It takes a village. Get to know ours.
Our Team
Lauren Birchfield Kennedy
CO-PRESIDENT
Lauren Birchfield Kennedy is Co-President and Chief Strategy Officer at Neighborhood Villages, which she co-founded with Sarah Muncey. Kennedy guides, evaluates, and executes the organization’s strategic vision and policy objectives. She oversees external relations, including government affairs, strategic partnerships, development, and communications, to further the impact, sustainability and scalability of Neighborhood Villages’ mission and programs.
Prior to co-founding Neighborhood Villages, Kennedy served as the Director of Health Policy at the National Partnership for Women & Families in Washington, D.C., where she directed the organization’s health policy portfolio and oversaw advocacy strategy for key policy initiatives, including implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and comprehensive health care payment and delivery system reform.
Kennedy is recognized as a leading voice in the call for comprehensive reform of the early education and care delivery system, both in Massachusetts and nationally. She has published numerous academic articles and op-eds, including in The New York Times. Kennedy’s policy and political analyses have been featured in diverse media outlets, including the Boston Globe, Forbes, NPR, and Bloomberg Businessweek.
Kennedy holds a Bachelor of Arts in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles and a law degree from Harvard Law School. Kennedy resides in Massachusetts with her husband and two children.
Sarah Siegel Muncey
CO-PRESIDENT
Sarah Siegel Muncey is Co-President and Chief Innovation Officer at Neighborhood Villages, which she co-founded with Lauren Birchfield Kennedy.
In her role, Sarah works closely with Neighborhood Villages’ community of early education and care providers, teachers, program partners, families, and children to imagine what a functional child care system could be. To demonstrate proof of concept, Sarah designs and implements innovative, scalable solutions to some of the biggest challenges plaguing our current, broken system.
Sarah has dedicated her career to improving access to affordable, high-quality education and care. Prior to co-founding Neighborhood Villages with Lauren Birchfield Kennedy, she spent 12 years at Boston Collegiate Charter School, one of Boston’s highest-performing public schools. There, she served first as 7th grade English teacher, then Director of Operations, and, finally, as the Director of Family and Community Relations. Prior to joining Boston Collegiate Charter School, Sarah began her career as a corps member of Teach for America, teaching 8th grade English in Atlanta, Georgia.
Sarah is recognized as a leading voice in the call for comprehensive reform of the early education and care delivery system, both in Massachusetts and nationally. Sarah's work has been featured in diverse media outlets, including the Fortune, USA Today, NPR, and the Boston Globe. Sarah graduated from Dartmouth College with a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature and holds a Master’s in Education from the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
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Alina Lopez Thomas
SENIOR DIRECTOR OF EARLY EDUCATION SUPPORTS
Alina has dedicated over thirty years to the early education industry, working in various capacities. Her most recent role was Family Support Coordinator at a Neighborhood Villages partnering program. Throughout her career, she specialized in early education licensing and compliance. Starting as a center-based licensing specialist and working her way up, she became a supervisor and eventually the Metro Boston Regional Director for the Department of Early Education and Care. She oversaw the second-largest regional office in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
As an expert in empowering Family Child Care and Center-Based programs to succeed by prioritizing business operations, health and safety, and classroom design, her top priority is to guarantee the prosperity and growth of these programs. Lopez Thomas is a confident leader who empowers women to unleash their entrepreneurial potential. Her business planning and marketing consulting services have helped women achieve their goals efficiently and confidently. Under Alina's guidance, women acquired the knowledge and skills necessary to leverage their transferable skills and excel in entrepreneurship.
She holds a Bachelor of Science in Management Studies from Cambridge College and received a digital marketing certificate from General Assembly. She is a lifelong learner and actively volunteers in various groups. Alina is an advisory board member for the Boston Family Engagement Network and Field's Corner Mainstreets. Alina and her husband are both from Boston, with roots in Roxbury and Dorchester. They have the privilege of having four adult children and four grandchildren. During their leisure time, they like to venture into nature and try different brunch places.
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Amaris Kinne
DIRECTOR OF RESEARCH
Amaris Kinne is Director of Research at Neighborhood Villages. In her role, Kinne leads the advancement of Neighborhood Villages' state and national child care policy portfolio. Prior to joining Neighborhood Villages, Kinne spent the last decade working in various capacities on anti-poverty research, innovation, policy, and programs. Most recently, she served as the Project Manager for the Massachusetts Association for Community Action’s workforce development initiative to increase early childhood educators’ capacity to deliver trauma-informed care. Prior to that, she spent four years as a Senior Innovation Manager at the Boston-based nonprofit, Commonwealth, managing projects to tackle financial insecurity. Kinne started her career as an ESL teacher in New York City and has remained connected to education throughout her career. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Human Development from Boston College, a Master’s in Education from Lehman College (CUNY), and a Master’s in Public Policy from Georgetown University. She is active in her community in Cambridge, where she has lived for the past six years.
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Binal Patel
CHIEF PROGRAM OFFICER
Binal Patel is the Chief Program Officer at Neighborhood Villages. In her role, she collaborates with early learning providers, educators, program partners, and public sector agencies to create systems change solutions to meet the needs of the early education workforce and the families they serve. In her role, Binal oversees the full spectrum of Neighborhood Villages’ direct service programs, including the Neighborhood, an innovation lab to test and evaluate scalable solutions to address systemic challenges in the early childhood education sector. Her work also includes bringing effective innovations to scale in partnership with government, including Neighborhood Villages’ Registered ECE Apprenticeship program for early education teachers and Directors.
Prior to this role, Patel was a Director and preschool educator herself for many years. Patel graduated with a Masters in Early Childhood Education from New York University, and a Bachelors in Economics from the University of California, San Diego.
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Christine Ashman
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION COACH
Christine Ashman has been in the early education field for over 25 years. Her previous roles include family group childcare owner, special education aide, lead teacher in infant and preschool classrooms, and program specialist. She has considerable experience working with dual language learners. She has an M.Ed. in Early Childhood and Special Education, and an M.A. in International Communication. Christine was born in Boston and grew up in Plymouth. She has lived in China, Hong Kong, England, and Australia. She has been an advocate for early care and education and for providers throughout her career. She is currently a member of the Strategies for Children Advocacy Network, 3rd Cohort. She works in early education and advocates for it because quality early learning environments make a real difference in children’s lives.
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Daniel Gonzalez, Ed.D, IMH-E®
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION COACH
Dr. Daniel Gonzalez has nearly 25 years of early education experience both in the classroom and as an administrator. Starting his career at Newton North High School where he was the first male to complete the early education program, he spent many years working with infants, toddlers, and preschoolers. He led several early education centers in Massachusetts and North Carolina.
Dr. Gonzalez holds a Doctorate of Education in Curriculum, Teaching, Learning, and Leadership from Northeastern University, a Master's of Science in Educational Studies from Wheelock College, a Master’s level Certificate in Organizational Leadership from Wheelock College, a Bachelor's of Science in Human Development from Wheelock College, and an Associate's of Science in Early Childhood Education from MassBay Community College.
Daniel has most recently taught college courses in Early Education at Dean College and Quincy College, rewriting and redesigning the entire early education and elementary education programs at Quincy College. He regularly presents on topics of early education both in Massachusetts and nationally, most recently at the 2022 NAEYC Conference in Washington, DC. He currently resides in Massachusetts with his fiancé Tim and his dog Bella.
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Devin Cole
SENIOR DIRECTOR OF WORKFORCE PROGRAMS
Devin Cole is the Senior Director of Workforce Programs, leading Neighborhood Villages' efforts to grow and strengthen the early care and education workforce in Massachusetts. Prior to Neighborhood Villages, Devin worked in government and in coworking. He led the City of Boston's ONEin3 Boston initiative (now SparkBoston), engaging Boston's 20–34-year-old population in city government and the city's professional, social, and civic communities, with a focus on retaining that age group in Boston. Devin carried this network building fous to Boston World Partnerships, an economic development non-profit started by Mayor Thomas M. Menino, and then to Workbar, a Boston-founded coworking company. At Workbar, Devin contributed to all aspects of the business, helping to grow it from a small startup to a 10-location network in Greater Boston. Devin is a native Bostonian. He currently lives in Roslindale with his wife, Teal, and daughters, Cecilia and Margaret. He is a graduate of Harvard College, with an A.B. in History.
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Elizabeth Leiwant
CHIEF OF POLICY
Elizabeth Leiwant is Chief of Policy at Neighborhood Villages. In this role, she leads the integration of Neighborhood Villages' work into state and federal policy. Prior to joining Neighborhood Villages, Elizabeth worked on advancing educational equity and access in a variety of direct service and policy roles, most recently as a staffer for the Joint Committee for Education at the Massachusetts State Legislature. Elizabeth is a former teacher and school leader and started her career as a child care teacher and out of school time educator in New York City. She holds a bachelor's degree in public policy from Bowdoin College, a master's degree in education from Lesley University and a master's degree in education policy from Harvard University. Elizabeth lives in Somerville with her husband and two children.
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Erica Maia
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION COACH
Erica grew up in Watertown, CT. She completed her education at Boston College, earning her Bachelor’s Degree in Psychology with a minor in Music. That summer, she began teaching as an Assistant Toddler Teacher in Newton, MA, emphasizing the strengths-based Brazelton Touchpoints Center approach to early childhood development. There, she fell in love with teaching young children and witnessing how quickly children grow and change through their early years. She became especially passionate about helping children label and navigate their big feelings and brought her love for music into the classroom by making up silly songs, playing instruments, and playing many genres of music for the kids. She is also grateful for the time she spent working as a Lead Toddler Teacher at BU Children’s Center, where she had the opportunity to train and mentor the college students working in her classroom. It was there that her interest in coaching blossomed!
Erica is a self-professed nerd outside the classroom and enjoys watching anime, reading manga, and playing her Nintendo Switch. She also loves trying new restaurants, delicious coffee, and spending time with family and friends.
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Fay Ferency
CURRICULUM PROJECT MANAGER
Fay comes to Neighborhood Villages with a wealth of experience serving young children, their caregivers, and their educators in Boston and beyond. She started out as a kindergarten teacher in Berkeley, California, and she still remembers her first day, flustered, misspelling "pumpkin" on the board. In Oakland, Philadelphia and her hometown of Boston, Fay worked as a teacher and leader in early childhood, elementary and higher education settings, with a focus on child development and early literacy. Fay's work has always emphasized her passion for ensuring access and opportunity for those most historically marginalized.
During her nine years working for the Boston Public Schools as an instructional coach and curriculum developer, Fay co-authored the Focus on Early Learning curriculum and worked with teachers and leaders on implementing Focus and playful learning practices. She now serves as the Curriculum Project Manager at Neighborhood Villages, where she is shepherding the new Infant Curriculum and supporting the existing Toddler Curriculum.
Fay holds a Master’s degree in Developmental Education from the University of California, Berkeley, a Master of Fine Arts in Poetry from Temple University, and a Bachelor's degree in English and American Literature and Language from Harvard University. Fay lives by the ocean in Hull with her twins and her parents. She writes both curriculum and poetry listening to the sound of the waves nearby.
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Joan Corcoran
DIRECTOR OF GRANTS MANAGEMENT
Joan Corcoran is the Director of Grants Management at Neighborhood Villages. Before joining Neighborhood Villages, Corcoran lent her grants management expertise to the Bridgeport Public School system in Bridgeport, CT. Corcoran was responsible for securing funding for a multitude of program areas across the district inclusive of early learning, mathematics, SEL, mental health supports, school security initiatives, and much more. Corcoran has experience working with federal, state, and private funders. Prior to her time with Bridgeport Public Schools, Corcoran worked in development for a child abuse prevention and awareness non-profit in Stamford, CT.
Corcoran graduated from Merrimack College with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and received a Masters of Public Administration from New York University’s Robert F. Wagner School of Public Service.
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Julyana Porto
GOOD JOBS CHALLENGE PROJECT MANAGER
Julyana Porto is a Student Support Associate at Neighborhood Villages. In this role, she is responsible for supporting students with determining the best course placement in the Professional Pathways portfolio to meet their professional development goals. Prior to joining the Neighborhood Villages team, Porto was a full-time nanny to the coolest toddler in Cambridge, MA. She always felt very rewarded working with young children and such feeling was intensified while working at The Family Cooperative (TFC), an early childhood center in Watertown, MA. Serving at TFC as a teacher assistant in the infant room, she quickly realized that good quality early childhood care is a right and a fundamental step in the developmental growth of each individual child and its community as well. Porto is a native of the northeast of Brazil, where she graduated from law school. While attending law school, she volunteered as a legal assistant at NACC (Núcleo de Apoio à Criança com Câncer), a support center for low-income families with children battling cancer. There she assisted the new families admitted to the program with finding affordable living, child care, and medical care. Since moving to the United States in 2015, she has been providing the Latino community help with immigration law. Porto currently resides in Massachusetts with her wife and two dogs.
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Kate Armstrong
CHIEF OF STAFF
Kate Armstrong is Chief of Staff at Neighborhood Villages. In her role, Armstrong directs organizational operations and other strategic priorities. Prior to joining Neighborhood Villages, Armstrong worked for 11 years in charter school operations in some of the highest performing charter schools in Boston. Most recently, she led operations for Uncommon Schools’ four Roxbury Prep schools in Boston as the Associate Chief Operating Officer for six years. Prior to that, she served in various school operations roles, including Director of Operations and Chief Operating Officer, at Boston Collegiate Charter School for five years. She began her career in other education non-profit roles, including serving as the Director of the Breakthrough Collaborative program in New Haven, CT, and supporting teacher and leader recruitment for Uncommon Schools. Armstrong holds a Bachelor of Arts in English and American Literature and Language from Harvard College and a Master’s in Education from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. She lives in the Boston area with her husband and three children.
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Katie Mayshak
CHIEF GROWTH OFFICER
Katie Mayshak is the Chief Growth Officer at Neighborhood Villages. In her role, Mayshak is responsible for guiding Neighborhood Villages’ interlocking external relations and development strategies to expand its reach and resources.
Prior to joining Neighborhood Villages, Mayshak supported Boston area non-profit organizations, including the ACLU of MA, as a fundraising and strategy consultant. Mayshak began her career in the non-profit sector as a member of the development team at Boston Ballet, where she helped to lead the Company through a major re-capitalization effort. As the Director of Development for the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (ICA) for nearly a decade, she guided the museum through two transformational campaigns raising over $100 million and doubled its annual operating budget.
Mayshak graduated from Wake Forest University with a Bachelors in English and Art History. After graduation she pursued doctoral studies in Art History at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. She resides in Massachusetts with her husband and two children.
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Lacey Mallett
PROGRAM COORDINATOR OF EARLY EDUCATION SUPPORTS
Lacey Mallett is the Neighborhood Program Coordinator at Neighborhood Villages. Like many others in the field, Lacey began as an assistant in an afterschool program and worked her way through the various teaching roles before landing as a center director. After being in supervisory roles for over 10 years, Lacey decided to explore other pathways, which allowed her to grow her skills in project management and customer service. However, this hiatus only made it more clear that her heart has always belonged to the field of early childhood, and she is excited to have found a role that will utilize all of her experience.
Lacey has her Bachelor's degree in Psychology from UMASS Boston and considers herself a lifelong learner. In her free time, Lacey enjoys being active, spending time with friends and family, and working on projects around the house.
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Latoya Gayle
SENIOR DIRECTOR OF ADVOCACY
As the Senior Director of Advocacy, Latoya Gayle leads Neighborhood Villages’ advocacy work. She has been an advocate for Boston’s families for the past 10 years. She served as founding Executive Director for Boston School Finder and was the Co-Founder and Executive Director of Phenomenal Moms, a Boston-based organization that aimed to reduce educational, social, and economic opportunity and achievement gaps by increasing engagement in schools and communities among parents and families of color. Gayle is also a Racial Equity Strategist and on the Board of Embracing Equity, a social change agency dedicated to centering racial justice in education through racial and ethnic identity development, critical consciousness, and critical action. She has also worked closely with Disruptive Equity Education Project (DEEP), a professional development and strategy organization that is focused on the intentional, developmental, and complex work that is associated with changing mindsets around equity and dismantling systemic oppression and racism. In response to the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Armaud Arbery, she co-founded and produced March Like a Mother for Black Lives Boston, a powerful and empowering rally that took place at Boston’s historic Copley Square on June 27, 2020. Calling on all mothers to stand in solidarity against anti-blackness and racism, March Like a Mother featured a diverse panel of speakers including Boston’s new mayor, then city councilor Michelle Wu, Suffolk County D.A. Rachael Rollins, and Rep. Liz Miranda. Organized in just three weeks, the rally assembled 20 partners and sponsors and more than 500 socially distanced attendees and hundreds of live streams. Gayle lives with her family in Boston and has four children.
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Lauren Cooke
DIRECTOR OF APPRENTICESHIPS
Lauren Cooke is the Director of Apprenticeships a Neighborhood Villages. Outside of work you can find her being mom to two wonderful kiddos, writing music as a creative outlet and hiking waterfall trails on one of NH’s great 48! Her professional life is constructed on a strong foundation of teaching and leading in early education. Most recently, she led a Boston non-profit, working to empower teachers and schools in STEM education. Now, she’s eager to bring that experience to NV!
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Lisa Garcia
DIRECTOR OF EARLY RELATIONAL HEALTH
Lisa has been in the field of Infant and Early Childhood Mental Health and child development for approximately 15 years. Throughout her career, she has held numerous positions ranging from direct clinical care, supervision and program management, and trainer. She is also a graduate fellow of the UMASS Chan Medical School Early Relational Health program, a globally recognized fellowship for Early Relational Health leaders. Lisa is also endorsed as an infant mental health specialist in the state of Massachusetts by MASSAIMH.
Lisa is passionate about expanding access to care for our most vulnerable populations, specifically starting with our most vulnerable and youngest community members: infants and young children. Lisa strives to be able to develop systems of care in Massachusetts that can provide care and wellness for developing young children, their families, and their communities.
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Meredith Jones
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
Meredith is an Administrative Assistant at Neighborhood Villages. She has a background in literacy education, and is committed to educational equity and accessibility for all students. She most recently managed the City’s First Readers Initiative at Literacy Inc., which connects New York City families to early literacy resources and programs. Before that, she participated in the two-year FAO Schwarz Social Impact Fellowship at Jumpstart. There, she supported the Policy and Government Relations and NYC Community Impact Teams with research, outreach, and early childhood programming. She has a bachelor’s degree in Literature from Hamilton College, and is currently a student at UMASS Boston’s School Psychology MSED/EdS program. Meredith grew up in the Boston area and is happy to be back and exploring her neighborhood in Somerville.
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Nicia Talbot
EXTERNAL RELATIONS ASSOCIATE
Nicia Talbot is the External Relations Associate at Neighborhood Villages, supporting the organization's external relations and development strategies. Prior to this role, she served as a Program Support Associate on Neighborhood Villages' COVID-19 testing team. Prior to this role she worked as a Contact Tracer, Mentor, and Case Investigator specializing in providing information to schools and childcare centers, completing outbreak investigations, and mentoring staff at Partners in Health, where she found helping the people of Massachusetts navigate the intricacies of the pandemic greatly rewarding. Nicia graduated from Johnson State College in Vermont with a Bachelor’s degree in Sociology & Anthropology and was awarded the Community Service Award for extensive work locally, nationally, and internationally. She also spent many years offering excellent customer service and skill as a Massage Therapist after being inspired by the healing power of touch while assisting a family member after a spinal cord injury. She has experience working with and supporting community members in a variety of cultural contexts and brings dedication and enthusiasm to efforts bridging public health, social justice, and maternal and child health and well being. As someone who has worked in childcare and explored many types of childcare with her own children, she is aware of the challenges working families and childcare providers face and is passionate about fixing the problems before we pass them onto the next generation.
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Pamela Thompson
DIRECTOR OF TEACHING AND LEARNING
Pamela Thompson is the Director of Teaching and Learning NV. In this role, she leads the Teaching and Learning team, providing support to the programs in the Neighborhood. Pamela is a dedicated early childhood educator who has found her passion in supporting other early childhood professionals. She has held many roles during her career from teacher to director, in both non- and for-profit early education settings. Pamela also experienced public and private schools while preparing for her teaching license in elementary education. Prior to joining NV, she supported individual and collective professional development as an Early Education Coach with Head Start. In her experience, she has found that relationships (just like with children) are the key to supporting continued growth. She is passionate about supporting educators' on-going evolution as knowledgeable, skillful, and extraordinary teachers. Pamela loves providing tailored encouragement and engaging training to challenge educators and help them rediscover their passion for and their “why” of working with children. Pamela holds a BA in psychology and a MA in teaching from Simmons College. She is also an adjunct faculty member at Urban College of Boston where she aims to inspire the next generation of early educators. She enjoys continuing to expand her own knowledge in hopes of being a change agent bringing further awareness to the needs of early educators working to meet the needs of ALL students. Pamela lives in Boston with her wife and two cuddly fur babies.
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Robert Whitehouse
APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAM COORDINATOR
Robert Whitehouse is the Apprenticeship Coordinator supporting Neighborhood Villages' Apprenticeships Program. Prior to joining Neighborhood Villages, he worked in Newton Public Schools as an Executive Assistant and then as a Program Coordinator. As the Program Coordinator, Whitehouse was responsible for running all the Adult Continuing Ed classes, supporting both students and instructors to provide the best possible experience in classes like Spanish, Italian, Pickleball, Woodworking, Watercolor, Acrylic, Yoga, Cooking and many more. Robert was born and raised in Puerto Rico. He graduated from the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras with a Double B.A. in Journalism and English Literature. He currently lives in Brighton after moving to Boston 2 years ago with his fiancé, Natalia, and their cat, Killua.
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Shawn Fisher
DIRECTOR OF WORKFORCE PROGRAMS
Shawn Fisher is the Director of Workforce Programs at Neighborhood Villages. She has worked within and alongside educational systems for over 20 years as an administrator, instructor, advisor, and project manager. Prior to joining Neighborhood Villages, Fisher was a program coordinator at Mass General Hospital, where she connected employees with educational opportunities and career development. Before her time at Mass General, Fisher worked at Bunker Hill Community College, managing a college transition program and teaching writing courses, and at JVS Boston, where she guided the integration of college and career readiness instruction into ESOL programs throughout Boston. She strives to make quality education accessible for all, and she has been known to offer impromptu college advising in nail salons, libraries, train stations, and friends’ dining room tables. Fisher received her Bachelor’s degree in English from Gordon College and her Master’s degree in English Literature from North Dakota State University. She grew up on Long Island, NY and currently lives in Massachusetts
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Vinicius Belhous
PROGRAM TEAM ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT
Vinicius is the Program Team Administrative Assistant at Neighborhood Villages. Originally from Brazil, Vinicius grew up in Massachusetts with a mother who was an early child care provider. With an eclectic background working in the service industry, events planning, and children's theater, he enjoys working in collaboration with others to fulfill a common vision. He is excited to start his position as Program Team Admin Assistant and support the work being done for a cause so close to his heart.
Our Board of Directors
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Landis Becker Young
Board Chair
Landis Becker Young currently serves as the Board Chair for Neighborhood Villages. Outside of her work for Neighborhood Villages, Landis serves as a Director on Planned Parenthood League of Massachusetts Board of Directors, and she also serves as a Director on the National Planned Parenthood Action Fund Board. Finally, Landis serves on the Board for Grenada Schools, Inc.; a not-for-profit designed to tackle the country of Grenada’s extreme illiteracy rate by installing libraries in all primary schools; educating teachers in reading techniques; and publishing books by local authors and illustrators so that the Grenadian people can relate to the subject and people they are reading about.
Landis and her husband live in West Newton, Massachusetts. She has four children in their twenties and three dogs. Before becoming a philanthropist/activist, Landis spent years teaching and in the private practice as a life coach and Reiki Master.
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Deborah Enos
Board Vice President
Deb is an executive leader with a proven track record of achievement growing, developing and managing complex, multifaceted organizations. She currently serves as a professional board member and advisor for several diverse organizations and is a recognized thought leader and champion for healthcare, social and economic equity and justice. Deb formerly served as President and CEO of Neighborhood Health Plan, successfully leading and growing the $2B organization over 10 years, shaping it into an influential player in Massachusetts and as a model nationwide.
Deb’s current board affiliations include Neighborhood Villages, Fallon Health, the Health Equity Compact, the New Commonwealth Fund Advisory Group, and Governor Healey’s Black Empowerment Council. Her former service included Brigham Health Board of Trustees, Chair of Governor Baker’s Black Advisory Commission, Trustee of Massasoit Community College, and Chair and member of the American Heart Association. In addition, Deb served on specific select health care commissions under both the Patrick and Baker administrations. Deb received her Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from Dartmouth College and her Master of Science degree in Health Policy and Management from the Harvard School of Public Health.
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Alex Krupp
As a dedicated cultural leader and Environmentalism Sustainability student, Alex Krupp has a diverse background in program leadership, community engagement, and cultural integration across social justice, environmental, and sustainability initiatives. With a globally-minded perspective, he currently serves as a Chairman and Board Member for The Krupp Foundation, spearheading operational efficiency in alignment with organizational objectives. Collaborating with internal teams, external partners, and executive leadership, he strives to optimize performance and communication within the organizations he supports.
Throughout his professional experience, he has gained recognition for his cultural appreciation and engagement efforts. As an Antiquities Restoration Specialist in Japan, he appeared in numerous magazines, newspapers, and television programs. Leveraging strategic relationships with global partners, he shared his passion for Japanese culture with community members to drive engagement and appreciation of restored artifacts. By fostering a global worldview in all facets of his work, he consistently provides exceptional customer service within highly complex environments.
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Carol Kanin
Carol Kanin has had a long career in child care, education and grassroots activism. Carol served as Director of the Family Day Care Program, a system of family day care providers jointly sponsored by the Women’s Educational and Industrial Union and the Massachusetts Mental Health Research Corporation. During that time, she was elected President of the Massachusetts Association of Day Care Administrators and served on the Boards of the Boston Area Committee on Day Care and the Mass. Council of Human Service Providers. In addition, Carol served on the Boards of NICU Parents Support and Warmlines Parent Resources. She has been a consultant for childcare programs around the country. Carol was President of Understanding Our Differences for eleven years, a disability awareness organization that provides a model of inclusion adapted by over 200 school systems nationwide. She helped lead the organization to broaden its curriculum, maintain and sustain a quality program for volunteers and students and significantly enhance its fundraising base.
Carol is a founding member of Invest to Elect (Boston) and serves on its Executive Committee. She recently worked as Finance Director for former Congresswoman Niki Tsongas. Her other political experience includes working on various state and national campaigns. She serves on the Finance Committee of Katherine Clark and Ayanna Pressley. She lives with her husband Dennis in Newton, where they raised their three sons.
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Christian LoBue
Christian LoBue is the President of the National Institute for Reproductive Health (NIRH) and its Action Fund, where she leads the organization’s mission to fight for just and equitable access to reproductive health care in states and cities nationwide. She brings extensive experience in designing impactful state and national advocacy efforts, building coalitions, and advancing transformational policy change. Previously, Christian was the Executive Vice President of Campaign Strategy at M+R Win, an issue advocacy and electoral strategy consulting firm focused on winning victories and building power for progressive organizations. As the Chief Campaigns & Advocacy Officer at NARAL Pro-Choice America, she designed and led an integrated approach to the organization’s political, government relations, digital, and organizing strategies.
Her experience also includes serving as Chief of Staff and head of campaigning at the Voting Rights Lab, where she developed and led strategies to fight voter suppression and mobilize a movement for voting rights and access. Additionally, she was District Director for Democratic Whip Katherine M. Clark (MA-5), managing in-state programs and outreach efforts to connect the work of Washington with district constituencies. At Planned Parenthood Federation of America and Action Fund, Christian developed and executed campaigns that mobilized millions of activists to support abortion access and health care reform, while coordinating efforts across multiple states. She has consistently worked to center the voices of those most impacted by systemic barriers, including Black communities, Indigenous and other communities of color, low-income people, and immigrants.
Christian currently serves on the boards of In Our Own Voice: National Black Women’s Reproductive Justice Agenda and Neighborhood Villages. She lives in Boston with her family.
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Clea Andreadis
Clea Andreadis held a variety of positions in higher education for almost three decades. Her last full time role was as Interim President of The Urban College of Boston, supporting the College as they searched for a new leader. She also served as UCB’s Vice President of Academic and Student Affairs and led the college’s academic and student affairs programming with an emphasis on strong, reciprocal collaborations with community and workforce partners as well as teaching and learning initiatives that promote the college’s mission to provide opportunity to every student seeking a college degree or professional advancement. Before joining the leadership team at UCB, she was the Associate Provost of the Charlestown campus at Bunker Hill Community College (BHCC). At BHCC her work included leadership and oversight of many aspects of the college’s academic and student affairs agenda as well as overseeing the College’s Open Educational Resources, online learning, community engagement, and student support services areas. She began her career in higher education at Middlesex Community College (MCC) as a member of the criminal justice faculty in 1991 and held a variety of positions at MCC including Chair of the Criminal Justice Department, Coordinator of the Liberal Arts Program, Dean of the Division of Social Science and Human Services and finally, Associate Provost. She also had a successful career in public service before transitioning to higher education. Upon graduation from law school, she prosecuted criminal cases as an Assistant District Attorney in Middlesex County. Her relationships in the law enforcement and legal communities provided a starting point for ongoing work with community partners on behalf of higher education institutions. She is a graduate of Colgate University and received her Juris Doctorate from Boston University School of Law.
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Emily Ford
Emily Ford holds a B.A. from UCLA and a M.Ed. from Loyola Marymount University. Emily is a founding board member of Neighborhood Villages.
Emily is also the founding chair of the Carver-Carson Society, a group advancing sustainable food practices at The Henry Ford. Emily sits on the board of trustees of City Year Detroit and Starfish Family Services.
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Henry Ford
Henry Ford III was elected to the Ford Motor Company board of directors in 2021 after 15 years as an employee of the company. He currently serves on the finance committee and the sustainability and innovation committee of the board. Before his election to the board, Ford held a variety of roles within the company in Investor Relations, Corporate Strategy, Marketing and Sales, Purchasing and Labor Relations.
Henry is a member of the advisory boards of Henry Ford College, Bridging Communities, Operation HOPE and Southwest Solutions. He serves on the board of trustees of The Henry Ford Museum, Ford Foundation, Neighborhood Villages and the Ford Piquette Avenue Plant. Henry holds a BA from Dartmouth College and a MBA from the MIT Sloan School of Management.
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Kate Duncan
Kate Duncan is a Chief Actuary at Liberty Mutual in Boston where she is responsible for the profitability and pricing strategy for a $3B specialty insurance portfolio. Over her 19-year career at Liberty Mutual she has a track record of building and leading large, complex organizations and turning around unprofitable businesses. Her tenure includes actuarial and product roles across the personal, commercial and life businesses. Committed to fostering inclusivity and gender equality, Kate is a co-chair of WE@Liberty, the women’s resource group at Liberty Mutual. In that role, she helped establish two new initiatives: the Wealth Equity workstream to provide resources and education to bridge the wealth gap, and the Women’s Health workstream, focused on creating support groups to facilitate the exchange of information and offering educational opportunities to empower women to advocate for their health outcomes. Outside of work, Kate is involved in her community – both as a town meeting member in her local government and as a member of the Family Action Network where she co-leads the Community Connection committee.
Kate graduated from Boston College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Mathematics. In her free time she enjoys running, hiking and spending time with her husband, two children and dog in Massachusetts and at Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire.
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Lauren Kennedy
Lauren Birchfield Kennedy is Co-President and Chief Strategy Officer at Neighborhood Villages, which she co-founded with Sarah Muncey. Kennedy guides, evaluates, and executes the organization’s strategic vision and policy objectives. She oversees external relations, including government affairs, strategic partnerships, development, and communications, to further the impact, sustainability and scalability of Neighborhood Villages’ mission and programs. Prior to co-founding Neighborhood Villages, Kennedy served as the Director of Health Policy at the National Partnership for Women & Families in Washington, D.C., where she directed the organization’s health policy portfolio and oversaw advocacy strategy for key policy initiatives, including implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and comprehensive health care payment and delivery system reform. Kennedy is recognized as a leading voice in the call for comprehensive reform of the early education and care delivery system, both in Massachusetts and nationally.
She has published numerous academic articles and op-eds, including in The New York Times. Kennedy’s policy and political analyses have been featured in diverse media outlets, including the Boston Globe, Forbes, NPR, and Bloomberg Businessweek. Kennedy holds a Bachelor of Arts in political science from the University of California, Los Angeles and a law degree from Harvard Law School. Kennedy resides in Massachusetts with her husband and two children.
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Linda Smith
Linda Smith is the director of policy at the Buffett Institute at the University of Nebraska and a Senior Fellow at Child Care Aware of America, with a specific focus on military, rural, and tribal child care, early childhood financing, and engaging the business community in child care initiatives nationwide. In addition to her role at the Institute, Smith has an appointment as professor of education and early childhood development at the Munroe-Meyer Institute at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Most recently, she served as director of the Bipartisan Policy Center’s Early Childhood Development Initiative. Prior to that, she was deputy assistant secretary for early childhood development in the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and executive director for the National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies (NACCRRA), where she represented more than 650 community-based agencies. Smith served as a legislative fellow and professional staffer on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee. She was the director of the Office of Family Policy for the Secretary of Defense, where she was one of the primary architects of the military’s child care program. Additionally, she has held positions with both the U.S. Army and U.S. Air Force.
Smith began her career in early childhood education on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation in her native state of Montana. She is a graduate of the University of Montana.
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Michelle Sanchez
Dr. Sanchez earned her B.A., M.Ed. and Ed.D. at Boston College. She began her career as a founding Math and Science teacher at Epiphany School in 1998. Epiphany is an independent, full-scholarship school for children from economically disadvantaged families. In 2010, she completed her doctorate at Boston College in Educational Administration with a focus on strengthening the family and school partnership; this sparked her interest in serving children as early as possible. To make a greater impact on the community at large she spearheaded the opening of the Early Learning and Family Support Center. This center begins working with families prenatally and will serve the children and their families until the age of 5 in the center, but will continue to support the students and families throughout their schooling. She works with Boston College where teaching fellows committed to a future in urban education earn their Masters’ Degree. Outside of Epiphany, Michelle has served as an adjunct professor at Boston College, and for the Urban Catholic Teacher Corp. She is a board member at Fessenden School where her two sons attend, Neighborhood Villages, ABCD, The Possible Project, Squashbusters, the Boston College AHANA Alumni Council and served as part of the 2020 The Partnership’s NGE Program. Dr. Sanchez lives with her husband, Lino Sanchez, and two sons.
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Natalie Serafeim
Natalie Tejero Serafeim is an investor with extensive experience in global real estate markets. Most recently, she served as a Managing Director, leading international commercial and residential real estate investments at The Baupost Group, a Boston-based investment management firm, where she spent over a decade expanding the firm’s real estate portfolio. Her career began at Morgan Stanley, where she worked in investment banking and real estate private equity. Natalie serves on the board of Neighborhood Villages and has previously been involved with Girls Who Invest and the Women’s Lunch Place. Originally from Miami, she attended the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, graduating with honors from the Huntsman Program in international studies and business.
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Neel Shah
Dr. Neel Shah, MD, MPP, FACOG, is Chief Medical Officer of Maven Clinic, the world's largest digital clinic for women's and family health. He is also a visiting scientist at Harvard Medical School where he previously served as a professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive biology.
Dr. Shah has been recognized with the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Humanitarian of the Year Award from the March of Dimes for his impact on maternal health in the United States. He is featured in the 2023 Emmy-nominated film Aftershock, currently streaming on Hulu, and The Color of Care from the Smithsonian Channel and Executive Producer Oprah Winfrey. Dr. Shah founded the nonprofits Costs of Care and March for Moms, as well as the Delivery Decisions Initiative at Ariadne Labs, a research and social impact program of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.
As a physician-scientist, Dr. Shah has written landmark academic papers on maternal health and health care policy, and contributed to four books, including as senior author of Understanding Value-Based Healthcare (McGraw-Hill), which industry leaders have called "an instant classic" and "a masterful primer for all clinicians." He is listed among the "40 smartest people in health care" by the Becker's Hospital Review. Dr. Shah currently serves on the advisory board of the National Institutes of Health, Office of Women's Health Research.
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Renée Boynton Jarrett
Renée Boynton-Jarrett, a pediatrician and social epidemiologist, is an associate professor at Boston Medical Center and Boston University School of Medicine. She is the founding executive director of the Vital Village Networks. Vital Village uses a trauma-informed lens to improve community capacity to promote child wellbeing and advance equity through dedicated collaborative partnerships, research, data-sharing, and community leadership development in Boston and nationally through the NOW Forum and CRADLE Lab. Her scholarship has focused on early-life adversities as life course social determinants of health. She has a specific concentration on psychosocial stress and neuroendocrine and reproductive health outcomes, including obesity, puberty, and fertility. She is nationally recognized for work on the intersection of community violence, intimate partner violence, and child abuse and neglect and neighborhood characteristics that influence these patterns. She has received numerous awards for teaching, clinical care, and public health including the Massachusetts Public Health Association Paul Revere Award for outstanding impact on public health. She received her AB from Princeton University, her MD from Yale School of Medicine, and ScD in Social Epidemiology from Harvard School of Public Health and completed residency in Pediatrics at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
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Sarah Muncey
Sarah Siegel Muncey is Co-President and Chief Innovation Officer at Neighborhood Villages, which she co-founded with Lauren Birchfield Kennedy. In her role, Muncey works closely with Neighborhood Villages’ community of early education and care providers, teachers, program partners, families, and children to imagine what a functional child care system could be. To demonstrate proof of concept, Muncey designs and implements innovative, scalable solutions to some of the biggest challenges plaguing our current, broken system. Whether designing operational infrastructure for child care centers, clearing pathways to credentialing for early educators, or strengthening support systems for children and families, Muncey’s expertise is overcoming systemic challenges with systems-oriented solutions.
Muncey has dedicated her career to improving access to affordable, high-quality education and care. Prior to co-founding Neighborhood Villages, she spent 12 years at Boston Collegiate Charter School, one of Boston’s highest-performing public schools. There, she served first as 7th grade English teacher, Director of Operations, and, finally, as the Director of Family and Community Relations. Prior to joining Boston Collegiate Charter School, Muncey began her career as a corps member of Teach for America, teaching 8th grade English in Atlanta, Georgia.
A recognized leader in her community and field, Muncey serves on the Bipartisan Policy Center's Facilities Working Group, the Bunker Hill Community College Early Education Department Advisory Board, and is active in political organizing in her community. Muncey graduated from Dartmouth College with a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature and holds a Master’s in Education from the Harvard Graduate School of Education. She lives in Boston with her husband and two daughters.
Our Program Partners
Our Funding Partners
Accelerate the Future
A.L. Mailman Foundation
Anonymous Donors
Arcadia Charitable Trust
Bushrod H. Campbell and Adah F. Hall Charity Fund
Carl and Ruth Shapiro Family Foundation
City of Boston
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Davis Family Charitable Foundation
Fund for Children and the Environment
Generous Individuals
Mass General Brigham Healthcare System, Community Health Impact Funds
Massachusetts Department of Early Education and Care (EEC)
Massachusetts Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development
The Directors Philanthropy Trust
The Doris Buffett Legacy Foundation, in partnership with the Humanitarian Grants Program
The Krupp Foundation