I have for the last several years been working with youth who transition from the foster care system. Over the last for years I have watched these youth have begun to break down the barriers that have kept the community around them from understanding their struggles and their needs. I will never forget being at a Youth Transition Action Team meeting (YTAT) when a youth had mentioned the difficulty in finding housing and being homeless. Our local District attorney spoke up after a youth and stated that he did not understand why they could not just go home. It was at this point that we realized it was time to educate other professionals in our rural community what the lives of a current and former foster youth could potentially be like. This was the exact reason that New Ways to Work had come to work with our community http://www.newwaystowork.org/about.html They brought with them the philosophy of “All youth and one System”. This is a system and a philosophy that I have faith will bring us back to the concept of Community involvement and support in raising our youth. The idea is that you design services for at risk youth but ensure that services are that are offered comprehensive and appropriate to meet the needs of all youth. New Ways to Work maintains that if you build a connected, comprehensive infrastructure that addresses academic achievement, career development, youth leadership, community services and supports youth in your community will find better opportunities of success.
For the last two weeks I have been involved in several activities and events thatare intended to improve services to youth in Humboldt County. The first was a training put on by the Y.O.U.T.H. training project. This is a group of former foster youth who provide training for professionals all over the state of California. It is intended to provide in site into a youth experience into the system, and provides suggestions of how to better serve youth in the foster care system. There are a variety of interactive methods used to provide these experiences to include the use of digital stories, games , youth panels usually assembled of local youth. I have attended this training on a yearly basis and it is always a excellent reminder presents new ideas of how to effectively serve youth.
Later on that week we had a Educational luncheon hosting foster youth at College of the Redwoods. This event is designed to provide a encouragement for youth to begin considered they too have an opportunity to attend college and explore the resources that are out there. The first one of these conferences was held at HSU and was very formal for youth. This one was certainly more youth oriented, bu less attended. I find it odd that they schedule it in the middle of the day and have to pull youth out of school to attend, Again it is us trying to work around or 9-5 day( non youth friendly hours).
The last event was a youth focus group in the Hoopa area. I actually recruited the youth to attend. these youth varied in ages from 15 -25 and had been effected by foster care, or substance abuse, or mental health or the juvenile justice system had . These youth were extremely interactive and clearly frustrated by the lack of youth friendly services in the valley. This information will be added to the book of proceeding that was created by the HCTAYC collaboration that is heading up the drive to build a Youth Center in Humboldt county.

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