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NoteWorthy – 2/28/21

February 28, 2021 by Kristin Cole

AROUND THE VALLEY

Lawrence Partnership Holds Annual Meeting

This week, the Lawrence Partnership annual meeting celebrated the resilience of the Lawrence community. Guest speakers and community stakeholders discussed the challenges and opportunities to build a post-pandemic economic system that focuses on growth, justice and equity.

The Partnership welcomed Rawi Abdelal, Harvard School of Business’s Herbert F. Johnson Professor of International Management, who offered a global look at the economic disparities facing the nation and strategies to counter those trends on a local level.

Abdelal suggested priorities to making economic opportunity more equitable for all Americans should include decoupling parent income from a child’s future opportunity to earn, emphasizing lifelong, skills-based training, and supporting small businesses.

“Confronted by a pandemic that has disproportionately impacted communities like ours and an ongoing struggle for racial and social justice requires smart, collaborative solutions that extend across every level of our community, ” said Derek Mitchell, Lawrence Partnership’s executive director. “As evidenced by the people we are honoring this week and the network of committed partners, we’re in a position to advance a recovery that is robust, inclusive, more resilient, and offers more shared prosperity when we work together toward the common good. That’s the road ahead of us this year and we’re excited by the opportunity for real change.”

The Partnership honored Dan Rivera, former mayor of Lawrence and current CEO of MassDevelopment, and presented the David Tibbetts Award to Julia Isabel Perez Silverio, founder of Silverio Insurance Agency and longtime community leader and former city councilor.

David Tibbetts Award
The Lawrence Partnership presented the annual David Tibbetts Award to a leader who successfully promoted and implemented innovative economic development strategies.

This year’s award went to Julia Silverio, who committed herself to improve the city of Lawrence through her dedication to the immigrant population. After moving to Lawrence in 1973, she began providing services to the immigrant community from her home. In 1984 she opened her office, Julia’s Consulting Agency, which is now Silverio Insurance Agency and concentrates in the service of property and casualty insurance. She has served in various positions to contribute to the advancement of the citizens in Lawrence and surrounding areas.


Rising Star Awards

The Partnership also honored emerging leaders that have a significant impact. This years Rising Stars were:

Joanna de Pena, author and founder of Top Notch Scholars, Inc.
Top Notch Scholars is a nonprofit dedicated to leadership development, providing workshops and motivational speaking engagements for high school students. With a particular focus on leadership topics, confidence-building and interviewing skills, networking techniques, and career advancement. De Pena has reached more than 16,000 students and young professionals through Top Notch Scholars. She is heavily involved in her community by volunteering with local nonprofits, food pantries and city clean-ups.

Eddie Rosa, Groundwork Lawrence’s Community Engagement Director
Rosa discovered his passion for community development while working as Latino Outreach Coordinator for The Center and working on the Greening the Gateway Cities program. He has served on the Lawrence Conservation Commission and the Resilient Lands Initiative and is a member of the Lawrence Redevelopment Authority. Throughout the pandemic, Rosa has been working diligently to help meet the community’s immediate needs, including helping families in need of food. Rosa is chair of the Community Outreach and Education group and works on a significant project aimed at redesigning the city of Lawrence recreational parks.

Jorge Velez, Founder of Pentagon Studios & Locay
Velez is an entrepreneur and community leader who launched his first formal business in 2016, Aurea Vestes, an urban clothing line with an e-commerce platform. He launched Pentagon Studios to provide digital marketing solutions to companies and organizations. He provided hands-on workshops that helped small businesses with social media management, online presence, and digital marketing. He has been honored by the commonwealth for his work helping small businesses. He continues to support small businesses with his latest venture, Locay, a platform that facilitates COVID-safe food purchasing for restaurants and customers.

The meeting can be viewed here.

Massachusetts to Enter Phase 3, Step 2 of Reopening On Monday, March 1

Massachusetts will move forward into Phase 3, Step 2 of its reopening plan on Monday, March 1. This will re-open indoor performance venues such as concert halls, theaters, and other indoor performance spaces — who will operate at 50% capacity with a 500-person max — and indoor recreational activities with greater potential for contact such as laser tag, roller skating, trampolines and obstacle courses — who will also operate at 50% capacity.

Also effective March 1: restaurants will no longer be subject to a percent seated capacity limit and their capacity is limited only by the requirement of 6 feet between tables. Musical performances are allowed in restaurants (with appropriate distancing). The 90-minute time limit on tables, and the limit of no more than 6 people per table remain in place. Food courts remain closed. For more information on Phase 3, Step 2 of the Massachusetts re-opening plan, visit here.

 

Baker-Polito Administration Announces $4.7 Million for Vaccine Equity in Hardest-Hit Communities

The Baker-Polito administration announced a new $4.7 million initiative to promote COVID-19 vaccine equity in the 20 communities most disproportionately impacted by the pandemic. The administration also announced 11 high-efficiency regional vaccination collaboratives involving local health officials and other regional partners.

This week, 50,000 new vaccination appointments were added mass vaccination locations across the state. This includes the mass vaccination locations at Fenway Park, Gillette Stadium, Springfield, Danvers, Dartmouth and Natick. Retail pharmacies like CVS and Walgreens also plan to administer over 20,000 doses next week as well. Residents can visit here to find and schedule their appointments. Appointment availability is very limited due to the constrained supply of vaccine doses that the Commonwealth is receiving from the federal government.

The $4.7 million effort to support its vaccine equity initiative announced last week, which focuses on reducing barriers to vaccination in the 20 hardest-hit communities in the Commonwealth. The administration will work with Archipelago Strategies Group (ASG) and Health Care for All (HCFA) to best leverage these funds.

The initiative will support and coordinate with local leaders and community- and faith-based organizations to strengthen existing efforts in these cities and towns. These efforts will specifically focus on communities of color, homebound seniors, disabled individuals and other hard-to-reach populations. In the Merrimack Valley, these communities include Haverhill, Lawrence, Lowell and Methuen. This work will be coordinated with targeted opportunities for increased vaccine access through existing and new locations, including pop-up sites and mobile clinics.

ECCF Funds Methuen Public Art Project

By summer 2021, the Spicket River Falls in Methuen will be home to a dazzling display of vivid colors and hydro-powered lights designed by local artists bringing new life to this celebrated treasure, thanks to funding from the Essex County Community Foundation (ECCF).

“Light the Falls” – headed by nonprofit Methuen Arts – is just one of six new collaborative public art and creative placemaking projects being funded by ECCF’s Creative County Initiative (CCI). Launched in 2018 through a partnership with the Barr Foundation, CCI is designed – through a variety of facets – to elevate arts, culture and the creative economy in Essex County.

State Lawmakers Call on Insurance Companies to Deliver on Protection Promises to Small Businesses

Working with local advocacy groups, state Sen. Diana DiZoglio and state Rep. Dylan Fernandes filed legislation in both the Senate and the House last week that would provide a lifeline to small businesses struggling to make it through the COVID-19 pandemic. Both HD 3170 and SD 1845 would require insurance companies to honor legitimate claims around business interruption insurance and do away with virus-exclusion clauses.

At a time when so many small businesses in Massachusetts have had their business operations interrupted in some way, insurers have been strictly denying all claims under business interruption coverage saying the current situation doesn’t fit the insuring agreement; that pandemics are not covered. However, one argument presented by policyholders, and amplified by nationwide hospitality industry advocacy group THIRST, is that it was not the pandemic that forced their closure – state orders did, triggering additional coverage under most policies called “civil authority action” which is covered by most business interruption insurance policies.

THIRST was founded in early 2020 to help owners in the hospitality industry lobby for protection they have paid for after there were widespread reports of insurance companies denying business interruption claims from small restaurants and bars across the country. DiZoglio’s and Fernandes’ offices worked with the THIRST’s Massachusetts Chapter to rework and bolster a similar bill that was introduced into last year’s legislative session.

“This essential piece of legislation is crucial for protecting our small businesses, who have faced one challenge after another throughout this pandemic,” DiZoglio said. “It is unacceptable that our local mom and pop shops pay insurance claims to protect against incidents of this nature while not being permitted to access much-needed funds. Insurance companies have done just fine during this emergency – and are sitting on significant money, set aside to pay out claims like these, that our small businesses desperately need. I am hopeful we will get this bill passed and on the Governor’s desk as soon as possible.”

GLCF awards record $152,500 in Community Grants to 30 Local Nonprofits 

The Greater Lowell Community Foundation (GLCF) awarded $152,500 in competitive grants to 30 local nonprofits within a framework of children’s services, elder services, racial equity and inclusion, as well as water resources initiatives. The focus areas collectively work toward creating a better quality of life for Greater Lowell residents and supporting local nonprofits.

These grant awards are part of a competitive grant process in which nonprofit organizations apply for funds, and an independent committee reviews the proposals and selects awardees. The discretionary grants program is one of several competitive grant programs offered through the community foundation each year.

Included in this round of grants are Catie’s Closet of Dracut, which received a children’s services grant to assist supplying clothing and toiletries through their ‘stores’ for students in need; the Cambodian American Literary Arts Association in Lowell, who received a programming grant to address racial equity and inclusion; and OARS, Inc. in Concord who received a $5,000 grant to improve environmental and public health.

Local Author Releases Debut YA Novel

Lowell native Chris Boucher has released his first novel, “Pivot Move,” which dropped into retail February 1.

Inspired by his time as a basketball coach in area rec leagues, Boucher worked the idea into book form while a student in the master’s creative writing program at Southern New Hampshire University.

Boucher majored in English and minored in philosophy at UMass Lowell, which helps to explain his protagonist’s twin interests in hip-hop culture and Friedrich Nietzsche, the German philosopher whose ideas inspired the Superman comic book hero.

“Pivot Move” is now available at Amazon in digital and print editions and will soon be available at Barnes and Noble and other brick-and-mortar bookstores. For more on Boucher’s work or workshops, visit here.

Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union Accepting College Scholarship Applications

Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union is now accepting applications for its Annual MoneyStrong College Scholarship and the Cooperative Credit Union Association’s 2021 Credit Union College Scholarship Program.

The Credit Union’s MoneyStrong College Scholarship will award $10,000 in scholarships to applicants currently enrolled in college, as well as incoming freshmen for the Fall 2021 semester. Student applicants or their guardians must be members of Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union to be eligible.

The Cooperative Credit Union Association will be awarding six $1,500 scholarships across all chapters, with one scholarship awarded per chapter. Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union falls under the Massachusetts Chapter. Eligibility is limited to incoming college freshmen who will be enrolled in an undergraduate college degree program during the 2021-2022 academic year. More information including submission forms, instructions, required documentation, and application deadlines for each scholarship can be accessed here.

***

MOVERS & SHAKERS

MassDevelopment Agency President and CEO Dan Rivera Hires Economic Development Veteran Theresa Park

Theresa Park, current executive director of the Merrimack Valley Planning Commission, will join the agency as deputy director and senior executive vice president. Park will be second in command at MassDevelopment per the bylaws and will focus on program effectiveness and development. Park comes to MassDevelopment with 25 years of regional and municipal planning experience, including leading economic development in Lowell. Park received her master’s in urban and regional planning from The George Washington University and a bachelor’s in business administration from the UMass Amherst. She also attended the International Summer School in Oslo, Norway, while in graduate school and spent a semester abroad in Kenya as an undergraduate student. Park will join the agency on March 15.

***

Check out the latest episode of The 495 Podcast!

Chocolate fans unite! This week on The 495, we talked with yummy food expert and Northern Essex Community College chemistry professor Mike Cross about theobromines, Mayan history, and the time he went undercover as a student to better understand the challenges they face. Click here to listen.

Filed Under: Community Tagged With: art, Baker-Polito, COVID-19, ECCF, GLCF, Lawrence Partnership Annual Meeting, MassDevelopment, Merrimack Valley, reopening, vaccine

NoteWorthy – 4/19/20

April 19, 2020 by Doug Sparks

Around the Valley

Student Advocate Named Civic Fellow

Courtney Morin of Lawrence has been named Northern Essex Community College’s Newman Civic Fellow for her outstanding leadership roles and devotion to advocating for community college students.

Morin, a biology and philosophy major, was nominated by NECC President Lane Glenn, who wrote, “College faculty and staff describe Courtney with words such as motivated, collaborative, innovative, dedicated, change-maker, and advocate.”

During her first year at Northern Essex, Morin became the president of the Amnesty International Club. In spring 2017, she started as a general member of the Student Government Association. Morin has attended several advocacy days at the Massachusetts Statehouse to advocate for sexual assault prevention, college affordability, educational attainment disparities between white and Latinx students, housing and food insecurity, mental health and the interconnectedness of these issues. Morin currently serves as the vice president of the Haverhill Campus for SGA.

In fall 2018, she was elected as the NECC student trustee to the board of trustees.

“Beyond the NECC community, Courtney was elected in 2018 to serve as the Vice Chair of the Student Advisory Council to the Massachusetts Board of Higher Education, where she supported and promoted initiatives such as open educational resources (OER), changing student trustee eligibility requirements, and Every Voice Coalition’s bills, aimed at addressing sexual violence and misconduct on higher education campuses,” wrote Glenn.

The Newman Civic Fellowship distinguishes and supports students who have shown leadership and an investment in their communities across the country to help solve problems they may be facing.

 

ECCF Announces New Grant Program for Creative Nonprofits Affected by COVID-19

Essex County Community Foundation (ECCF) is announcing the creation of the Essex County Creative Nonprofit Resiliency Grant Program.

Seeded with $100,000 from ECCF’s Creative County Initiative, the program will provide one-time grants to the Essex County cultural nonprofits that anchor vulnerable and vitally important cultural communities. The program will target small and mid-sized arts and cultural organizations with deep roots in their communities, that serve the economically vulnerable and are taking a long view towards recovery and sustainability.

During this time, ECCF encourages donors to continue their direct support of the arts and cultural organizations they have supported in the past. For more information, and to help sustain creative nonprofits by making a donation, please visit eccf.org/creative-county.

Individual artists are not eligible for The Essex County Creative Nonprofit Resiliency Program, but may be eligible for a grant from The Essex County Artist Fund. For more information, visit eccf.org/creative-county.

 

Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union and Community Teamwork Launch Acre Catalyst Fund

The Acre Catalyst Fund is a new collaborative project as part of Working Cities Lowell that provides businesses and entrepreneurs in the Acre neighborhood with funds and other support to start or expand their business ventures.

Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union has partnered with Community Teamwork, Inc. (CTI) to launch the Acre Catalyst Fund, a new collaborative project that will enhance business and entrepreneurial opportunities within Lowell’s Acre neighborhood.

The credit union has committed $200,000 to the Entrepreneurship Center @CTI to capitalize an economic development initiative. The Entrepreneurship Center @CTI offers a broad range of business services. The Acre Catalyst Fund complements the center’s programs by making loans available to entrepreneurs, new and current Acre businesses, and businesses seeking to locate to the Acre, one of Lowell’s most impoverished neighborhoods.

“The Acre is more than a neighborhood to us,” said Mark Cochran, president and chief executive officer of Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union. “This is where our organization began, and it’s still our home today. We have a responsibility to provide resources that can help neighborhoods thrive and give residents a pathway to economic opportunity. As a Working Cities Challenge member, the Credit Union is pleased to collaborate on this effort.”

The Acre Catalyst Fund is part of the Working Cities Lowell Initiative, a partnership between 13 local organizations, including Jeanne D’Arc Credit Union and Community Teamwork, Inc. that work to improve the Acre.

In addition to loan capital, entrepreneurs and businesses that are part of the program will receive business and financial counseling and other supportive resources to help guide them in their business ventures. Applicants must meet specific criteria to be eligible.

For more information regarding The Acre Catalyst Fund visit www.GrowYourBusinessat CTI.org.

 

Greater Haverhill Chamber of Commerce Launches Financial Program for Small Businesses

A new program from the Greater Haverhill Chamber of Commerce is helping the area’s smallest businesses where they need it most right now: Their pocketbooks.

“The COVID-19 crisis is wreaking havoc on Main Street small businesses across the United States,” says Dougan Sherwood, president of the Haverhill Chamber. “The Greater Haverhill Chamber has set up a new fund to drive desperately needed cash into these local mom and pops.”

Thanks to the program, people who shop at the participating businesses will get 25% off their purchase up to $100. They can find more details and participating businesses on the Haverhill Chamber’s website.

People can also help by donating to a GoFundMe campaign that the Chamber created to fund the initiative. It will use the fund to repay the businesses that provide a 25% discount to their customers.

Sherwood says the program will run for as long as it has funding.

“Please consider giving,” he says. “Then go shopping!”

 

Lupoli Delivers Pizza With a Purpose

On April 3, Sal Lupoli, the CEO and founder of Sal’s Pizza, delivered over 200 slices of pizza to Lawrence Memorial Hospital to thank the doctors, nurses, and hospital workers for their dedication and hard work. Then on April 8, Sal and wife Kati Lupoli, delivered pizzas to the Chelmsford Police and Fire Department. Through #pizzawithapourpose, Sal’s Pizza has discounted pizza at each of its locations and is providing pizza-making kits.

“Our mission is to help those that are helping our communities fight this virus. The courageous work that first responders are doing is hard and it does not go unnoticed. I hope that by delivering pizzas and saying thank you we can help our first responders in a small way” said Sal Lupoli, the CEO and Founder of the Lupoli Companies.

 

Student Entrepreneur Competition Tackles Health Care and Sustainability

Innovating even in the face of the coronavirus pandemic, UMass Lowell students learning entrepreneurship skills presented their ideas for new products and services in a pitch competition held remotely for the first time.

UMass Lowell’s DifferenceMaker program brings together students in all majors and teaches them to think like entrepreneurs and launch their own businesses and nonprofits. This year, as the UMass Lowell community teaches and works remotely, students participated in the eighth annual DifferenceMaker $50K Idea Challenge via Zoom on Wednesday, April 15. The event was open to the public.

The contest’s judges, many of them UMass Lowell alumni, heard from students pitching ideas for everything from biodegradable face masks to a service that trains people to escape burning buildings. Winning teams will receive shares of $50,000 in seed money from private donations.

Since the DifferenceMaker program’s launch, UMass Lowell students have formed 35 companies, filed for eight patents and raised $4 million in funding. Successful ventures include Nonspec, which builds prosthetics for people in developing countries; TopaCan, which makes and sells a portable device that turns beverage cans into environmentally friendly receptacles for cigarette butts; and invisaWear, inventor and seller of a personal safety alert device that looks like jewelry.

 

Pentucket Bank Continues with Increase in Community Contributions Amid COVID-19

Pentucket Bank announced the third round of “Phase One” donations as part of the bank’s strategy to increase charitable giving by 20% in 2020 over the $400,000 that the bank donated in 2019.

On Friday, April 10, the bank informed the following organizations that they will be receiving $2,500 in unrestricted funds: Elder Services of the Merrimack Valley, Salem Family Resources and Essex Country Community Foundation. The bank is committed to placing these meaningful funds in the hands of several agencies that are continuing to provide critical services throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. What the Bank is calling “Phase One” of their giving strategy includes ten local organizations and a total of $25,000; $2,500 for each of the ten. To date, the following organizations have also been recipients of these strategic bank contributions: Sarah’s Place Adult Day Health; Isaiah 58; Home Health Foundation; Emmaus Inc.; Boys & Girls Club of Haverhill, Boys & Girls Club of Salem and Family Services of Merrimack Valley.

For more information, please visit www.pentucketbank.com/covid19.

 

Haverhill Bank Provides $15 Million in SBA Funding to Local Businesses Impacted by COVID-19 Restrictions

As a longtime participating lender in U.S. Small Business Administration programs, Haverhill Bank was prepared to help when Congress approved the Paycheck Protection Program. The PPP is the centerpiece of a $2.2 trillion economic stimulus package and converts many loans into outright grants. Haverhill Bank President and CEO Thomas Mortimer said his institution has already funded $15 million to local businesses.

“This isn’t just about business. It’s personal. These are our families, neighbors, frontline workers at local businesses who need a helping hand as the nation faces the worst downturn since the Great Depression of the 1930s,” he said.

On the day the program launched two weeks ago, he said, Haverhill Bank was already coaching businesses remotely. As a result, it received more than 160 applications and $34 million in requests.

The program allows businesses to keep paying employees and/or bring back laid-off workers. For the kinds of small businesses served by Haverhill Bank, most businesses won’t have to repay the loan if they keep people on the payroll.

Mortimer said bank staff have worked tirelessly to process the applications since time was of the essence. He explained that Congress allocated $349 billion and the bank processed loans all the way up until the time the current round of funding ran out on Thursday.

“This program will save many businesses from continued hardship and will benefit many who are unemployed,” Mortimer added.

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, Community, Education, Health & Wellness Tagged With: business, community, Coronavirus, COVID-19, ECCF, funding, GLFHC, JDCU, lupoli, masks, NECC, pandemic, Pizza, Sustainability, UMass

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