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星期二, 3月 05, 2024

Boston - The Funding Update

 

CITY OF BOSTON

The Funding Update

 

FEDERAL


Employment and Training Administration, 4/4/2024
The purpose of this program is to provide eligible incarcerated individuals in men’s and women’s state correctional facilities or local or county jails with workforce services prior to release and to continue services after release by transitioning the participants into reentry programs in the communities to which they will return. By providing for reentry services to begin while participants are still incarcerated and to continue post-release, these projects are designed to eliminate the time gap between release from prison and enrollment into a workforce development reentry program leading to skills-based employment, to improve individuals’ transition back into their communities, and to reduce recidivism. Nonprofits having a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education, State governments, Nonprofits that do not have a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education and City or township governments. Estimated 20 grants up to $4 million each.


OVW Fiscal Year 2024 Transitional Housing Assistance Grants for Victims of Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault and Stalking Program, 4/9/2024
The Transitional Housing Assistance Grants for Victims of Domestic Violence, Dating Violence, Sexual Assault and Stalking Program (Transitional Housing Program (CFDA 16.736)) supports programs that provide 6-24 months of transitional housing with support services for victims who are homeless or in need of transitional housing or other housing assistance, as a result of a situation of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault or stalking; and for whom emergency shelter services or other crisis intervention services are unavailable or insufficient.Nonprofits having a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education, City or township governments, Native American tribal governments (Federally recognized), Nonprofits that do not have a 501(c)(3) status with the IRS, other than institutions of higher education and State governments. Estimated Total Program Funding:$ 40,000,000.


SYSTEM FOR AWARDS MANAGEMENT UPDATE:
The federal government has transitioned from DUNS to the Unique Entity ID.
A UEI is required to apply for and receive federal awards.
The process is extensive; plan ahead.
For more information, go to the FAQ page at SAM.gov.


Federal funding opportunities are continuously updated on grants.gov

STATE


Massachusetts Preservation Projects Fund, 3/15/2024 
The MPPF is a state-funded 50% reimbursable matching grant program established in 1984 to support the preservation of properties, landscapes, and sites (cultural resources) listed in the State Register of Historic Places. Applicants must be a municipality or nonprofit organization.Historic cultural resources in public and nonprofit ownership and use frequently suffer from deferred maintenance, incompatible use, or are threatened by demolition. These important resources represent a significant portion of the Commonwealth’s heritage. By providing assistance to historic cultural resources owned by nonprofit or municipal entities, we hope to ensure their continued use and integrity.  



Shannon Community Safety Initiative Statewide Research Partner Opportunity, 3/22/2024
The program supports regional and multi-disciplinary approaches to combat gang violence through coordinated prevention and intervention, law enforcement, prosecution, and reintegration type programs.

CITY



GROWBOSTON Education Fund Grant,3/11/2024 

The purpose of this grant program is to invest in Boston residents’ urban agriculture knowledge. Organizations may apply for a maximum of $30,000 per application. Recipients must be a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit or a community-based organization partnering with a fiscal sponsor that is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit. No grants can be awarded to individuals or for-profit businesses. Grants under $10,000 will be paid in one lump sum upon grant award, and a signed grant application will serve as a grant agreement. Grants between $10,000 and $30,000 will be paid in two installments. 



2023-24 Design Fund Grant Application, 5/1/2024

GrowBoston is offering a total of $75,000 to fund the development of conceptual designs for urban farms, community gardens, food forests, and other open spaces with food production elements. Designs must be for projects intended for public use and benefit, and may be for new spaces or for renovations or expansions of existing spaces. A copy of the resulting designs must be provided to GrowBoston upon completion. The purpose of this grant program is to invest in the creation of food production spaces that will be for public use and/or benefit. Grants up to $9,999.00.



FOUNDATIONS


Boston Athletic Association Gives Back Grant Program, 3/8/2024
The Spring 2024 round of the Boston Athletic Association Gives Back Grant Program opens for applications from February 26 to March 8. The program supports nonprofits that advance the B.A.A.’s mission of promoting a healthy lifestyle through sports, especially running, in order to build healthy communities. Grants from $5,000-$15,000 are available.


Bloomberg Philanthropies, 3/13/2024                                                                                                                  The program will provide funding, expert technical assistance, and leadership development over two years to strengthen the digital infrastructure of nonprofit cultural organizations. To be eligible, organizations must be based in the U.S. or UK, tax-exempt as defined by section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, be in existence for at least three years, and have a budget of at least $500,000.



Frankenthaler Climate Initiative, 3/15/2024 
                                                                                                          Grants will be awarded to support the planning or implementation of capital projects that reduce emissions by improving efficiency in building energy use. Eligible applicant categories include museums, archives, and institutions whose primary mission includes visual art; higher education art schools, centers for study, residency programs; community and cultural organizations whose missions include an emphasis on visual art. Grants up to $100,000, depending on the grant category.


Boston Scientific Foundation, 3/15/2024
The foundation supports programs focused on improving STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) educational opportunities and academic development for K-12 students who are economically disadvantaged.

The Grassroots Fund, 3/19/2024
Grants of up to $4,000 will be awarded in support of community-based environmental work in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, or Vermont.


NAACP and Adobe Editing Fellowship Program, 3/22/2024

The 14-week paid fellowship is for individuals who have some experience with video editing and includes training, mentorship, and hands-on workplace experience. The program includes an intensive week-long retreat to launch the fellowship in Los Angeles, industry mentorship pairing, craft conversations led by notable industry experts across disciplines, and up to four workplace rotations within the NAACP Content Team and with Oscar-winning post-production house Parallax. Additionally, fellows will receive a three-year subscription to Adobe Creative Cloud All Apps plan. Selected participants will be awarded a stipend of $14,000.

Home Depot Foundation, 3/22/2024
Grants will be awarded to support the construction and rehabilitation of permanent supportive multifamily housing for veterans. Awards typically range from $100,000 to $500,000.


Voices for Healthy Kids, 3/25/2024

The 2024 Policy Campaign funding opportunity funds campaigns for public policy change in Voices for Healthy Kids priority areas, including early care and education access, Early Head Start/Head Start appropriations, paid family and medical leave, healthy school meals expansion, sugary drink tax and investment, Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) access and expanded benefits, SNAP incentives and produce prescription programs, and water access in schools and communities. Funded campaigns must pursue policy through legislation, regulation, executive order, or ballot initiative. Tribes, subdivisions of a tribe, 501(c)(3) and 501(c)(4) nonprofit organizations, and organizations with a fiscal sponsor are eligible to apply. Applicants must have the ability to conduct lobbying activities.



Imagine Learning Foundation, 3/29/2024
Grants of up to $100,000 will be awarded to support the well-being of learners outside of the classroom, either at home or in their communities.

Classics for Kids Foundation, 3/31/2024
Matching grants will be awarded to schools or nonprofit organizations that incorporate string instruments into their music programs.



The Edward E. Ford Foundation, 4/1/2024

The EE Ford Foundation works to strengthen and support independent secondary schools and to challenge and inspire them to advance teaching and learning by disseminating best practices and supporting efforts in sustainability and collaboration. Grants must be matched by additional funds raised by the school at least dollar for dollar. Applying schools must serve a 9-12th grade program, be a member of NAIS, serve a diverse population, have a current Head of School that has served for a full two years, and not have applied for funding from the EE Ford Foundation within the last four years. Previously funded traditional grants have supported leadership and project-based learning opportunities, emotional intelligence technology, the underwriting of full-time staff, instructional coaching programs, and more. Grants up to $100,000.00.


Sun Life, 4/19/2024                                                                                                                                                  Sun Life’s Health Access Grant Program (formerly the Team Up Against Diabetes program) provides support to nonprofit organizations in the United States that are improving access to health programs focused on diabetes and oral healthcare in their local communities. Programmatic support is provided in the following areas: diabetes prevention, awareness, and education; diabetes management and care; obesity prevention; nutritional programs, including education, management, and awareness; recovery support for diabetes-related complications; oral healthcare; and oral disease prevention and management. Grant amount: $25,000, $50,000 or $100,000

Mary Kay Foundation, 4/30/2024                                                                                                                        The foundation’s Domestic Violence Shelter Grant Program awards grants to shelters across the country providing critical, life-saving services to women and children seeking safety from an abusive situation. Grants of $20,000 are awarded to at least one domestic violence shelter in every state. 



Ben and Jerry’s Foundation, Applications are accepted on a rolling basis through October 2024

The National Grassroots Organizing Grant Program offers two-year unrestricted, general operating support grants to small, constituent-led grassroots organizations throughout the United States and its territories. Support is provided to organizations that are led by people working to help themselves and their communities create progressive change through organizing campaigns and movement building efforts aimed at dismantling systems of oppression and the legacies of white supremacy culture. Applicants must be nonprofits with 501(c)3 status (or have a fiscal agent), have an annual operating budget under $350,000, use grassroots, base-building organizing campaigns as the primary strategy for creating social change, and be U.S.-based and U.S.-focused. Grants up to $ 30,000.00.



  THE RESOURCE TABLE, NEWS AND CITY EVENTS



The Voyager Scholarship, 3/27/2024

The scholarship program will help students pursuing careers in public service by providing access to travel and education.

Research Statistics

All City of Boston Newsletters



       Daily Updates from the City of Boston
News, Resources, Applications, Permits, Jobs, Events and more!

波士頓市和警探協會達成協議簽5年新約 強調薪酬公平及透明

MAYOR MICHELLE WU ANNOUNCES FIVE YEAR CONTRACT RATIFIED BY BOSTON POLICE DETECTIVES BENEVOLENT SOCIETY, CODIFYING KEY REFORMS, FAIR COMPENSATION AND ADVANCING TRANSPARENCY 


New contract builds on wage adjustments and significant reforms codified in December’s BPPA contract including a major overhaul of court time

BOSTON - Monday, March 4, 2024 - Mayor Michelle Wu today announced that a new five year collective bargaining agreement has been ratified by the members of the Boston Police Detectives Benevolent Society (BPDBS), the union exclusively representing Boston Police detectives. The union includes members of the Boston Police Department holding the rating of Detective. Since the start of her administration, Mayor Wu has made it a priority to achieve reform within the Boston Police Department (BPD). This has been accomplished through contract negotiations, delivering the highest standards of community policing to keep our residents safe, and by ensuring resources for the health and well-being of police officers and their families. The BPDBS contract expired on June 30, 2020. The ratification vote took place on Friday, March 1, 2024. Reforms in the BPDBS contract are consistent with, and build upon, operational reforms ratified in the BPPA contract announced last December.


“This historic contract builds on the groundbreaking agreement ratified by the BPPA late last year. This contract includes the same significant reforms to overtime, paid details, and officer education, plus an additional reform to how court overtime is administered,” said Mayor Michelle Wu. “This agreement also includes quality of life improvements for the police detectives that work hard every day for the safety of our city, and I’m grateful to the Boston Police Detectives Benevolent Society for working with us to achieve these reforms.”


“I am happy to stand by an agreement between the BPDBS (Detectives) and the City that respects and honors the leadership and exemplary investigative police service that the men and women of the Detectives Society provide every day,” said Donald Caisey, President of the Boston Police Detectives Benevolent Society. “I thank Mayor Wu and her team for bargaining and for working with us to deliver a historic agreement, including changes to court time, that will support the needs of detectives and their families for years to come. We look forward to continuing to work to make Boston a safe city for all.”


“We are pleased to see another union reach an agreement with the City to settle their Contract.” said Commissioner Michael Cox, Boston Police Department. “Once again, our officers have shown leadership in agreeing to implement important reforms that will continue to reinforce trust with those we serve. Through this agreement, the Detectives have shown their commitment to elevating the standards of transparency and accountability expected of the Boston Police Department.”


The new agreement covers the period from July 1, 2020 - June 30, 2025, at a total five-year estimated cost of $22.2 million, or an increase of 23% over the entire period. This is the first contract pertaining to Boston Police detectives that delivers significant reforms, and costs are in line with those seen in the union’s prior contracts without noted operational reforms.

  • FY21-FY25 - 23.3% over 5 years (a 4.7% average annual increase) 
  • FY17-FY20 - 17.3% over 4 years (a 4.3% average annual increase) 
  • FY11-FY16 - 28.7% over 6 years (a 4.8% average annual increase) 


Cost of Living Adjustments

The contract includes the following base wage increases to ensure detectives are paid fairly.

  • Effective first pay period July 2020 (FY21) - 2.0%
  • Effective first pay period July 2021 (FY22) - 1.5%
  • Effective first pay period July 2022 (FY23) - 2.0%
  • Effective first pay period July 2023 (FY24) - 1.0%
  • Effective first pay period July 2024 (FY25) - 2.5%


Court Time

Boston Police detectives who attend court as a witness or in any other capacity on behalf of the department or City are entitled to overtime compensation. Previously, if a court hearing or proceeding was canceled under 72 hours, detectives were entitled to compensation for every hour they were scheduled to be in attendance and mandated at minimum 4 hours of pay. In FY22, the City spent $8 million in court overtime pay for the entire Boston Police Department. To ensure that this contract is reflective of advances made in technology and scheduling, this new contract cuts the cancellation time down from 72 hours to 24 hours, marking a significant reform that will reduce the amount of mandatory overtime paid out to officers.

  • FY24 - $997,741.36 paid out in court overtime to detectives by the department (as of today)
  • FY23 - $1,189,894.35 paid out in court overtime to detectives by the department 
  • FY22 - $1,443, 387.20 paid out in court overtime to detectives by the department 
  • FY21 - $920, 367.27 paid out in court overtime to detectives by the department  


Discipline

This contract designates a list of offenses that will not be eligible for arbitration as a pathway to overturn discipline or termination issued by the department. A detective will face discipline without arbitration if they are indicted for, or if a sustained Internal Affairs finding is issued and upheld for, a defined list of offenses.


These offenses are: indecent assault and battery on child under age of 14; assault and battery to collect loan; indecent assault and battery on a person with an intellectual disability; felony for hire; wanton or reckless behavior creating a risk of serious bodily injury or sexual abuse to a child; mayhem; assault with intent to murder or maim; attempt to murder; murder; armed robbery; assault with intent to rob or murder; use of firearms while committing a felony; stealing by confining or putting in fear; rape; rape of child; rape of a child during commission of certain offenses or by use of force; rape of a child through use of force by certain previously convicted offenders; rape and abuse of child; rape and abuse of child aggravated by age difference between defendant and victim or by when committed by mandated reporters; rape and abuse of child by certain previously convicted offenders; assault with intent to commit rape; assault of child with intent to commit rape; extortion; kidnapping (weapons; child under age 16); drug trafficking; drugging persons for kidnapping; enticement of child under age 18 to engage in prostitution; human trafficking or commercial sexual activity; hate crimes (MGL c. 22C s. 32); and hate crimes involving assault or battery for the purpose of intimidation (weapons; punishment) (MGL c. 265 s. 39).


Paid Details

New Highest-Priority Detail Category

Boston Police officers previously were the only eligible personnel to perform paid details for events or construction sites that involve traffic disruption on City roadways, but many priority details went unfilled and had to be covered by mandated overtime at significant cost to the department and the City. To ensure the highest priority traffic details are covered to keep traffic flowing and to keep road users safe, the City will now categorize details by priority. Highest priority details, or Type 1 Details, are events and activities that pose a substantial risk to public safety, including major events with anticipated attendance over 5,000 people; utility or construction details at major arteries, in busy intersections, or in areas with heavy traffic; or areas due to an emergency. These kinds of details will be filled first before any others and offer higher hourly compensation. All other details will be considered Type 2 Details and compensated at the existing rate.


Expanded Personnel to Fill All Details

If details go unfilled by Boston Police officers, the open detail shifts can be offered to Peace Officers Standards and Training (POST) Commission certified officers, including Boston Police Department retirees, Boston Housing Authority Police officers, and college/university police officers. After details are offered to these groups, Boston Municipal Protective Services Officers and Sergeants and contracted civilian personnel will be offered the opportunity to accept the detail shifts. Opening up the detail system to ensure that other workers can perform traffic control will ensure better coverage of details throughout Boston and safer, smoother traffic flow on our streets. The opportunity for more workers to perform details also creates economic opportunity throughout Boston’s neighborhoods as trained personnel will have opportunities to earn income through detail work.


Eliminating Double-Booking of Details

This contract ends the practice of allowing officers who finish a detail early to start another detail, preventing the accumulation of double pay for the same period of time.


Streamlining Administration of Detail Assignment

Additionally, instead of the current paper system used to assign details in each police district, the City now has the legal authority to implement a technology based platform (i.e., electronic, web based or app based programs) for the administration, management and assignment of paid details across the city. Also, after fully implementing this transition in technology and administration, the sworn officers performing those duties will be reassigned for other needed police work.


Central Booking:

This new contract gives the BPD the legal authority to proceed with setting up a central lock-up facility.


Medical Leave

The process to address extended medical leave through arbitration is long and complex. Under the new contract, when there is disagreement between an officer’s doctor and BPD’s doctor regarding an officer’s ability to return to work after being out on leave, instead of engaging in arbitration, an Independent Medical Examiner will determine the employee's fitness to return to light duty. This will simplify and streamline the process.


Union Release

The contract will reduce the number of officers attending to union business while being on duty and paid by the City. Specifically, this contract settlement curtails union release time by approximately 37% by limiting the number of hours allowed for labor management committees, appearances before the City Council, and other union business. . 


Career Awards Retention Program

Effective July 2023, this contract establishes a new Transitional Career Awards Program for Detectives with five, ten, fifteen, twenty, and twenty-five years of experience while eliminating the current Cumulative Risk Enhancement Adjustments career awards program. This brings police officer’s career advancement opportunities in line with those of the Boston Fire Department as a tool for retention at the department. 


Educational Incentive Plan

Boston Police officers receive salary adjustments to reflect continuing education incentives. This contract increases the qualifying schools to include the University of Massachusetts System, Northeastern University, and Boston University, and increases the qualifying degrees to include Sociology, Psychology, and Public Administration–aligned with the skills and training to further enhance community policing and improve organizational management.


Parental Leave

This contract settlement provides paid parental leave to the members of the bargaining unit for the first time. 


“This contract settlement further cements Mayor Wu’s commitment to reforming the Boston Police Department through collective bargaining. The Mayor’s focus on cutting down on the routine use of court overtime is a significant win,” said Rev. Art J. Gordon, Pastor of St. John Missionary Church in Roxbury. “At the same time, this contract contains wins for both sides – like paid parental leave for the first time – that will help the BPD hire and retain qualified and diverse personnel.”   


Collective bargaining with the BPDBS during the Wu administration has been ongoing for nearly 18 months. The parties met in more than a dozen sessions to hammer out this contract settlement. 


The ratification of the BPDBS contract codifying key operational reforms and fair compensation builds on Mayor Wu’s work to ensure that Boston continues to deliver the highest standards of community policing in the country. In December, Mayor Wu announced that a new five-year collective bargaining agreement has been ratified by the membership of the Boston Police Patrolmen’s Association (BPPA), the union representing the majority of Boston Police officers.

星期一, 3月 04, 2024

波士頓2024「愛你的街區」訂4月6、20、27日發動鄰里大掃除

MAYOR MICHELLE WU, OFFICE OF CIVIC ORGANIZING ANNOUNCE 2024

 LOVE YOUR BLOCK SPRING CLEANUPS

BOSTON - Monday, March 4, 2024 - Mayor Michelle Wu and the Office of Civic Organizing (OCO) announced the Love Your Block spring 2024 cleanups will take place on April 6, April 20, and April 27. Love Your Block is a Citywide community service event that invites community members to lead in hosting a neighborhood cleanup or joining a cleanup as an individual volunteer. Love Your Block neighborhood beautification projects include cleaning up trash on sidewalks and streets, park revitalization, and flower planting. The Love Your Block application is open for volunteers to sign up to become a host or join a neighborhood cleanup here. OCO will connect individuals with a cleanup site in their neighborhood once all sites are finalized. 


“Love your Block cleanups are a perfect way to enjoy the upcoming spring weather while helping your local community look vibrant and clean,” said Mayor Michelle Wu. “The City is proud to help supply the tools to host group cleanups and assist individuals in finding a Love Your Block volunteer opportunity near them.”


Cleanups will take place in every neighborhood of Boston over the course of three weekends. 


The dates are as follows:


Saturday, April 6: Allston/Brighton, Back Bay/Beacon Hill, Fenway/Kenmore, Mission Hill, South Boston, West Roxbury


Saturday, April 20: Charlestown, East Boston, North End/West End/Wharf District, Chinatown/Downtown/Leather District, South End/Bay Village


Saturday, April 27: Roxbury, Mid-Dorchester, Dorchester, Hyde Park, Mattapan, Roslindale, Jamaica Plain


The Love Your Block program was first created in 2015 with a three-year grant awarded to the City of Boston by Cities of Service. After the grant's expiration in 2018, Love Your Block became a permanent City program under the Mayor’s Office of Civic Organizing (within the Community Engagement Cabinet). This year, OCO will partner with Boston Public Library and Boston Centers for Youth & Families who will serve as host sites for community members to pick up and drop off cleanup tools. All sites are listed on the Love Your Block sign up form. Tool collection is scheduled from 9:00 -10:00 a.m., with returns to the same location between 12:00 -2:00 p.m.


"Having served as East Boston's liaison, I've seen the transformative power of this initiative firsthand,” said Director of Civic Organizing Nathalia Benitez-Perez. “Love Your Block empowers residents to take charge of their community's well-being through collective action and beautification efforts. I'm thrilled to carry forward this tradition of fostering empowerment and unity."


In past Love Your Block cleanups, neighborhood groups have picked up litter from streets and sidewalks, beautified local parks, cleaned up vacant lots, urban wilds, and more. For tips on how to plan and host a cleanup in your neighborhood, OCO has created a helpful guide.


“In 2022, fourteen volunteers from Prospect Hill and Mt. Hope neighborhoods of Roslindale turned out to clean up the pedestrian walkways of the Blakemore Street Bridge,” said Friends of Blakemore Bridge Co-Founder Meri Bond. “By the end of the day not only had they removed the leaves, litter, bottles and nips that had been accumulating along the Bridge for years, they had enjoyed meeting one another and working together for a common purpose.” 


The Office of Civic Organizing will provide volunteers with cleanup tools including trash bags, gloves, brooms, rakes, trash pickers, and a Love Your Block t-shirt.  Hosts leading a cleanup can request tools until Friday, March 22 at 5:00 p.m. here


“Love Your Block is an event that I look forward to the Mayor’s Office of Civic Organizing leading every year,” said Brianna Millor, Chief of the Community Engagement Cabinet. “This is an effort for our Cabinet alongside Boston residents, community leaders, and volunteers to beautify every Boston neighborhood together. I look forward to seeing everyone in April to keep our neighborhoods clean.”

紐英倫客家鄉親會慶天穿日 吃穿唱跳講究客家味

紐英倫客家鄉親會慶天穿日,逾百人出席。 (謝開明攝)
             (Boston Orange) 紐英倫客家鄉親會32日在高地社區體育館慶祝「天穿日」,逾百會員、嘉賓歡聚一堂,暢敘別後種種,享用佳餚美食,欣賞好歌妙舞,還摸彩抽獎,開心無比。

              2024年的「天穿日」是紐英倫客家鄉親會在新冠病毒疫情降溫後,繼2023年夏季烤肉以來的第二次公開活動。             

紐英倫客家鄉親會舞蹈團和老師余嘯渝(後左六)合影。 (謝開明攝)
                          會長劉秀春指出,每年農曆一月廿日的「天穿日」是客家人最有特色的活動之一,網路上已經有非常多關於女媧補天等傳說故事,該會在過去數年的活動中,也介紹過好幾次,所以她更想說的是,非常高興終於有機會再和親朋好友們面對面歡聚,感謝加起來近千歲的民俗舞蹈團員們,個個不向低頭,在余嘯渝老師有教無類的指導下,每週三練舞,健身、聯誼、傳承客家文化。             

紐英倫客家鄉親會會長劉秀春致詞。(謝開明攝)
紐英倫客家鄉親們,這天再次展示團結力量大的客家精神,由會長劉秀春,副會長畢儒宗、邱西薔和全體理事分工合作,不但把會場佈置得很有客家特色,還親自烹煮出各色客家美食,包括鄭雪卿的客家艾草粄、徐滿嬌的炒麵、曾正泉的客家麻糬、曾秀梅的客家擂茶、陳玉瑛的九層粄、陳裕逢的滷筍乾等,讓出席嘉賓們難得的又有機會飽口福,品嘗客家特色菜。

              劉秀春會長也不忘感謝許多出席嘉賓的慷慨解囊捐款,以及僑務委員會和駐波士頓台北經濟文化辦事處的贊助,包括Wellesley Toyota汽車代理創辦人柯乃南,商業地產發展商游勝雄,蔡坤喜醫師,以及周健夫、王子仁、Cathy Xia,余嘯渝、楊英嬰、江佩蓉等都是該會今年「天穿日」的貴人。

波士頓經文處處長廖朝宏還是第一次參加紐英倫客家鄉親會
的天穿日慶祝活動。 (謝開明攝)
              波士頓經文處處長廖朝宏、波士頓僑教中心主任潘昭榮,波士頓僑務委員郭競儒,前任波士頓僑務委員蔣宗壬,波士頓僑務顧問馮文鸞,波士頓僑務促進委員康麗雪,波士頓北一女校友會創辦人趙小怡,前任紐英崙中華專業人員協會董事長周萬欽,現任中華專協會長盧彥君,這天也都應邀到會,與眾同歡。

              其中的盧彥君還是第一次參加紐英倫客家鄉親會的天穿日活動,初次接觸這客家民俗典故,在他個人的臉書網頁台灣生醫科學家在美國上,圖文並茂的記了一筆。

                          早從2013年起,就和紐英倫客家鄉親會結下兄弟情誼,每年天穿日都從紐約趕來與盛,曾任大紐約客家鄉親會會長的黃開榮,也偕同妻子羅玉昇再度到會,同歌共歡。(更新版)

會長劉秀春和會員們一起唱客家歌。 (謝開明攝)

美洲臺灣客家聯合總會的前總會長黃開榮夫婦和
美洲臺灣客家聯合總會的前總會長宋玉琴,紐英倫客家鄉親會會長劉秀春。
(謝開明攝)