantees Only. 

Opportunity Finance Network and the UNH Carsey School Center for Impact Finance have partnered to bring to you the Fundamentals of the Opportunity Finance Industry certificate course. This three-week course will take you through three modules focused on the following topics: 

  • History, Context and Current Status of the CDFI Field 
  • Financial Analysis of CDFIs and CDFI Loans 
  • Impact Measurement and Public Policy 

Live virtual classes, readings, guest speakers, and assignments will develop your knowledge and capacity of community development finance to productively contribute to expanding your organizations' capacity and impact. 

 


 

Joint Committee on Community Development and Small Businesses Hearing 

On Tuesday May 27th, Yari DeJesus, Director of Economic Development at MACDC, and Kim Lyle, CEO of Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation and Chair of MACDC’s Board of Directors, participated in an Informational Hearing held by the Joint Committee on Community Development and Small Businesses. They shared pressing challenges facing small business owners in the Commonwealth, including those served by Dorchester Bay, particularly around social, economic, and environmental barriers to growth. They emphasized the importance of increased support for Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs), especially in light of potential reductions to the federal CDFI Fund, and called for sustained investments in the small business technical assistance program that help entrepreneurs navigate administrative and financial hurdles. They also highlighted the critical role of microlending in expanding access to capital for underserved entrepreneurs, particularly for small-dollar loans used for working capital, inventory, equipment, or startup costs. The testimony offered both a sobering look at current challenges and practical recommendations to strengthen the Commonwealth’s small business ecosystem. 

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Kimberly Lyle, CEO, Dorchester Bay Yari DeJesus, Director of Economic Development, MACDC

 

 


Health Equity Updates June 2025

June 13th, 2025 by Elana Brochin

Thank you, Grace! 

Our Health Equity Intern, Grace, is leaving MACDC after having recently graduated with her master's degree in Community Development and Planning from Clark University this past Monday! This Summer, Grace will be starting a full-time position as an Associate Project Manager at Preservation of Affordable Housing (POAH) through the Kuehn Charitable Foundation Fellowship, working to develop equitable affordable housing throughout the Commonwealth.  

 


 

Welcome, Taylor!

Taylor J. Robinson, MPH, PhDc is MACDC’s new Health Equity Intern. Her work supports the planning and implementation of MACDC’s Housing Quality and Health Equity Initiative.  

  

Taylor is currently a doctoral candidate at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, where she studies the intersection of housing, environment, and sleep health through the lens of social epidemiology. As a T32 trainee in Sleep, Circadian, and Respiratory Neurobiology at Harvard Medical School, her research interrogates how neighborhood environments, housing conditions, and environmental exposures shape sleep quality in Boston and the wider U.S. population. Her dissertation leverages Fitbit data and indoor temperature measurements to inform community-driven policy solutions.  

  

Prior to her doctoral training, Taylor earned her MPH in Epidemiology and her BA in Communications and Applied Statistics from the University of Pittsburgh. She has previously worked as a Rappaport Public Policy Fellow at the Executive Office of Housing and Livable Communities. Her commitment to housing justice and health advancement is also reflected in her work with the NIH, the CDC, the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, and Harvard’s FXB Center for Health and Human Rights. In her free time, you can find her at a local Boston theatre, in the garden, or attempting a new Southern style recipe!  

 


 

Massachusetts Healthy Homes Program Coalition

Our next MHHP Coalition meeting will be on July 17th at 10am. Please let me know if you would like me to send along the Outlook invitation for that meeting.  

 


 

Lead Paint Webinar

MACDC hosted a free webinar for homeowners on how to identify and address lead paint in their homes or rental units they own on Thursday May 1st. The webinar featured speakers from the MA Department of Public Health, local rehabilitation agencies, lenders, and others. The need for this webinar came out of our Community Engagement work in Gateway Cities as part of our Housing Quality and Health Equity Initiative. You can check out the recording of the webinar here. Please feel free to share with your networks! 

  


June 2025 Housing and Real Estate Updates

June 13th, 2025 by Don Bianchi

Division of Banks Awards More Than $3.5 Million for CDCs and Other Nonprofit Agencies Counseling Homebuyers and Homeowners 

 

On May 29, 2025, the Healey-Driscoll Administration’s Division of Banks (DOB) awarded more than $3.5 million in grants to 24 nonprofit organizations to fund first-time homeownership education programs and foreclosure prevention counseling centers throughout Massachusetts. These awards- the highest annual awards in the program’s history- were made under the “Chapter 206 Grant Program”- named after the Chapter in the groundbreaking 2007 law enacted in response to the nation’s financial and foreclosure crises Despite the current fiscal challenges faced by the Commonwealth, this year’s Chapter 206 awards by the DOB affirmed the importance of these proven counseling agencies which assist homeowners who are experiencing financial hardship and prospective homebuyers who are determining if homeownership is right for them. 

 

As in prior years, MACDC Members led the way, with 16 collectively receiving more than $2.6 million, three quarters of funding awarded, including awards to the following organizations: 

ACT Lawrence 

Allston Brighton CDC 

Asian CDC 

Codman Square NDC 

Community Development Partnership 

Franklin County Regional Housing and Redevelopment Authority 

Lawrence Community Works 

Neighborhood of Affordable Housing 

NeighborWorks Housing Solutions 

NewVue Communities 

Somerville Community Corporation 

South Middlesex Opportunity Council 

Southeast Asian Coalition of Central MA 

Urban Edge 

Way Finders 

Valley Community Development 

 

We are grateful to the DOB for its able stewardship and championing of the Chapter 206 Program, and to the Healey-Driscoll Administration and the MA Legislature for their support for the Program. 

 

From the MACDC GOALs Survey, we know that CDCs provided homebuyer counseling to almost 5,700 households in 2024, and foreclosure prevention counseling to more than 600 households. It’s a powerful combination: sound public investment coupled with a high-capacity nonprofit program delivery system. Since the inception of the Chapter 206 Grant program in 2008, DOB has awarded more than $30 million to organizations that have collectively assisted more than 109,000 consumers. 

 


 

MACDC Convenes Forum on Acquisition Strategies, Launches Broader Initiative 

 

On May 20th, MACDC hosted an Acquisition Forum at Urban Edge, bringing together CDCs, public and private intermediaries, and other experienced practitioners. The assembled 59 practitioners, in-person and online, discussed the challenges associated with acquiring properties characterized as Naturally Occurring Affordable Housing, or “NOAH,” residential properties offering some level of affordability but not publicly subsidized. 

 

The Forum launched MACDC’s Acquisition Strategies Initiative (ASI), a Community of Practice, with support from The Boston Foundation. The acquisition of NOAH properties can be an important affordability preservation and anti-displacement strategy in rapidly appreciating real estate markets.   

 

The Acquisition Forum was highlighted by three panels: 

  1. The current landscape in the City of Boston 

  1. The current landscape outside Boston’s city limits 

  1. The path forward on property acquisitions 

 

We will follow up with two peer learning sessions over the coming months, and the ASI will culminate with MACDC authoring a report summarizing the learnings, assessing the different strategies, and providing resources for further exploration. 

 

We will invite all the individuals from MACDC Member organizations who participated in the May 20th Acquisition Forum to participate in two 90-minute virtual peer learning discussions, as follows: 

  • Monday, June 23rd at 2 p.m.: The discussion focus will be on best practices in acquiring NOAH properties. 
  • Wednesday, July 23rd, at 2:30 p.m.: The discussion will focus on public policies to support NOAH property acquisitions. 

 

If you did not attend the Forum, and would like to be part of acquisition strategies conversations going forward- or just want more information about the ASI- reach out to MACDC’s Director of Housing, Don Bianchi (donb@macdc.org) or MACDC’s Data and Equity Specialist, Gracie Theobald-Williams (gracietw@macdc.org)We’d welcome your participation! 

 


Recording of Healthy Homes Webinar: “Better Homes Through Better Health: Identifying and Addressing Lead Paint in Massachusetts Homes”

May 12th, 2025 by Elana Brochin

Recording of Healthy Homes Webinar: “Better Homes Through Better Health: Identifying and Addressing Lead Paint in Massachusetts Homes”

On May 1st MACDC hosted a webinar for property owners on how to identify and address lead paint in their homes and in rental units they own. The need for this webinar came out of intensive conversations with community leaders in Massachusetts Gateway Cities.

The webinar featured speakers from the MA Department of Public Health, local rehabilitation agencies, lenders, and others. You can check out the recording of the webinar here (note that you can listen to the webinar in English or Spanish through this link) and view a PDF of the slides here. Please be in touch with Elana Brochin (elanab@macdc.org) or Don Bianchi (donb@macdc.org) with any questions.


Grabación del Seminario Web sobre Viviendas Saludables: “Mejores viviendas gracias a una mejor salud: identificación y tratamiento de la pintura con plomo en los hogares de Massachusetts”.

El 1 de mayo, el MACDC organizó un seminario web para propietarios, sobre cómo identificar y tratar la pintura con plomo en sus viviendas y unidades de alquiler. La necesidad de este seminario web surgió tras intensas conversaciones con líderes comunitarios de las ciudades de puerta de entrada (Gateway Cities) de Massachusetts.

Este seminario web contó con la participación de ponentes del Departamento de Salud Pública de Massachusetts, así como agencias locales de rehabilitación, entidades crediticias y otros. Para ver la grabación del seminario web, haga clic aquí (usando este enlace, podrá escuchar el seminario web en inglés o en español) y envíe un correo electrónico a Elana si desea un PDF de las diapositivas. Si tiene alguna pregunta, sírvase contactar a Elana Brochin (elanab@macdc.org) o a Don Bianchi (donb@macdc.org).



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