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Workforce Development Grantmaking

The Office of Workforce Development (OWD) supports many organizations through a variety of funding sources, each with its own purpose. Additionally, OWD often offers various funding opportunities.

Funding Opportunities

Community Development Block Grant, Public Services FY2025 - Request for Grant Applications

Each year, the City of Boston receives Community Development Block Grant – Public Services (CDBG-PS) funds from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) through the Mayor’s Office of Housing (MOH). The funds are primarily used for affordable housing and economic development activities. However, up to 15% of the funds can be used for “public services” related to economic development. As the City’s workforce development agency, the Office of Workforce Development (OWD) manages this portion of the funding on behalf of MOH. The public services component of the CDBG-PS provides services for low-income individuals and families to move them out of poverty towards economic security.

This Request for Grant Applications (RFGA) solicits competitive proposals for services under CDBG-PS. OWD seeks proposals for programs offering education and/or training; job readiness and job placement; and/or economic security. Preference will be given to proposals incorporating these components in a convincing way with tangible outcomes. Individuals with limited education or job skills find it difficult to attain higher wages or skills for advancement. Therefore, we encourage programs that lead to the attainment of a high school diploma/GED/HiSET, post-secondary education, and/or training.

The goal of this RFGA aligns with the city-wide economic opportunity agenda that tackles income inequality for Bostonians. OWD is aware that there are not enough funds to support multiple continua of programs and services – so under this RFGA, OWD will be looking for organizations to work together to build a structure to provide a full set of education, employment, and economic security programs. OWD encourages applicants to partner to provide a career pathway continuum and clearly define each partner’s strengths, roles, and responsibilities under this RFGA. OWD defines a career pathway continuum as an effort that provides a clear sequence of activities and a connection between education, training programs, and economic security services that lead to employment. Career pathways:

  • Allow participants to progress from one level to the next to build skills that lead to improved career prospects.
  • Prepare and place individuals into jobs in high-demand and high-wage industries with increased earning opportunities by providing industry-recognized credentials, certificates, and degrees. 

View the full RfGA

Responses to this RFGA must be received by 5:00 PM on Monday, May 13, 2024

LETTER OF INTENT

A letter of intent (LOI) is strongly encouraged but not mandatory. Letters of intent allow OWD to plan for the volume of proposals and resources needed. If your organization is submitting a letter of intent, it should be received by OWD by 5:00 PM on April 24, 2024, via Google Forms. Please click on this Google Form link (Appendix A) to complete the LOI. Should you subsequently decide not to submit, please contact us via email: Tatiana.joyce@boston.gov.

BIDDER’S CONFERENCE

Organizations interested in bidding on the RFGA are strongly encouraged to attend the scheduled Bidder’s Conference, which will be held virtually on Friday, April 12, 2024, at 1:00 PM. Questions and answers provided at the Bidder’s conference will be made available to the public on this webpage.

Register for the Bidder’s Conference

SUBMISSION OF INQUIRIES

Questions regarding this Request for Proposals should be submitted in writing to Tatiana Joyce, Assistant Deputy Director of Grants and Procurement, via email: Tatiana.joyce@boston.gov. Phone calls will not be accepted. The deadline to submit questions is Friday, May 1, 2024, by 5:00 PM. Responses to questions received during the procurement process will be posted on this webpage. It is the Bidder’s responsibility to check this page for updates and postings.

WIOA Supportive Service Providers - REQUEST FOR grant applications 

The Office of Workforce Development (OWD) is the City of Boston's workforce development agency. OWD administers funding from various sources to support a broad range of services, including education and training, career development, job training, adult basic education, and youth employment services. This Request for Grant Applications (RFGA) is a one-time opportunity to make use of approximately $700,000 from previous fiscal years of Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) Youth funding. This RFGA is a special release opportunity to identify supportive service provider(s) to improve the retention of participants already enrolled in OWD’s WIOA Youth-funded programs. Current providers cite the need for stronger referrals and resources in affordable housing, behavioral health, and childcare. When the basic needs of participants are unmet, participants struggle to complete job training or education. 

Within the WIOA Youth portfolio, OWD envisions an integrated and coordinated system of services that stabilizes marginalized youth and transitions them towards career-oriented education, training, and employment. Consistent with WIOA federal guidelines, OWD partners with programs and services that place out-of-school youth ages 18-24 on a pathway toward post-secondary attainment or career-level employment. With this RFGA, OWD seeks to identify providers who specialize in direct service or resource referral in the areas of affordable housing, behavioral health, and childcare to support youth enrolled in WIOA-funded partnerships. Because this available funding is one-time, we seek providers proficient at leveraging state and other funds to connect youth with public benefits that might sustain access to services over the long term.

Please read the full RFP before submitting a proposal. Full proposals are due no later than 5:00 PM EST on Tuesday, April 30, 2024. 

View the RFP

Submission of Inquiries
Questions regarding this Request for Proposals should be submitted in writing to Tatiana Joyce, Assistant Deputy Director of Grants and Procurement, via email: tatiana.joyce@boston.gov. Phone calls will not be accepted. The deadline to submit questions is Thursday, April 11, 2024, by 5:00 PM EST. Responses to questions received during the procurement process will be posted on boston.gov/owd-grantmaking. It is the bidders’ responsibility to check the website for updates and postings.

Grants

Grants

Through the Alternative Education Initiative (AEI), the City of Boston supports youth who are working toward their high school diploma or its equivalent. AEI provides funds to alternative education programs where youth also receive wrap-around services and develop workforce readiness skills. Eligible youth are Boston residents, ages 16–21.

Boston receives Community Development Block Grant funding from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, HUD, under a formula based on several factors. The funds are received by the City's Department of Neighborhood Development (DND) and are used primarily for affordable housing and economic development. HUD allows cities to use up to 15% of this money for human service programming. DND subcontracts with OWD to manage that portion of the CDBG allocation.

The Office of Workforce Development (OWD) issues competitive Requests for Proposals in order to make awards to non-profits across the city for programming to serve youth and adults. These funds are intended to be used to provide support services to enable individuals to access education or job training and, in turn, obtain the kinds of jobs capable of moving people out of poverty.

Developers of commercial and institutional development over 100,000 square feet pay linkage fees to the Neighborhood Jobs Trust (NJT) and the Neighborhood Housing Trust. In general, NJT funds are awarded through competitive RFPs issued when enough money has accumulated in the Trust. This money can be used for jobs or job training.

The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA) provides federal formula funds to each state through the Department of Labor. OWD administers Boston's portion, with oversight from the Boston Private Industry Council.

Boston's WIOA Title I Youth funds are distributed to alternative education, career exploration, and training programs. Youth have the opportunity to earn a high school diploma or its equivalent, gain work experience, and/or earn a recognized certificate. All WIOA youth complete academic and career assessments which then inform their individualized youth plan. Throughout the program, organizations offer a wide array of supports including: financial literacy, counseling, referrals, subsidized work experience, and mentoring. Youth then take the next step to enroll in post-secondary education, enroll in training programs, and gain employment. Eligible youth are Boston residents, ages 14–24, and face a barrier to employment.

Boston's WIOA Adult funding provides workforce development activities that increase employment, retention, and earnings of participants by increasing occupational skill attainment of participants and improve the quality of the workforce, reduce welfare dependency, and enhance the productivity and competitiveness throughout the country. WIOA encourages business to participate in the local delivery of workforce development services through workforce investment boards, chaired by private sector members of the local community. WIOA funds are distributed annually to low-income Boston residents and job seekers looking to re-enter the workforce after a layoff or plant closure. The Mayor’s Office of Workforce Development (OWD) administers the annual distribution of Individual Training Accounts (ITA) via the two MassHire Career Centers. Individuals have the option to receive reemployment services and/or attend occupational skills training programs in a variety of industries and sectors, including healthcare, information technology, culinary arts, and transportation, among others. To apply to become an ITA vendor, please visit the state Office of Labor and Workforce Development.

The Office of Workforce Development (OWD) also administers National Emergency Grants (NEG). NEGs expand the service capacity of WIOA by offering reemployment services to dislocated workers who are affected by plant closings and large layoffs.

Through the YouthWorks Summer Jobs grant and the YouthWorks Year-Round Jobs grant, OWD ensures that Boston youth ages 14-21 are employed year-round. OWD uses these funds to provide area non-profits to provide Boston youth with these services.

Who We Fund

Who We Fund

Action for Boston Community Development (ABCD) offers career counseling to adult students in its ESOL instruction programs at the Mattapan Family Service Center, South Side in Roslindale, and Parker Hill/Fenway Neighborhood Center in Roxbury.

Artists for Humanity provides Boston teens and young adults, ages 14-20, with hands-on training in the arts that promotes business business, entrepreneurial, and career skills.

Asian American Civic Association, through its Connection Center, provides job readiness, job placement, ESOL, financial literacy, as well as assistance for public benefits such as SNAP, EITC, etc.

Bay Cove Human Services provides low-income Boston residents with career exploration and planning, skills training, job placement, job development, on-site job coaching and case management services.

Bird Street Community Center provides young people, ages 12-22, with academic support, job readiness skills, and hands-on experience in arts and entrepreneurship activities and trades.

Boston Asian Youth Essential Service provides residents, ages 16-24, with academic support, college readiness and job readiness skills, employment/internship placement, case management and assistance to obtain such essential benefits as health insurance, EBT cards, and food stamps.

Boston Builds Credit helps residents build or establish credit through credit-building workshops, one-on-one credit counseling sessions, and ongoing financial coaching.

Boston Centers for Youth & Families (BCYF) provides three ESOL and HiSET classes to low- income clients between the ages of 21 and 44 living in North Dorchester and Mattapan.

Boston Chinatown Neighborhood Center, through its ESL and Early Childcare Education Program, provides job readiness training, ESOL education, and job placement, and helps participants enroll in the Professional Qualifications Registry with the Department of Early Education and Care.

Boston HERC provides college preparation training for first-generation college students that are failing or have been placed in underperforming schools.

Boys & Girls Clubs of Dorchester provides students with a college road map that guides them through the end of high school and into their first year of college.

Casa Myrna assists low-income residents and domestic violence survivors, ages 18-50, with financial planning, CORI and credit report reviews, referrals to ESOL and other classes, and job-related counseling.

Catholic Charities provides low-income youth and adults with education support and employment readiness training at its Haitian Multi-Service Center and Teen Center.

Community Servings, Inc Community Servings’ Teaching Kitchen program is a free, twelve-week culinary job training program that provides a warm and supportive pathway to permanent employment in the foodservice industry for one of the most high-need populations in Boston: individuals experiencing multiple, major barriers to employment such as criminal records, poverty, substance use disorder, and homelessness. Housed in our state-of-the-art “Food Campus” facility, we promote employment and economic outcomes among our trainees through a continuum of services, including foodservice, job readiness, and life skills training, integrated case management and job placement supports, subsidized training/work opportunities, digital and financial literacy education, and connections to a network of employment and referral partners.

Crossroads Family Center helps homeless shelter clients optimize qualified benefits, complete an economic security plan, and engage in education and employment programs.

DEAF, Inc. provides deaf, deaf-blind, hard-of-hearing, and late-deafened Boston residents with assessments for assistive technology and overall needs, assistance with applications for financial and health benefits, and job readiness and literacy skills development.

Dorchester Bay Economic Development Corporation provides 1:1 pre-to-post employment Case Management services, culturally/linguistically appropriate employment, entrepreneurship education, and economic security workshops/training sessions. We will employ our vast referral network to connect clients to industry specific employment certification/training programs and wrap-around services. We will work closely with our employer network to connect clients to jobs in the Carpenter, Commercial Driver, Construction Laborer, Food Prep/Service/Manufacturing, Hospitality, Janitorial, Rehabilitation, Sanitation, Warehouse, and Water Remediation sectors.

East Boston Social Centers serves Boston youth, ages 15-19, with academic support, college preparation, college tours, career planning, job readiness skills, internship placement, budgeting skills and bank account help.

Economic Mobility Pathways (EMPath) - The Mobility Action Plan (MAP) is a career development, educational credentials acquisition, and family support program for heads of households with low-income living in the City of Boston, who are interested in increasing their career and/or education opportunities to become self-sufficient.

ESAC provides low-income Boston youth with educational training for the HiSET exam, as well as job training and placement.

Ethos runs the Boston Money Management Program, which assists low-to-moderate income elderly and disabled adults with routine tasks of money management.

Fenway CDC serves residents of the Fenway and Mission Hill neighborhoods with assistance and education related to employment and housing-maintenance needs.

Greater Boston Chinese Golden Age Center provides case management services tailored to the needs of Chinese-speaking elders. Services focus on assistance with health insurance, Medicaid, housing application, supplementary security income, food stamps, and other benefits to help clients maintain their financial independence.

Greater Boston Legal Services, through its Economic Security Advocacy Project, helps low-income parents with minor children and/or pregnant women obtain, increase, keep and regain cash benefits, nutrient benefits, child care or transportation benefits, and housing benefits.

Haitian-American Public Health Initiatives helps low-income high school juniors and seniors complete high school, learn about job fields available to them, and obtain a full- or part-time job.

Haitian Multi-Service Center provides support for adult education, training and workforce development programming at the agency’s (1) Haitian Multi-Service Center (HMSC), (2) Teen Center’s Career Center (TNC) programs and (3) partnership with the BCYF-Perkins Community Center Adult Education (PCCAE). In collaboration, the HMSC and PCCAE will focus on providing workforce ABE and ESOL classes. TNC will provide high school seniors support for applying to college and entering the workforce.

Hyde Square Task Force provides youth with academic support, college preparation, leadership/life-skills, career knowledge, and case management support through its Jovenes en Accion program.

International Institute of New England provides foreign-born low-income residents with job readiness skills, employment training and placement, ESOL education for employment, financial literacy, and assistance with public benefits.

Interseminarian-Project Place Inc. career tracks provide a continuum of care encompassing work readiness and computer lab learning, advanced industry training, credentialing, transitional employment, and wraparound case management and career development services. The program will be provided to individuals experiencing homelessness and poverty in Boston with the goal of placing them on pathways to gainful employment and, ultimately, economic independence. We will work with employer and program partners to provide a holistic program focused on long-term retention of outcomes.

Jackson Mann Community Center provides academic support, college readiness and job readiness skills, employment/internship placement, and case management services to low-income Boston residents, ages 14-21.

Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Development Corporation, through its Family Prosperity Initiative, provides job readiness, ESOL/education, job training, job search support, and public benefits assistance to low-income Boston residents, ages 18-60.

JVS Boston, through its Hyde Park ESOL program, provides ESOL classes to immigrants living in Hyde Park and surrounding Boston neighborhoods who need to improve their English language skills.

La Alianza Hispana serves low-income elders with work readiness support, life skills training, and access to socialization activities.

MAB Community Services provides visually impaired seniors with in-home rehabilitation services, peer support groups, a telephone support network, adaptive aids and materials, and specially trained volunteer assistance.

Madison Park Development Corporation (MPDC) Piloted in 2016 - MPDC’s Opportunity Employment Program (OEP) primarily serves opportunity youth from Roxbury and nearby neighborhoods like Dorchester and Mattapan, as well as other neighborhoods when appropriate. Since its initial pilot period, OEP has expanded to include in-house HiSET classes, comprehensive workforce development, on-site mental health services/case management and mentoring. MPDC has acquired significant experience in serving the City’s highest need opportunity youth population, successfully connecting them with alternative education and workforce development/employment resources in the short-term and ultimately facilitating transition to postsecondary training and education pathways in the long-term.

Massachusetts Alliance of Portuguese Speakers provides skills training, case management, education and access to benefits to mostly Brazilian and Cape Verdean clients.

Maverick Landing Community Services, through its Hospitality & Beyond Program, provides six-week skills training to prepare participants for careers in Boston's growing hospitality industry.

Mothers for Justice & Equality tailors its 12-15-month career readiness training to trauma-impacted individuals who have been unable to gain or retain employment due to anxiety or depression.

Mujeres Unidas Avanzando provides ESOL classes, education for Hi-SET certification, career exploration, computer and occupational skills training, job placement and apprenticeship opportunities, financial literacy training, and assistance with income maximization. The Adult Literacy Program provides Spanish HiSET programs to Latina single parents who possess few or no job skills.

New England Center for Arts & Technology (NECAT) is a culinary training and job placement program for low-income Boston residents.

Notre Dame Education Center, through its Workforce Readiness Program, provides job counseling, job training, internship, and employment services to Boston residents, ages 25 and over.

Operation ABLE serves low-income residents, ages 45+, with computers training, job search skills instruction, case management, career counseling, internship development, placement and post-placement support.

Partners for Youth with Disabilities provides entrepreneurial job skills training and job readiness activities to low-income Boston resident students with and without learning or physical disabilities.

Project Hope supports low-income residents with resume writing, interviewing skills, and applying for new jobs.

Project Place is a transitional employment program that provides low-income clients with job training and job placement services as well as individual career counseling and case management support.

Rian Immigrant Center provides low-income Boston residents with training in ESOL classes as well as home care skills.

Roca provides basic transitional employment, workforce readiness training, pre-vocational training and alternative education to low-income young men.

Somali Development Center provides support services and case management to Somali- Americans, ages 16-22, living in Boston to help them acquire employment and become self-sufficient.

Stone House supports low-income Bostonians in their efforts toward financial stability by teaching personal financial management skills, assisting with applications for adult education or workforce development programs, and providing substantial wrap-around services.

STRIVE Boston supports the re-entry of court-involved, out-of-school and underemployed youth into training and job placement activities.

Tierney Learning Center operates the Technology Mobility Action Plan, an education and career development resource for low-income heads of households who seek employment in the technology field.

West End House gives young people, ages 17-24, academic support, college preparation, leadership and career development, and employment services.

Workforce Opportunity Resource Center (WORC) provides construction-industry workers and small businesses with “one stop shopping” for the resources and technical support promoting growth and success in either their career or business.

X-Cel Education offers low-income adults classes in HiSET preparation, career exploration, and further educational and career development.

YMCA of Greater Boston delivers an integrated education and workplace training program model called the Education & Career Advancement Program. The program integrates adult education and literacy activities with workforce preparation activities and workforce training for the purpose of educational and career advancement. This Education & Career Advancement Program integrates the core components of its longstanding history of successful workforce development programs at Training, Inc., and English to Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) programs at the International Learning Center (ILC) to serve 50 program participants

YMCA Training, Inc. provides job readiness and computer skills, basic financial literacy, employment training, internship placement, and job seeking support to low-income residents, ages 20 and above.

ZUMIX engages youth, ages 7-18, in activities involving music and technology to improve their communication and interpersonal skills and provide them with valuable job training.

Organization

Industry

Program Description

African Bridge Network (ABN)

Healthcare and Finance

ABN’s Immigrant Professionals Internship program places individuals in paid, 10-week internships with healthcare and finance employers to support skilled immigrants to transition their work experience from their home countries to professional careers in Boston's high growth industries.

Asian American Civic Association (AACA)

Building Trades 

The BEEMS program trains students in basic carpentry, plumbing, electrical, and energy efficiency and prepares them for in-demand, high-wage careers at property management companies, hotels, and maintenance firms.

Benjamin Franklin Cummings Institute of Technology

Building Trades

FCT proposes an occupation skills training program to support individuals facing barriers to employment to pursue a certificate in the clean energy trades of HVAC&R and Practical Electricity. Programs are in the high demand industry of Construction Trades and can be completed in less than a year.

BEST Corp

Hospitality 

BEST hospitality Pre-apprenticeship and apprenticeship programs provide training for high quality hotel jobs with graduates receiving industry recognized certifications and college credits. This program will provide extensive case management and wrap around services through their partnership with Action for Boston Community Development (ABCD).

Boston Chinatown Neighborhood Center (BCNC)

ESOL/Customer Service 

The ESOL for Customer Service job training program integrates ESOL instruction with general workplace and industry-specific skills and includes individual career counseling and case management services.

Breaktime

Youth Employment and Career Development

Breaktime uses a transitional employment model combining elements of Learn-and-Earn and occupational skills training to ensure that homeless young adults can secure stable employment, permanent housing, and financial empowerment.

Catholic Charities/Haitian American Multi-Service Center (HMSC)

ESOL/ Healthcare and Human Services

HMSC’s ESOL for employment program provides contextualized ESOL classes embedded in an occupation training program for individuals interested in professions in healthcare and human services. 

Charlestown Adult Education (CAE)

ABE/ ESOL/ Healthcare/ Building Trades 

CAE proposes a job training program with comprehensive wraparound services, including ABE and ESOL classes, case management services, career exploration support, and financial literacy courses, supporting participants to obtain jobs in healthcare or construction. The majority of those served will be residents of Charlestown BHA housing, English Language Learners, or court-involved youth.

Community Servings

Culinary

The Teaching Kitchen’s 12-week culinary program provides a pathway to permanent employment in food services for high-need Boston residents experiencing multiple barriers to employment such as criminal records, poverty, substance use disorder, and homelessness through skills training and supportive services.  

Community Works Services (CWS)

Building Trades 

The Solar Technician Training program is a comprehensive 15-week training, with wrap-around support services, preparing participants for quality jobs in the expanding clean energy industry. Graduates will receive nationally recognized certifications in solar and wind technologies as well as earn 3 college credits.

English for New Bostonians (ENB)

ESOL

The ESOL Economic Mobility Initiative will support 13 ESOL Pathways programs providing contextualized ESOL for employment.

Immigrant Family Services Institute (IFSI)

ESOL

IFSI will assist low-level English speakers with ESOL instruction and career-focused training classes in healthcare along with computer skills and financial literacy classes. Located in Mattapan, the program focuses on serving recent immigrants, supporting a growing population of Haitian immigrants in Boston. 

Interseminarian- Project Place

Logistics 

The LEAP program will provide comprehensive job training, employment, and support services to homeless and low-income individuals via occupational skills training and learn-and-earn pathways to employment in modern logistics (transportation, warehousing, and delivery). 

Jewish Vocational Services (JVS)

Healthcare

JVS proposes a Certified Nursing Assistant and Pharmacy Technician training program to prepare Boston residents for careers in healthcare, equipping graduates to obtain industry recognized certifications. 

More Than Words (MTW)

Youth Employment and Career Development 

MTW blends workforce training, youth development, deliberate transition planning, and individual and systems-level advocacy to prepare young people (primarily homeless youth and young people at risk of homelessness) for future education, employment, and self-sufficiency.

Mothers for Justice and Equality

Healthcare and Administration 

MJE’s transitional employment program provides job skills training in administration for non-profits, health care, and academia. Primarily serving low-income residents in Dorchester, Roxbury, and Mattapan, MJE offers trauma-informed case management and supportive services for individuals struggling with the impacts of violence. 

Mujeres Unidas Avanzando

ESOL/ Healthcare

MUA’s program will help English Language Learners to complete a Medical Assistant Training (CMA) program, consisting of 320 hours of instruction followed by a 160-hour externship.

New England Culinary Arts Training (NECAT)

Culinary 

NECAT provides a 12-week culinary skills training program to prepare Boston residents, including returning citizens, people experiencing homelessness, and individuals in substance abuse recovery, for careers in restaurant and hotel kitchens. The program combines training in socio-emotional development, career readiness, and industry specific training. 

Operation ABLE Greater Boston

Healthcare 

The ABLE Medical Office Skills Training Program combines job training, digital literacy, and soft skills development with 6-week internships to support older adults re-entering the workforce.

Per Scholas

IT 

Per Scholas provides occupation skills training for individuals from traditionally underserved populations to prepare them for a variety of tech roles including IT support, Cloud Practitioner, and Software Engineer with starting salaries between $65,000 - $120,000 annually. 

Resilient Coders

IT 

Resilient Coders offers a remote coding bootcamp to prepare young (18-30 year old) Boston residents of color for careers as full stack developers and software engineers, with graduates obtaining jobs with employers such as Wayfair, Audible, and The Broad Institute.  

SkillWorks - The Boston Foundation

Multiple 

SkillWorks is a nationally recognized, Boston-based funder collaborative that acts as a workforce intermediary to pool funding from public, private, and corporate philanthropy and create a flexible set of resources that can be steered towards innovative solutions, capacity building, and system improvement.

Tech Goes Home

IT 

Tech Goes Home will partner with a variety of occupational skills training programs to integrate digital literacy skills training into existing programs through a “train the trainer” model. 

Urban League of Eastern Massachusetts (ULEM)

IT 

MSIMBO Coding Academy is a social enterprise and workforce development bootcamp program offering full-stack training and career placement to underserved individuals (primarily women and African Americans/people of color).

X-CEL Inc

Water Treatment 

X-Cel Conservation Corps prepares young adults for the MA Grade 3 municipal wastewater operator licensure by combining classroom instruction and conservation work projects. In addition to obtaining an industry recognized certification in a field with an average starting salary of $25.85/hr, participants will receive assistance obtaining a driver's license, and a used vehicle.

YMCA of Greater Boston

Early Childhood Education

YMCA of Greater Boston will provide an Early Childhood Education Apprenticeship and Pre-Apprenticeship Summer Academy program.

 

The Alternative Education Initiative (AEI) supports alternative education programs that provide young Boston residents, ages 16-21, with help pursuing their high school diploma or its equivalent, workforce readiness skills, and various wrap-around services.

Action for Boston Community Development (ABCD) supports at-risk high school students to earn a Boston Public Schools diploma at University High School.

Bridge over Troubled Waters provides a HiSET program for youth experiencing homeless and housing instability.

Catholic Charitable Bureau of the Archdiocese of Boston, Inc. supports communities throughout Eastern Massachusetts by providing services to the most vulnerable populations.

Ecumenical Social Action Committee, Inc. (ESAC) is a community-based nonprofit and multi-service agency that strives to improve the quality of life for residents of Boston and eastern Massachusetts. ESAC provides HiSET preparation, as well as career exploration, skill-building, internship, and employment opportunities.

El Centro del Cardenal, a program of Catholic Charities, provides bilingual alternative education and employment services for at-risk, primarily Latinx, youth.

Mujeres Unidas Avanzando prepares low-income Latina youth to take the HiSET exam in Spanish.

Notre Dame Education Center runs an alternative high school diploma program in partnership with Cathedral High School, which includes a weekly college and career readiness class.

X-Cel Education offers HiSET preparation classes, career exploration opportunities, and post-secondary transition services to youth.

Action for Boston Community Development (ABCD) supports at-risk high school students to earn their Boston Public Schools diploma at University High School. Through its Career Explorations program, ABCD exposes young people to career tracks in the building trades, criminal justice, culinary arts, early education and care, and health care and helps them acquire the necessary work experience or credential to enter one of those fields.

Asian American Civic Association, through its "Hire Values" program, provides out-of-school youth (ages 16-24) with career exploration and skills training opportunities, as well as help enrolling in and completing educational programs.

College Bound Dorchester prepares high-risk, out-of-school youth for the HiSET exam, provides coaching in the college application and completion process, and offers apprenticeship opportunities in boat-building.

East Boston Neighborhood Health Center provides holders of high school (or equivalent) diplomas with certified nursing assistant (CNA) training, including college credit-bearing classes and internship opportunities.

El Centro del Cardenal offers a HiSET and internship placement program, along with tutoring in ESOL.

More Than Words employs youth in paid shifts at a warehouse bookstore, where they can learn technical, entrepreneurial and work readiness skills as they process online orders, set inventory goals, run the register, and provide customer service.

Mujeres Unidas Avanzado (MUA) helps youth attain the High School Equivalency Test (HiSET in Spanish); enroll in a Clinical Medical Assistant (CMA) training program and complete and externship and job placement with various employer partners, including Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Dorchester House Multi-Service Center; and through two career coaches, access other work opportunities and work experience through MUA's network of referrals and other job partners, such as Breaktime.

Notre Dame Education Center (NDEC) in South Boston offer low-income, out of school youth (ages 18-24) a multi-step pathway from secondary education completion to post-secondary education and career. This program includes an Alternate Education Program to attain a high school diploma (HSD) from Cathedral High School or gain a high school equivalency (HSE), access to Early College Program for dual enrollment in post-secondary education while completing a high-school credential and supported entrance, including scholarship funds, into a first year of post-secondary education at Benjamin Franklin Institute of Technology.

X-Cel Education offers HiSET classes, college and career planning, and internship opportunities with community partners.

Action for Boston Community Development (ABCD) provides job placement in day care, camps, health, building trades, library/science, office work, food service, and outdoor/maintenance primarily to youth who are court-involved, in foster care or homeless.

Youth Engagement & Employment connects youth with a variety of summer jobs through its SuccessLink application system.

Boston Private Industry Council connects BPS students and recovered dropouts or those who are at risk of dropping out with employment in churches, child care centers, boys and girls clubs and similar venues.

YOU Boston supports court-involved and/or gang-affiliated youth in jobs in construction, facilities maintenance, retail, landscaping, and residential and commercial painting.

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