Healey-Driscoll Administration Awards Over $3 Million in Grants to Help Local Communities Tackle Climate Change
Thirty-three municipalities receive funding to enhance
climate resilience planning while prioritizing equity
BOSTON – The Healey-Driscoll Administration today
announced it’s awarding over $3 million through the Municipal Vulnerability
Preparedness Planning 2.0 (MVP 2.0) grant program to assist local communities in
preparing for climate change. A total of 23 municipalities and three regional
groups, representing another 10 municipalities, will benefit from these funds.
The goal is to provide financial support and resources so that communities can
create actionable strategies to address climate challenges.
Nearly every municipality in Massachusetts – about 99
percent, or 349 communities – are currently enrolled in this grant program
after completing the original MVP Planning Grant process. Additionally, 32
cities and towns and one Tribe are already updating their resilience plans in a
pilot project awarded in 2023.
"These grants are crucial because they empower
communities to include voices that have often been overlooked in discussions
about climate resilience,” said Governor Maura Healey. “This funding
will help ensure that everyone can contribute to and benefit from climate
action, making our response to climate change more equitable and
effective.”
“As a former mayor, I have seen firsthand how important the
MVP program is for local efforts to climate change,” said Lieutenant
Governor Kim Driscoll. “By collaborating, these cities and towns can share
valuable insights and develop stronger strategies. This approach not only
enhances their climate resilience but also fosters a sense of community and
belonging for everyone involved.”
MVP Planning 2.0 guides communities to prioritize the needs
of those most affected by climate change, ensuring their voices are heard in
the planning process. Cities and towns will also receive training on best
practices in climate resilience and equity, allowing them to rethink their
current plans based on what they learn from community input. Each of the
selected communities will also get $50,000 in guaranteed funding to support
projects that enhance their resilience against climate impacts.
Communities will have access to a new online resource called
Guides for
Equitable and Actionable Resilience (GEAR). This tool provides important
information on how local climate issues relate to everyday concerns like
housing and health.
The municipalities receiving grants will work with experts
in climate resilience and will have an Equity Partner to help keep equity at
the forefront of their plans. They will form a team of community liaisons who
have strong ties to populations most affected by climate change.
The Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs
(EEA) has been collecting feedback from the 33 MVP 2.0 pilot communities to
improve the program. This feedback has led to updates that enhance training on
climate justice and bring more support for addressing community needs.
Communities with older MVP plans had to apply for this round MVP Planning 2.0
to continue qualifying for future funding.
“I am excited to award this round of MVP Planning 2.0, which
will connect six seasoned Equity Partners with municipalities to ensure they
receive focused support for effective, inclusive and community-driven
resilience planning,” said EEA Secretary Rebecca Tepper. “MVP
Planning 2.0 reinforces our commitment to environmental justice and drives
meaningful impact through our grant initiatives.”
“Climate change will bring extreme heat, severe storms, and
increased flooding risk, and the Commonwealth and its communities need to be
prepared,” said Senate Majority Leader Cindy Creem (D-Newton).
“Brookline has been carefully planning to build resilience against those
impacts, particularly for its most vulnerable residents. This MVP 2.0 grant
will bolster the town's efforts to translate its plans into action.”
“Lexington has continued to lead the way in climate
planning, and thanks to the funds provided in the Municipal Vulnerability
Preparedness 2.0 grant program, Lexington will be able to develop concrete
action steps to respond and address the climate crisis with an emphasis on
equity,” said State Representative Michelle Ciccolo (D-15th Middlesex).
The following communities will receive funding to complete
MVP Planning 2.0 in 2025-2027:
Applicant |
MVP Program Region |
Total Award |
Boston |
Greater Boston |
$75,000.00 |
Brookline |
Greater Boston |
$100,000.00 |
Cambridge |
Greater Boston |
$100,000.00 |
Canton |
Greater Boston |
$100,000.00 |
Colrain & Charlemont |
Berkshires & Hilltowns |
$175,000.00 |
Conway & Ashfield |
Berkshires & Hilltowns |
$175,000.00 |
Devens Enterprise Commission |
Central |
$ 100,000.00 |
Duxbury |
Southeast |
$100,000.00 |
Holyoke |
Greater Connecticut River Valley |
$102,420.00 |
Lexington |
Greater Boston |
$100,000.00 |
Martha's Vineyard Commission (on behalf of Aquinnah,
Chilmark, Edgartown, Oak Bluffs, Tisbury, & West Tisbury) |
Southeast |
$408,000.00 |
Melrose |
Greater Boston |
$100,000.00 |
Natick |
Greater Boston |
$100,000.00 |
New Bedford |
Southeast |
$105,000.00 |
Newburyport |
Northeast |
$100,000.00 |
Pelham |
Greater Connecticut River Valley |
$100,000.00 |
Princeton |
Central |
$100,000.00 |
Salem |
Northeast |
$105,000.00 |
Scituate |
Greater Boston |
$100,000.00 |
Sherborn |
Greater Boston |
$100,000.00 |
Spencer |
Central |
$100,000.00 |
Springfield |
Greater Connecticut River Valley |
$103,780.00 |
Swampscott |
Northeast |
$100,000.00 |
Swansea |
Southeast |
$100,000.00 |
Ware |
Greater Connecticut River Valley |
$100,000.00 |
Wrentham |
Greater Boston |
$ 100,000.00 |
Total (26) |
|
Total: $3,049,200 |
MVP supports the implementation of the statewide
ResilientMass Plan released in 2023, which provides a national model of
integrating hazard mitigation priorities with forward-looking climate change
data and solutions. The plan is implemented within state government by the
ResilientMass Action Team (RMAT), an inter-agency team led by the Executive
Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs and the Massachusetts Emergency
Management Agency and staffed by designated Climate Change Coordinators from
each Executive Office. The ResilientMass Action Team provides guidance and
decision-making for Plan implementation, further refines priority actions, and
ensures actions are integrated into agency practice and policy.
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