NeighborWorks® America welcomed leaders from across its nearly 250-member network to Washington, D.C., last week, for its annual Executive Symposium. The gathering gave leaders – and, for the first time in person, board members – a chance to connect, to innovate, and to talk about solutions for the nation’s housing crisis.

This year, about 220 network leaders and 120 board members joined in the event. The theme was Collective Leadership: Building Strength for Today & Tomorrow!

Across the country, renters are facing rising costs, limited housing supply and increasing financial pressure. At the same time, housing counselors are on the front lines, helping households navigate complex systems, avoid eviction and build pathways to stability. 

In this moment, credentials matter. 

NeighborWorks® America convened a Housing Supply Solutions Lab last week to provide affordable housing and community development practitioners in the network a chance to dig deeply into innovative building techniques, zoning and land-use reform, and attainability and affordability. The lab format allowed the participants a chance not just to listen, but to speak, learn and solve challenges together. They left the eight-hour session with new connections and new ideas. 

NeighborWorks® America’s ‘Bridging the Missing Middle’ Survey Reveals Broad Support for Diverse, Affordable Housing Options 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 

Contact: 
Arian Tyler 
Director of Communications | NeighborWorks America 
[email protected] | [email protected] 

NeighborWorks® America’s ‘Bridging the Missing Middle’ Survey Reveals Broad Support for Diverse, Affordable Housing Options 

19 out of 20 Americans across generations agree on the need for attainable, inclusive housing. 

Asian Community Development Corp., a Massachusetts nonprofit that creates and preserves affordable and vibrant neighborhoods in Chinatown and Greater Boston, celebrated becoming an official member of the NeighborWorks® America network last week. The event, held in conjunction with a groundbreaking for a new affordable apartment building with a ground-floor library – the first public library in Boston’s Chinatown since 1956 – marked the fifth and final new affiliate in the NeighborWorks network for 2025.

NeighborWorks America Awards $11.8 Million in Fifth Tranche of FY 2025 Flexible Impact Grants

For Immediate Release 

July 31, 2025 

Contact: Douglas Robinson

[email protected]

NeighborWorks America Awards $11.8 Million in Fifth Tranche of FY 2025 Flexible Impact Grants

Fiscal Year 2025 Investment of $71.5 Million To Date to Nonprofits Delivering Market-Based Solutions to the Nation’s Housing Supply and Affordability Crisis