In places rural and urban and with activities that ranged from beautification and barbecues, education and engagement -- that's how NeighborWorks network organizations across the country celebrated NeighborWorks Week. They celebrated with service and spotlighted the people at the center of it all: the neighbors who make up the neighborhoods. Find just a few pictures below.

"Big Mama" – this is how Tanya Westmoreland is known in Green Bay, Wisconsin. Kids in the community stop and tell her about their day. They stand a little straighter when she's around and they want her to be proud. She is proud – of the kids and of the community she's called home for 24 years.  

The 40th annual NeighborWorks Week saw 150 events across the country this year. They ranged from classes on homebuying to park cleanups to social media campaigns and more. In some towns, volunteers gathered to spruce up homes for older residents. In others, it was working on a community center or beautifying a community garden. NeighborWorks Week is held each year to bring communities together and to highlight the way NeighborWorks network organizations empower communtiies for success.

NeighborWorks network organizations across the country celebrated NeighborWorks Week with paint, plants, trash pickups, cards, signs, hammers, nails, food, and all of the other trappings you’d expect in a community celebration. Held each year the first full week in June, NeighborWorks Week highlights the collective impact of NeighborWorks America’s nearly 250 network nonprofits. The week, celebrated nationally since 1983, also celebrates the resiliency and strength of communities.

Victoria Barajas was stressed. "Everybody was struggling with the pandemic and with unemployment," she says. "Everything was scary." Barajas herself had been laid off from her temporary job when businesses in San Diego shut down in 2020. So, she hiked up Cowles Mountain. It was important to stay active, and being in nature soothed her.