A $5 million investment in kids at Greater Lowell YMCA

A $5 million “investment in the future of our kids” should be ready by September as the Greater Lowell YMCA embarked Friday on a renovation and expansion project to its Thorndike Street building.

Executive Director Kevin Morrissey welcomed Lowell officials and others “to celebrate our investment in the facility and our children.”

When completed the project will mean 12,000-square-feet of renovated and added space providing  “a state of the art learning center for kids,” Morrisey said.

A $1 million grant from the state Department of Early Education and Care got the project off the ground.

The state agency visited Lowell a year ago to evaluate the YMCA’s facility and programs before making the award.

“It really felt great here,” said Theresa Jordan of the Children’s Investment Fund, which oversees the grant for the state.

State Sen. Edward Kennedy, state Rep. Tom Golden and Mayor John Leahy shared memories of the YMCA growing up in Lowell. Golden and Leahy both learned how to swim at the Y pool. Kennedy also learned to swim at the Y,  but the old Y on Merrimack Street, which was located between Old City Hall and what is now Enterprise Bank.

The new YMCA opened 45 years ago, so Kennedy took some ribbing from Golden and Leahy.

Golden called the Y “a real asset for the community” and added that it is a safe place for the children of Lowell. Leahy agreed and remembered coming to the building when it first opened.

City Manager Eileen Donoghue reminded the audience that the YMCA is more than 150 years old. “It’s been a labor of love from then until today,” she said, adding, “The YMCA is more important now than ever.”

While construction is underway, the early childhood programs and day care have been moved temporarily offsite. Windows in that area of the building are boarded up and the interior has been gutted. The gym and other areas at the front of the building are still open, but signs of construction are still evident.

Project Manager Robert Samaral of Kaplan Construction was on hand outside to answer questions. He has done a lot of work for YMCAs in the state, including several in Lawrence. But this is his first project in Lowell.

 

 

SourceLowell Sun

Belchertown Day School buys land at former State School site for early childhood education center

Belchertown Day School has purchased two acres the former site of the Belchertown State School, where it plans to build a 8,600-square-foot early-childhood education center and afterschool facility.

MassDevelopment announced the sale in a news release Wednesday.

“We no longer will be renting; we will have a school to call our own that will be a forever home,” the school’s executive director Pat Bruni said in an interview Wednesday. “This new school means so much to us.”

Belchertown Day School paid $133,333 for the land, according to documents filed Dec. 11 at the Hampshire County Registry of Deeds. The seller was the Belchertown Economic Development industrial Corp.

Also on file is a document requiring Belchertown Day School to build the childcare facility and to start construction within six months of buying the land.

MassDevelopment also said a new road at the 55-acre site, called Carriage Drive, opened in December.

At over a third of a mile, Carriage Drive opens the Carriage Grove neighborhood for residential, commercial, and industrial uses and realigns Jackson Street to move traffic away from an established neighborhood. The Day School site is on Carriage Drive.

MassDevelopment calls Carriage Grove a “new neighborhood” at the State School site, part of a master plan for up to 581,000 square feet of mixed-use development.

“MassDevelopment is proud to oversee the development of Carriage Grove from a former state school into a first-rate mixed-use neighborhood,” MassDevelopment President and CEO Lauren Liss said in a statement. “The addition of Belchertown Day School, Inc. and the recent completion of Carriage Drive mark two exciting milestones in our redevelopment efforts, and create momentum toward the build-out of this community.”

Carriage Drive opened Dec. 1, 2019. Funding included a $3 million grant from the Commonwealth’s MassWorks Infrastructure Program, according to the release.

Founded in 1977, Belchertown Day School is a nonprofit providing early childhood education for more than 100 children between ages 15 months and 12 years old. It has toddler and preschool classes, before and after-school programming and vacation and summer programming, according to a news release.

Belchertown Day School currently operates out of leased space at 432 State St. in Belchertown.

Deeds documents show at least $2.9 million in funding for the project. The new building will be financed by Children’s Investment Fund’s Early Education and Out of School Time Capital Fund, according to deeds documents. Additional financing is from Blue Hub Capital and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Community Facilities Program.

At least a quarter of the 110 slots in the new school will be set aside for children from low-income families.

Following the Belchertown State School’s closure in 1992, the Belchertown Economic Development and Industrial Corporation purchased the Carriage Grove site from the state, according to Wednesday’s news release. The main campus of the property contained almost 400,000 square feet of abandoned buildings and utility tunnels with significant environmental issues that required abatement and demolition.

MassDevelopment is the state’s finance and development agency.

The Belchertown Planning Board approved a site plan for the Day School in February 2019.

Jim Russell contributed reporting.

SourceMassLive

Making room for growth, GLCAC makes final push to fund new, bigger daycare center

Sharing the parking lot with a Dunkin’, the building looks a lot like a strip mall.

That’s because at one time, it was.

From the outside, the Child Care Center at 581 Andover St. is quite non-descript. A bunch of cars, some buses, the aforementioned Dunkin’ are all visible from the street.

Then there is the building, emblazoned with the sign indicating it is a school facility owned by the Greater Lawrence Community Action Council, or GLCAC.

Once a supermarket, the inside of the pre-school for low-income children and their families has been transformed over the years into a warm, inviting learning environment.

Teachers have created beautiful murals in the hallways. Classrooms are adorned with decorations. Mini chairs and low tables are filled with smiling children, eating raspberry yogurt “and granola,” as one young girl with curly red hair explains.

But the building, and the grounds around it, have outlived their usefulness. Quietly, almost stealthily, the board of directors of GLCAC over the past three years has raised $7.9 million to build a new school on the same piece of property. The group just received a $1 million donation from the state, bringing the total raised to $8.96 million.

Another $440,000 is needed to meet the goal of $9.4 million, and school officials are bullish about the project and the fund-raising.

“We looked for another building,” said GLCAC Executive Director Evelyn Friedman. “We wanted to stay in Lawrence and build a facility for 250 kids. Everything we found was too big or too small, so we decided to rebuild on-site.”

The existing building is about 20,000 square feet on one level. The new building will be 30,000 square feet on two levels and the number of students will increase from the current 200 to the goal of 250.

“We only have $441,000 left to raise,” said Jennifer Carter, director of program planning and evaluation, who is also responsible for grant-writing. She said $660,000 has been raised from individuals and family members, another $70,000 from staff and board members.

Sara Morin works with Carter and helps organize the annual gala in April. She said she is hopeful that event will put the organization over the top and that the white tip of the oversized fund-raising thermometer will turn red by spring.

In obvious need of expansion

During a tour of the facility last week, it became clear very quickly how much the school needs more space.

Items were stored in the hallways. Classes were doubled up in many cases.

A gym, also known as the “gross-motor room,” is tiny and can only handle 10 children at a time.

The new facility will have two much larger gross-motor rooms, enabling more children to play at any given time.

Classrooms will no longer be doubled up: In the current facility, one classroom has 20 kids on one side with two teachers. A makeshift wall of cabinets and desks marks a boundary of sorts, inside of which are 10 kids with one teacher.

In the new facility, there will be 20 kids per classroom, with two teachers in each. No shared space.

Jessi Surette, whose title is “inclusion coach” and whose job is to help children with behavioral difficulties, is looking forward to the new facility.

“It will be so much bigger, with more room for classrooms, and it will serve more children,” she said.

Adelaida Guzman, a teacher of 10 years, said she was hopeful about the new school, noting that with more room comes “more decorations which will make the kids more interested” in learning.

Other problems abound in the old school.

For example, the 13 employees in the transportation division are jammed into a small room in the center of the building. A room for teachers to do lesson plans is even smaller, but it is the only place in the building with WiFi.

The new school will offer larger rooms for these and other programs, as well as more and larger administrative offices, where employees are now doubled-up.

The new facility will have one, large kitchen, where food will be prepared for the six schools under the GLCAC banner throughout the city. The agency will hire at least 20 new teachers and staff.

Grateful for grants, donations

Outside, the differences will also be dramatic.

The way the construction is planned, the new building will be adjacent to the existing building, on top of the playground for the older kids and on top of what is now the parking lot for buses. It will go from the back to the front of the property at Andover Street.

When the new building is done, everyone will be moved over and the old building will be razed, making way for a brand-new playground, more parking, and a driveway that will carry buses and cars out the side of the property, onto Diamond Street.

Currently, buses trundle into the front entrance, pick up students, and then back up and out the exit/entry. Making matters worse is that customers going to Dunkin’ have a tendency to use the entrance to the school before going left to the drive-through.

Under the new scheme, the Dunkin’ driveway will be isolated from the rest of the property with landscaping and curbing.

Friedman said she was very thankful for all the support the agency has received for the new school, especially the $1 million grant from the Baker-Polito administration through the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation.

The grant was announced last month as part of a $6 million gift to child care programs across the state.

“Our administration is pleased to support facility improvements at early education and care programs throughout the Commonwealth to provide families with the resources necessary for success in and out of the classroom,” Baker said during a ceremony Dec. 19 at the YMCA Cape Cod in Hyannis, one of the facilities benefiting from the state program.

“Renovating and repairing child care facilities helps achieve the administration’s goal of providing quality early education and care in all Massachusetts communities.”

SourceThe Eagle-Tribune

Cape Ann Y gets $1M for early ed center

With help from a state grant, the new Cape Ann YMCA will be able to provide more space for in-house educational opportunities for young children.

The new YMCA, which is slated to open in the fall of 2020 at the site of the former Fuller School, will include, among other features, an expanded early education center with more staff and programming than is currently offered in the Y’s building on Middle Street. This will be funded, in part, by a $1 million capital grant the YMCA of the North Shore — the parent entity of the Cape Ann Y — received from the Baker-Polito administration.

The grant award also brings the Cape Ann Y’s overall capital campaign to a total of $20.4 million, closing in on the $22 million fundraising goal for the new complex.

“We are so grateful to the Children’s Investment Fund, the Department of Early Education and Care, and the entire Baker-Polito Administration team for their overall commitment to high-quality, affordable early learning across Massachusetts,” said Chris Lovasco, President and CEO of YMCA of the North Shore. “Our Cape Ann Y is honored to have been selected and truly appreciates the confidence the administration has expressed in our Y’s ability to deliver on its mission here in Cape Ann.”

The plan going forward is for the new Cape Ann YMCA to have a state-of-the-art licensed childcare space.

“It is going to be 6,000 square feet,” Cape Ann Y’s Executive Director Tim Flaherty said. “That does not include shared spaces.”

The entire new facility will have 65,000 square feet of recreational and educational space, compared to 44,000 square feet now at the Middle Street location.

The new early education space and increased staff will allow the Y to accept infants into its programs and increase space for toddlers to play and learn. This, in turn, is expected to enable the Y to double its enrollment in early education programs.

In 2019, the Cape Ann YMCA provided early education (including preschool) and after-school care for more than 200 children while offering more than $150,000 in financial assistance.

“With this increased enrollment, we are going to help all people from those who can’t afford to those who can afford child care,” Flaherty said. “It is going to be reflective of the community.”

The Cape Ann YMCA was one of six agencies in the state to receive this money in Early Education and Out of School Time capital improvement awards to establish Early Learning Centers and to repair and renovate facilities serving children from low-income households.

The other agencies receiving grants of $1 million each include the YMCA of Cape Cod, Greater Lawrence Community Action Council, Greater Lowell Family YMCA, Horizons for Homeless Children in Boston, and YWCA of Central Massachusetts.

As the YMCA’s dream of a new Cape Ann location begins to draw closer to reality, they are looking to the next few months as instrumental ones in reaching their fundraising goal of $22 million.

“The Y continues to push to the finish line to reach its goal by raising the final $2 million in the coming months,” said Pam Sullivan, of YMCA of the North Shore.

Anyone interested in volunteering to help the campaign may contact the Y’s Chrissy Cahill at cahillc@northshoreymca.org

Staff writer Taylor Ann Bradford can be reached at 978-675-2705 or tbradford@northofboston.com.

SourceGloucester Daily Times

Women-led YWCA construction project breaks ground in Worcester

Poised to “meet the challenge of the new downtown,” as YWCA Central Massachusetts President Roberta Brien announced, the all women-led construction team for the YWCA’s $24 million renovation broke ground Thursday morning.

The ceremony, attended by some 50 people, was held inside the YWCA’s gymnasium, because of frigid temperatures. Thirteen project and organization executives and contributors dug shovels into a large sandbox as cameras clicked.

The construction project at 1 Salem Square features building system upgrades, a new two-floor early education and care center, expanded transitional housing units, increased space for domestic violence services, reconfigured wellness and health areas and overall site enhancement, including a shared play area with Worcester Public Library.

YWCA’s $7.5 million capital campaign has already received $5.25 million in pledges, said YWCA President-elect Christienne Bik.

The state has committed $3.6 million in bond funds.

Included in that, the YWCA received a $1 million Early Education and Out of School Time capital improvement grant in December through the Department of Early Education and Care, one of six grant recipients to receive the largest investment the state has made in child care facilities, said Early Education and Care Commissioner, Samantha Aigner-Treworgy.

What makes the project unusual is that its field management and supporting staff teams are all women.

“We knew that their (YWCA’s) mission was empowering women,” said Jody Staruk, project executive for Consigli Construction, the project’s construction contractor.

When Staruk was approached to arrange a team, she said, “I had a significant pool of women to pull from.”

Women conduct the estimates, preconstruction management, virtual design and construction modeling, and superintendent and engineer positions in the field, Staruk said.

While women have worked on numerous separate teams, to pull them together on one project is a first for Consigli.

The owner’s project manager, Pinck & Co., an Anser Advisory company, and architects Fennick McCredie Architecture Ltd. are also part of the women-led team.

“When we sit in a meeting, it’s a dozen women in the room, solving world problems and getting work done,” Staruk said.

She called the process, “collaborative and creative.”

Women aren’t just involved in leading the project. Some women working on site will have come through the Worcester Jobs Fund, a training program for low-income residents.

“Because the percent of women working in construction is so low, a lot of women don’t think of construction,” despite the high pay, said Kelsey Lamoureux, director or the Worcester Jobs Fund. The program is housed at MassHire’s Central Region workforce board.

She said that nationally, 3% of workers on construction sites are women. In Massachusetts, it’s closer to 8% to 9%, with union efforts helping to push the numbers.

Women make up about half the training program in Worcester.

Lamoureux said she was looking for more women interested in construction for the next training program, which begins at the end of February.

Construction started last week and is expected to finish by the end of the year.

SourceTelegram

Worcester YWCA begins $24M renovation

The YWCA Central Massachusetts began construction Thursday on a $24-million renovation of its Worcester facility.

The construction project has already hit a milestone: what the nonprofit says is the city’s first community benefits agreement, which ensures an all-women led construction management team. It’ll also promise living-wage jobs with benefits, and an emphasis on diversity by employing union contractors, local women and people of color.

The project will remake the YWCA’s Salem Square location with a relocated playground, a new shared play area with the Worcester Public Library, and four new rooms for residents to stay in the transitional housing program. Other improvements include an increase space for domestic violence services and the addition of a multi-use fitness area.

Other work is more utilitarian, including upgrading heating and air conditioning, repairing roofs and installing new windows and doors. The work is set to take about one year.

The YWCA Central Massachusetts was one of six community nonprofits to win a $1 million grant each in December from the Gov. Charlie Baker Administration and the Massachusetts Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation. The funds support facility improvements at early education and care programs that serve low-income children.

SourceWorcester Business Journal

Greater Lowell YMCA receives $1 million for renovations

Smiling kids smear green paint on paper plates. It’s Christmas Eve, and children in the Greater Lowell YMCA’s school-age care group are crafting cone-shaped pine trees.

The students crowd around tables in a room used for lunch, arts and crafts, STEM activities and small indoor games.

“Right now, we have such a limited space,” said Assistant Childcare Director Brittany Laferriere, wearing a Santa Claus skirt and green light-up earrings.

“There are so many things I’ve wanted to do and not been able to do,” she added.

But that is about to change.

With the help of a $1 million grant from the state, the YMCA will soon have a much larger space for its youth programs, with a new computer lab, a playground and more.

The Baker-Polito Administration and the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation on Dec. 19 announced $6 million in Early Education and Out of School Time capital-improvement grants to six early-education and care programs serving low-income children.

“Our administration is pleased to support facility improvements at early-education and care programs throughout the commonwealth to provide families with the resources necessary for success in and out of the classroom,” Gov. Charlie Baker said in a news release.

The grant will help the Greater Lowell YMCA fund a $3.275 million project to include 9,500 square feet of renovations, 927 square feet of new construction and the addition of a 2,100-square-foot playground.

“The environment that they will have access to will be top-notch,” Greater Lowell YMCA CEO Kevin Morrissey said, referring to local children who can make use ot the playground.

Outdated preschool classrooms will be revamped with carpeting and new bathrooms, and a community and teen annex is planned. A rear entrance will also be added to completely separate child-care space from other YMCA facilities.

“It will be a huge increase in security,” Morrissey said.

The renovations will allow the YMCA to more than double the capacity of its youth programs. There are currently 50 preschool and 75 school-age students enrolled in the programs.

“It’s a safe environment for the children to come learn,” Morrissey said, adding that kids are able to socialize with others their age.

“There’s a lot of diversity, which makes it more fun to talk to people,” fourth grader Hadassa Perez said as she watched friends spread green paint on their masterpieces.

Construction is expected to begin at the end of January and finish by October 2020. The project will make the space “a lot more conducive for learning and especially safety,” Morrissey said.

A typical day in the YMCA’s after-school program consists of snacks, homework help, and physical or themed activities, such as constructing the paper pine trees, Laferriere explained. She has worked at the Greater Lowell YMCA for 12 years.

In the renovated space, students will be able to participate in STEM-related activities, use computers for homework, and engage in more age-specific play.

“We can just offer more programs for the kids themselves that they wouldn’t otherwise have,” Laferriere said.

Of the space, she said, “I’m excited to see it be something … that I never could have dreamed.”

 

SourceLowell Sun

Central Mass. YMCA receives $1M state grant to improve childcare facilities

The YMCA of Central Massachusetts was among six early education providers around the state this month to receive a $1 million grant to improve their facilities.

In total, Gov. Charlie Baker and the state’s Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation announced $6 million in funding would be awarded to the organizations, which serve low-income children in their areas.

“Well-designed buildings, classrooms and play spaces help provide high-quality learning environments in which children grow and thrive,” the state’s Early Education and Care Commissioner, Samantha Aigner-Treworgy, said in a statement. “The $6 million in grant awards this year — the highest amount since the EEOST Capital Fund inception — will support better program settings for over 700 children across the state.”

The YMCA of Central Massachusetts, which operates child development centers at its Westboro, Southbridge, Fitchburg, and two Worcester branches, received the Early Education and Out of School Time capital improvement grant by demonstrating financial need and securing other funding to subsidize the planned building improvements and renovations.

SourceTelegram.com

YWCA Gets Piece of $6 Million Grant from State to Improve Early Ed and Care Programs for Low-Income Kids

 

SourceThis Week in Worcester

YMCA Cape Cod Receives $1M Grant for Hyannis Early Education

The YMCA Cape Cod has been awarded a $1 million grant from the state to support a new early education center in downtown Hyannis.

The grant was one of six announced Thursday at the Hyannis Village Marketplace on Stevens Street – the location of the new education center which will open next fall.

The 2019 Early Education and Out of School Time Capital Fund Facilities Improvement grant awards were funded through the Department of Early Education and Care, and the Children’s Investment Fund, an affiliate of the Community Economic Development Assistance Corporation.

YMCA Cape Cod will renovate a commercially-zoned office and retail space to develop the early education center that will serve, primarily, low-income families.

The state-of-the-art center will be a tenth of a mile walk from the Hyannis Youth and Community Center, and just one block away from Main Street for immediate access to the Hyannis Public Library, the John F. Kennedy Hyannis Museum and the Cape Cod Maritime Museum.

The design includes five classrooms that will be able to serve up to 65 infants, toddlers and preschoolers; an indoor motor play space with doors that open into a natural playscape; urban courtyard; and floor to ceiling windows for natural light.

“One million dollars invested into capital infrastructure for children is exactly what the Cape Cod community needs,” said Stacie Peugh, the president and CEO of YMCA Cape Cod. “We need more of it.”

Designs of a new YMCA Cape Cod early education center planned for the Hyannis Village Marketplace on Stevens Street.

Peugh said she couldn’t be happier that the organization is able to bring the facility to Hyannis to serve children and families.

“There are a hundred families who live in the apartments above these spaces who need services like an early childhood program,” Peugh said.

Peugh said the facility will be transformational and change the culture and feel of the community.

“There is nothing more exciting than seeing children and families play together and learn together,” she said. “It’s what makes it feel like a vibrant community.”

Peugh believes bringing the early education center to the community will be a draw for similar organizations to bring community service opportunities to the area.

Plans for the facility call for the outdoor courtyard area at the property to be converted into an all-natural playground.

“That will actually be utilized not only by the children in the daycare but the residents who live here in the apartments above these spaces,” Peugh said.

Second Barnstable State Representative Will Crocker (R-Centerville) said the new facility will provide a sense of security for parents.

“We have had some shake ups where child care has been going the last six months or so,” Crocker said. “Kudos to YMCA Cape Cod for being able to step in and pick the ball up and continue moving forward.”

Crocker said parents need to know there is going to be a safe and secure environment, and a place where children will be able to grow and thrive, when they drop of their kids.

Crocker said early childhood education is a component of the affordable housing issue on Cape Cod.

“We also need to know that once we get that housing for those families, those families need to know that there is a place for their children to go to be able to be safe, to learn and to thrive,” he said.

Cape and Islands State Senator Julian Cyr (D-Truro) echoed the importance of child care when it comes to increasing access to affordable homes for younger families.

“If you are someone who is trying to make a life here on Cape Cod you have to be working, and if you have a spouse they are probably working too,” Cyr said. “So child care is just a key piece of how we help working families be successful.”

Cyr said providing more options for families will help them to stay afloat.

“For families that are really struggling to make ends meet, this center is going to make a big difference and it is a big deal to have state support for it,” Cyr said.

Cyr said he would like to see every town on Cape Cod support some form of universal pre-kindergarten programs. He cited a voucher-based program in Wellfleet and the work of Mashpee to integrate programs with the schools as possible models for other communities.

“We are struggling to keep our families,” Cyr said. “If you look at where we are going demographically, we are losing younger people. We are losing young families.”

Cyr challenges other towns on the Cape to take up universal pre-K programs at town meetings.

“I think we can do this Cape-wide working with each of our towns before we are able to do it at the state level,” he said.

The announcement of $6 million in grant funding from the state for the six programs was made by Samantha Aigner-Treworgy, the state’s Early Education and Care Commissioner.

The other awardees include Cape Ann YMCA/YMCA of North Shore, which serves the Gloucester area; Greater Lawrence Community Action Council; Greater Lowell Family YMCA; Horizons for Homeless Children, in Boston; and the YWCA of Central Massachusetts, which serves the greater Worcester area.

“All children deserve to learn in enriching environments and their teachers deserve well-equipped facilities,” said Aigner-Treworgy. “The EEOST Capital Fund is creating those environments across the Commonwealth and leveraging additional resources in support of high-quality early childhood education and out-of-school time.”

SourceCapeCod.com