Saturday, June 21, 2008

Budget Vigils at New York City Hall

As the New York City Council and Mayor negotiate the FY ‘09 City budget, the CTW has been a daily presence on the steps of City Hall, advocating for funding that serves disconnected youth. To see our budget priorities, visit the Resoruces/Documents section of this website.

Many organizations and individuals have joined us in the effort to express a strong and unified voice in support of our programs and young people. Most importantly, young people who participate in programs targetting disconnected youth have also been present to advocate for themselves and their peers. Pictured below are two youth from Brooklyn, Jennifer and Jenna, who attend one of the programs provided by Opportunities for a Better Tomorrow (OBT).

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Tuesday, June 10, 2008

The Disconnected Youth Crisis in a National Spotlight

NY Times Columnist Bob Herbert recently wrote an Op-Ed that addresses the current civic crisis concerning disconnected youth.  David Jones, Executive Director of Community Service Society — one of the Campaign for Tomorrow’s Workforce’s lead coordinators — was also quoted. This piece is yet another in an increasing blitz of media attention that recognizes the need to act now in order to ensure a stable and sustainable society.

From the NY Times, June 10th, 2008:

“Out of Sight”

When the dismal unemployment numbers were released on Friday (at the same time that oil prices were surging to record highs), I thought about the young people at the bottom of the employment ladder.

Below the bottom, actually.

A shudder went through the markets when the Labor Department reported that the official jobless rate had jumped one-half a percentage point in May to 5.5 percent — the sharpest spike in 22 years.

The young people I’m talking about wouldn’t have noticed. These are the teenagers and young adults — roughly 16 to 24 years old — who are not in school and basically have no hope of finding work. The bureaucrats compiling the official unemployment rate don’t even bother counting these young people. They are no one’s constituency. They might as well not exist.

Except that they do exist. There are four million or more of these so-called disconnected youths across the country. They hang out on street corners in cities large and small — and increasingly in suburban and rural areas.

If you ask how they survive from day to day, the most likely response is: “I hustle,” which could mean anything from giving haircuts in a basement to washing a neighbor’s car to running the occasional errand.

Or it could mean petty thievery or drug dealing or prostitution or worse.

This is the flip side of the American dream. The United States economy, which has trouble producing enough jobs to keep the middle class intact, has left these youngsters all-but-completely behind.

“These kids are being challenged in ways that my generation was not,” said David Jones, the president of the Community Service Society of New York, which tries to develop ways to connect these young men and women with employment opportunities, or get them back into school.

It is extremely difficult because, for the most part, the jobs are not there and the educational establishment is having a hard enough time teaching the kids who are still in school.

“Schools have not made much of an effort to bring this population back in,” said Mr. Jones. “Once you fall out of the system, you’re basically on no one’s programmatic radar screen.”

So these kids drift. Some are drawn to gangs. A disproportionate number become involved in crime. It is a tragic story, and very few people are paying attention.

The economic policies of the past few decades have favored the wealthy and the well-connected to a degree that has been breathtaking to behold. The Nation magazine has devoted its current issue to the Gilded Age-type inequality that has been the result.

Just a little bit of help to the millions of youngsters trying to get their first tentative foothold in that economy should not be too much to ask.

It’s not as if these kids don’t want to work. Many of them search and search until they finally become discouraged. The summer job market, which has long been an important first step in preparing teenagers for the world of work, is shaping up this year as the weakest in more than half a century, according to the Center for Labor Market Studies at Northeastern University in Boston.

Now, with the overall economy deteriorating, the situation for poorly educated young people will only grow worse. As Andrew Sum, director of the Center for Labor Market Studies, told The Times recently:

“When you get into a recession, kids always get hit the hardest. Kids always go to the back of the hiring queue. Now, they find themselves with a lot of other people in line ahead of them.”

As the ranks of these youngsters grow, so does their potential to become a destabilizing factor in the society.

More important, the U.S. needs the untapped talent (and the potential buying power) in this large pool of young people, just as it needs the talents of the many other Americans of all ages whose energy, intelligence and creativity are wasted in an economic system that is not geared toward providing jobs for everyone who wants to work.

America needs to dream bigger, and in this election year, job creation should be issue No. 1. If I were running for president, I would pull together the smartest minds I could find from government, the corporate world, the labor movement, academia, the nonprofits and ordinary working men and women to see what could be done to spark the creation of decent jobs on a scale that would bring the U.S. as close as possible to full employment.

We’ve maxed out the credit cards, floated mindlessly in stock market bubbles, refinanced mortgages to death — now’s the time to figure out how to put all Americans to work.

-Bob Herbert

 

 

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Friday, June 6, 2008

Skills2Compete NY Launched

S2CNY is a non-partisan initiative to advance the joint interests of community-based training providers, community and technical colleges, employers, industry associations, unions, policymakers and foundations to strengthen New York’s global competitiveness. Linked to the national Skills2Compete campaign, as well as other regional efforts, the initiative’s objective is to promote policies and financial investments at the city and state levels that move New York toward guaranteeing that every New Yorker has access to at least 2 years of education or training past high school during his or her working lifetime. S2CNY is being organized by the NYC Employment & Training Coalition. For more information go to www.nycetc.org/s2cny
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Monday, June 2, 2008

Conference on Mental Health and Literacy for Disconnected Youth

The Coalition of Behavioral Health Agencies is hosting a conference on June 23rd.
Please see the information from Marc Kutner below.

We would like to formally invite you to attend the Center for Rehabilitation and Recovery’s one-day conference, Reading between the Lines: Re-thinking Mental Health and Literacy for Youth in Transition, to be held at New York University’s Kimmel Center on June 23rd, 2008.  

 

The first of its kind in New York City, this conference will bring together experts from the worlds of education and mental health to investigate how these highly interrelated systems can more effectively collaborate with one another and better reach New York City’s  disconnected youth – older adolescents and young adults - ages 16 to 25. 

 

We know that cognitive functioning, literacy and the ability to learn are interconnected, and that older adolescents and young adults with emotional and behavioral problems confront multiple barriers to education, a job and a career.  In our efforts to promote the employment goals of young people with psychiatric disabilities, we need to learn how to better address these barriers. Simply put, without the ability to read and write, the outcomes which many, if not most, consumers hope to achieve – including employment and a higher education – remain out of reach.

 

Details and registration are available on line at www.coalitionny.org/the_center/ .  Should you have any questions, please feel free to contact either Alysia Pascaris at (212) 742-1600, ext. 201, or Marc Kutner, x204. Please note that we are actively encouraging the participation of consumers of the mental health system, youth and students.  

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