YAP South Sudanese Fellow: The America I Knew in Movies Versus the Real America

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By Jacob Ngor Khot Garang

Guest Writer

As a young man growing up in Africa, I never thought that one day I would have a chance or an opportunity to visit one of the world’s most powerful nations, the United States. I am sharing my personal experience with traveling to America for the first time to participate in the Community Engagement Exchange program which provides emerging international leaders a unique opportunity a fellowship through organizations such as Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc., a national nonprofit offering community-based youth justice, child welfare, and neighborhood violence prevention alternatives.

When I left South Sudan for the U.S. earlier this year, I knew that I would have the chance to learn many new things. I also knew I was leaving a place that taught me resilience and provided me with a strong work ethic, but I was not naive to the fact that my native country has shown me at a very young age about the darkest part of humanity which includes killings and hatred. A civil war in Sudan between two rival armed entities has caused many people to be killed, hurt, or flee the country.

My trip to the U.S. started on a flight from Juba International Airport in South Sudan through the Addis Ababa Bole International Airport in Ethiopia with a layover in Paris, France, then to Detroit, Mich., and to my final destination of Austin, Texas where I am working to learn more about YAP’s trauma-informed behavioral health programs. Stepping foot on my first flight left me with a feeling of both joy and sadness. I was happy because I was traveling to engage in the CEE program and work with YAP. On the other hand, I was saddened while making the trip because many people on the plane from South Sudan were traveling to Cairo, Egypt in search of better medical attention from their ailments.

I arrived Ethiopia at 7 p.m. The airport was packed with travelers who were moving throughout the airport during its busiest peak hours. I had to wait for a connecting flight for a while and never knew how to change the little bucks we had into Ethiopian Birr currency so that we could buy some snacks. There was a Swiss man who was on the flight who had been in South Sudan since 2016 working with vulnerable children. He showed us a few pictures of the projects he has been spearheading and I was impressed. He was traveling to Switzerland to see his family. This man also bought me some food and water as I waited for my next flight. I have never seen that kind of love before; he was just being kind. We spent some time together in the airport and then parted ways. The next journey I was about to embark on was more fun and the longest leg of the pilgrimage. It was enjoyable because unlike the previous flight, all of those onboard were traveling for different reasons like going to see their families and others were on traveling on business.

I assumed that some of the passengers on the flight made a lot of money and were enjoying life. It was at that moment that I realized that my perspective would never be the same. I finally reached Detroit around 1 p.m. and the first thing that caught my attention after leaving the airport was all of the fancy cars. I have never seen such cars before. They were new and awesome. I was asking myself why they didn’t have old cars and the second thing I noticed was all of the snow. The snow was beautiful to me because it was my first time seeing it. However, because I wasn’t used to the snow, I found it hard to deal with. In South Sudan, it is hot throughout the year. How do people cope with snow?

My first week in the U.S. was a struggle. The food wasn’t that good because everything was new to me. I believe that our food system in South Sudan is good compared to American cuisine because we eat organic food, straight from the farm. The difference in food between the U.S. and South Sudan is that we don’t have enough food. Although we have fertile soil, we cannot grow our own food because of insecurity.

I always thought of America as a perfect nation and indeed it is because the people here are really great. But I also learned about the homeless; those who I assume feel invisible to the outside world. I thought everyone was working and making money in the U.S., but I was wrong. Money doesn’t grow on trees here and if you lose your job, you may end up on the street. I also learned about school shootings done by school children and that broke my heart. I can’t believe kids have access to guns and I was told that it is not illegal to own a gun, but it is a crime if you use that gun to kill. I was shocked to learn all of this and wondered why would anyone need a gun in the first place.  

America has taught me some things that I never knew when I was in South Sudan. Those things include gratitude and time management. We have time back home and really don’t know what to do with it. In this country, time is a resource and you must make good use of it. Everyone here is appreciative and people always wear smiles on their faces, something I have missed for years since the war in South Sudan started. It’s nice to see Americans saying thank you and speaking so friendly to one another, which is the opposite of what I have witnessed in South Sudan recently.

In my country, and in my opinion, people are always sad and this also forces you to be sad even when you have some reasons to be happy. This is because of the long protracted wars in my country. In South Sudan, if you have five reasons to be happy, you will have 20 more reasons to be sad. To be continued. Part 2 will be published in April.

Participants in the CEE Program conducting civil society practicum are working alongside YAP staff members in Austin, Houston, Chicago, and Philadelphia. For 12 weeks, the international fellows will learn firsthand knowledge and experience as part of their assignment to collaborate with YAP on civil society initiatives and prepare to undertake community engagement projects in their home countries. The CEE Program is sponsored by the U.S. Department of State with funding provided by the U.S. Government and supported in its implementation by IREX. 

A national nonprofit in 35 states and Washington, D.C., YAP is the leading nonprofit provider of services that reduce the overreliance on youth incarceration, residential care, and group home foster placements. YAP is in its 50th year of implementing its unique YAPWrap™ individual and family wraparound services model to transform public systems to become more effective and equitable. The nonprofit also has international partnerships in Australia, Guatemala, Ireland, and Sierra Leone.

About the Author: Jacob Ngor Khot Garang (He/Him) is a South Sudanese human rights activist, writer and a U.S State Department 2024 CEE fellow currently interning with Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. in Austin, Texas

From Intern to Advocate: Harley Pressel is Making a Difference for Kids on Probation

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York, Pa. – “A pretty cool chick; and an absolutely wonderful human being who gets along with everybody.” That’s how Youth Advocate Programs (YAP™), Inc. York County, Pennsylvania Lead Advocate Harley Pressel’s supervisor describes her. 

“Harley really has built a phenomenal relationship with our referring agency,” said YAP York County, Pa. Director Natasha Kara. “They love her to death and she is an amazing member to our team.”

A partnership with York County Probation Services’ Juvenile Wellness Court, the YAP York County, Pa., Youth Justice Program provides systems-involved young people ages 14-18 with a neighborhood-based Advocate who is trained to empower them with tools to see and nurture their strengths.

“I wanted to take a moment to extend my appreciation for our ongoing partnership with Youth Advocate Programs and most specifically, for Harley’s role as a member of our team,” said Juvenile Wellness Court Coordinator/Specialty Programs Supervisor Danielle Salisbury. “Harley is truly an asset to our team.  She is professional, energetic, and hard working.”

Harley Pressel.

YAP connects program participants and their parents and guardians with resources to meet their individualized economic, educational, emotional, and basic needs.

In its pre-50th anniversary year, YAP is a national nonprofit it 35 states and Washington, D.C. that partners with youth justice, child welfare, behavioral health, education, public safety, and other systems to deliver community-based services as alternatives to youth incarceration, residential care, and neighborhood violence. The nonprofit’s national headquarters is in Harrisburg, PA, and the York County office is one of about 30 county YAP offices in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

The York County program has the capacity to serve up to 20 youths, but currently has approximately eight program participants all assigned to Pressel who started with YAP as an intern her senior year at York College of Pennsylvania in 2022. York County Probation Services’ Juvenile Wellness Court refers many program participants to YAP due to substance and or mental health issues. Pressel sees each of them once – sometimes twice a week – and connects with them by being a confidant who offers encouragement, assistance and takes them on an outings to the mall or park if they’ve reached their goals.

“I definitely try to get on their level,” said Pressel, adding that she makes it a point to also communicate with the youths’ parents or guardians. “I am not a probation officer. I am there to help support them in any way possible. That helps them to be honest throughout the program.”

October 2024 marks two years since the York County YAP program got off the ground. Kara and Pennsylvania Regional Director Bob Swanson aligned the program to address the needs and trauma of youth who are on probation.

Swanson said Pressel abilities are a testament to the dedication of YAP staff who help change the lives of young people.

“Harley was the Advocate who Natasha went to right out of the gate; with confidence she would be the staff who could and would provide the best support,” Swanson said. “To hear probation’s feedback really affirms Natasha’s assessment of Harley’s abilities.”

Pressel is extremely proud of all of her program participants, but highlighted one in particular who was able to complete the program in four months, two months earlier than it normally takes. She said he was able to get off drugs, devoted his all to the program, had straight A’s in school and even applied for scholarships including the Tom Jeffers Endowment Fund for Continuing Education to further his education.

“It was good for the other participants to see him doing well,” Pressel added. “I just feel empowered to do what I need to do to help youth. I have always had a passion to want to help others.”

For more information on YAP, visit yapinc.org or follow the organization on X at YAPInc.

With Help from Youth Advocate Programs, Julian is Off Drugs and Turning His Life Around

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Providence, R.I. – With the help of Youth Advocate Programs (YAP™), Inc., former program participant Julian was able to get off drugs and get back to high school.

“My [YAP] Advocates were very understanding and patient,” Julian said, adding they helped him obtain a social security card so he could get a job. “They would help sit down with me to get myself on the right track and work with me on my goals.”

According to the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, there is a link between substance abuse and delinquency.

“A good 60-70% of youths we serve in the youth justice system typically have substance abuse issues,” said Regional Director Estrella Griggs (Licensed Professional Counselor & Licensed Chemical Dependency Counselor) of Santa Fe Youth Services in Texas, a Division of YAP. “In Sante Fe we provide substance abuse programs that are specifically designed for adolescents. All of our programs are individualized with the program participant receiving an assigned counselor who will work with them through the process of recovery.”

In its pre-50th year, YAP is the leading nonprofit provider of trauma-informed services that reduce the nation’s over reliance on youth incarceration, residential care, and group home foster placements. In 35 states and Washington, D.C., and headquartered in Harrisburg, Pa., YAP partners with public systems to provide community- based wraparound and behavioral health services as an alternative to out-of-home placement. YAP also uses its wrap around services approach in its community violence intervention (CVI) work in several cities across the country.

Julian was referred to YAP for substance abuse issues and was required by the court to complete three months in the program to have his drug case dropped. Julian said he first started doing drugs at age 14 and got off them at 18. Born in Texas, he was adopted by his grandmother and moved to Rhode Island with her when he was two years old.

Julian.

“Julian has come a long way,” said YAP Providence County, R.I. Assistant Director Allen Leach. “In the beginning he was doing pretty badly. He wasn’t going to school at all but now he’s graduated from the program and is doing well.”

Leach was on the team of YAP staff and Advocates who worked with Julian. Often hired from the neighborhoods they serve, YAP Advocates are trained to empower program participants to see their strengths while connecting them and their families to wraparound services that include individualized educational, economic, and emotional tools to help them achieve their goals and re-set their lives.

Aside from his day job, Julian is an artist and makes music. His next goal is to get a car.

“He has come a long way from where he was and what he was going through to where he is now,” Leach said. “He is spiritual and is into crystals and that type of thing. He goes to work, goes to appointments, and still is on top of his future.”

“If it wasn’t for YAP, I probably would be dead or in jail; something drastic like that,” Julian added. “YAP is an amazing program. All of the staff are very understanding and helpful people. It’s nothing but positive energy to be around.”

Learn more about YAP and how you can support the national nonprofit’s work at yapinc.org/donate.

Follow the nonprofit on X @YAPInc.

Youth Advocate Programs (YAP™) Dallas Leader Recognized for Violence Intervention Work

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Dallas, Texas – The Director of Youth Advocate Programs (YAP™) Inc.’s Dallas Cred violence interruption team is a nominee of The Epiphany Advocates of Change Award. He will be recognized during the April 6 Inaugural Life to Legacy Gala hosted by the Bishop Omar Jahwar Foundation.

Victor Alvelais has been a part of the Dallas Cred team since its inception and has led the team since 2022. YAP launched Dallas CRED in May 2021 as part of the City of Dallas to include violence interrupters in its public safety strategy. The violence interruption approach was recommended as part of the Mayor’s Task Force on Safe Communities. Today Dallas Cred is funded through the Communities Foundation of Texas (CFT) W.W. Caruth, Jr. Fund.

YAP is a national nonprofit in 35 states and Washington, D.C. partnering with youth justice, child welfare, behavioral health, education, and other systems to deliver community-based services as an alternative to incarceration and residential care, and group home foster placements. YAP’s evidence-based wraparound services model is also part of the nonprofit’s growing community violence intervention and prevention work in communities across the nation. 

 “Bishop Omar was a pioneer in brining community violence intervention services to Dallas. I am honored and humbled to be acknowledged as a nominee for this award,” Alvelais said. “This is a testament to the hard work that the Dallas Cred team does in helping the community and our neighbors; and I’m honored to have the opportunity to support and learn from each of my co-workers and the people we serve every day.”

YAP Dallas Cred Director Victor Alvelais.

According to the Bishop Omar Jahwar Foundation, nominees are Dallas residents who demonstrated the spirit of Bishop Jahwar through business excellence, ethical standards and behaviors, and the desire to uphold social responsibility within their communities. The Bishop Omar Jahwar Foundation partners with change agents who impact lives in underserved communities and break down barriers that prevent people from seeing themselves as God sees them.

“The Bishop Omar Jahwar Foundation partners with change agents who impact lives in underserved communities and break barriers that prevent people from seeing themselves as God sees them. We do this by providing pathways to opportunity with resources, support, funding, workshops, and tools,” said Fayth Jefferson, sister of Omar Jahwar. “The Bishop Omar Jahwar Gala  is our inaugural signature fundraising event to highlight and invest in individuals, groups, and organizations who inspire their communities.”

Dallas Cred focuses on identifying individuals who meet criteria for being at the highest risk levels of being engaged in violence. These include people who have recently returned home from jail or prison or are otherwise justice system-involved; individuals who are gang-affiliated; and those who have recently lost someone to gun violence and at risk for retaliating. At the same time, the team works to help individuals throughout these neighborhoods see their strengths while connecting them with tools to help them put their lives on a positive course. In addition to Alvelais, Dallas Cred consists of Violence Interrupters Tonya Sparks, Juan Perez and Credible Messenger Untruan Grant.

“Everyone brings a separate piece to the puzzle to effect positive change. Myself and Juan were recently from prison after serving 26 years and Tonya and Untruan have been doing this work for over a decade,” Alvelais said. The whole Dallas Cred team together brings a lot of unique skills and qualities from which I am constantly learning from.”

After serving 26 years in prison, Alvelais returned home to Dallas where he grew up and dedicated his life to making sure others did not choose a path that led to prison.

“Sadly, I have a shared lived experience with the community,” Alvelais added. “It was because of some poor decisions I made in the past. Being a part of Dallas Cred is part of my own personal road to redemption for which there is never an end goal except to continue to make a difference.”

While in prison, Alvelais worked as a coordinator for the Virginia Department of Corrections Veterans Housing Community where he established the Veterans Housing Unit, created a rehabilitative program for residents, organized work projects for the vets, and advocated for resources and opportunities for them. Prior to that, he led the National Second Chance Organization, providing redemption resources to incarcerated individuals, leading fundraisers, advocating for second-chance opportunities for incarcerated people, and publishing a newsletter.  Alvelais is a graduate of Franklin D. Roosevelt High School in Dallas and the author of L.I.F.E. Sentences, a daily affirmation book aimed at preparing incarcerated people for a successful release.

The Life to Legacy Gala will be held at 7 p.m. at Gilley’s Dallas, 650 North Avenue I in Dallas. For tickets and more information, visit bojf.orgBishop Omar died in 2021.

Learn more about YAP and how you can support the nonprofit’s work at YAPInc.org. Follow the organization on X @YAPInc.  

‘If I Can Do it, So Can You’ — LaShawn Jenkins Connects Systems-Involved Kids with Tools to Turn their Lives Around

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Chicago, IL — At age 27, LaShawn Jenkins knows all too well the unique value she brings to her work and the lives of the young people she serves at Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. in Chicago.  

When she was 15, Jenkins herself was a YAP participant; and like the youth she now works with at the agency, she faced complex challenges. 

“I was very stubborn — didn’t want to do anything; afraid to let them [the YAP team] come in and help me.” 

Founded in 1975, YAP is a national nonprofit in 35 states and Washington, DC that partners with youth justice, child welfare, behavioral health, education, and other systems to deliver community-based services as an alternative to incarceration and residential treatment and placements. YAP’s evidence-based wraparound services model is also part of the nonprofit’s growing community violence intervention and prevention work in communities across the nation. Using zip code-based staff recruitment, YAP hires culturally responsive Advocates, Behavioral Health staff, and Credible Messengers to work with young people and their families at home, school, and other community-based sites. YAP teams are trained to empower program participants with skills to put their lives on a positive track by connecting them with individualized tools — including basic needs resources — to help them see and nurture their strengths and give back to their communities. 

Jenkins entered the child welfare system at birth.

“I was born into foster care,” Jenkins said. “I was adopted by a very kind couple when I was eight. They had two kids and they also had adopted my biological brother, but after being bounced from home-to-home, I had trouble trusting people and was having a lot of emotional issues.” 

In addition to moving a lot as a child in the foster care system, by the time she was adopted, Jenkins had lived briefly with her father before she was a toddler and had vivid memories of visiting him after that when he was in prison.

By age 8, Jenkins had lived with many families.

Compounding her pain and confusion, she had never lived with her biological mother and was aware that she had other siblings throughout the city whom she didn’t know. 

By her early teens, Jenkins had experienced multiple arrests and placements in numerous detention and residential care facilities. She said that while her adopted parents never turned away from her, a judge returned her to the child welfare system. That was when she became a participant in YAP where she began to work with a team of Advocates who believed in her from the start and never gave up on her. 

“Marlon, Antoine, E’Ron, Lanita, Jasmine, Shaquita, Nikki – they saw something I didn’t see in myself,” she said. 

By then, Jenkins was a freshman at a high school that specializes in working with students with serious behavioral and other health needs.  

“My Advocates helped me get back into regular school; and when I would mess up, they encouraged me, telling me, ‘You’re better than this.” 

Jenkins thanks YAP for helping her rebuild her relationship with the couple who adopted her before her entry into the youth justice system and re-entry into the child welfare system.

Jenkins said her YAP Advocates helped her strengthen her bond with her adopted foster parents (the Jenkins’) and empowered her with tools that helped her begin to rebuild a relationship with her biological father and start fresh with her mother and siblings with whom she had recently connected. 

“Lanita helped me with the situation with my mom — helped me understand her story. She met my mom and would invite her and some of my other siblings out with us to help build that bond,” Jenkins said. “If I never listed to Lanita, I would never know what my mom went through herself.”  

Jenkins thanks her YAP team for supporting her throughout her high school years.

She credits her whole team of YAP Advocates for helping her stay on track and graduate high school.  

In 2023, Jenkins was back at YAP as a young adult, but not as a program participant. This time, she was applying for a job. 

“I wanted to come back and give back to kids the way my Advocates gave back to me,” she said.  

So far, as a YAP Advocate, Jenkins has worked with nine program participants. She said they are all making progress, “baby steps,” as she described it. 

“Building trust is the first step. I give them hope that I’m not going to just be in and out of their lives. They need to know someone will be there steady,” she said. 

Jenkins’ superpower as a YAP Advocate is the experience that she shares with those she serves — kids who are systems involved with complex childhoods that are difficult to navigate. 

“I tell them, If I can do it, so can you.” 

Learn more about YAP and how you can support the nonprofit’s work at YAPInc.org. Follow the organization @YAPInc.  

With Tools from His YAP Advocate, Shamarion is Taking Steps Towards a Positive Future

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At age 16, Shamarion has begun to recognize and appreciate his strengths – that he’s smart, respectful, cares about his mother, and is a great big brother to his siblings. Fulton County, Ga. Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. Program Director Haasan Smith has been working with Shamarion, encouraging him, and connecting him with tools to nurture his strengths.

YAP CEO/President Gary Ivory and YAP VP of SE LaVeisha Cummings.
Shamarion and mom, Aneka, with YAP Board members.

YAP is a national nonprofit in 35 states and Washington, D.C. that hires and trains culturally responsive Advocates, credible messengers, and behavioral health professionals to deliver community-based alternative-to-incarceration/placement, aftercare, diversion, and public safety services.

YAP Board Member Clarence Campbell giving guidance to Shamarion.

Shamarion said he landed in YAP after refusing to comply with his principal following a school fight and other incidents where he was making decisions that got him into trouble. He credits Smith for helping him navigate decisions and distractions.

“He helped me to mature and grow as a young man,” Shamarion said.

Shamarion, Fulton County YAP Program Director Haasan Smith and YAP VP of SE LaVeisha Cummings.

The Fulton County program is one of six YAP pilots launched in 2019 and 2020 that a Center for Juvenile Justice Reform at Georgetown University report found to be “extremely successful” in serving youth and families.

YAP Board Chair and Ga. Rep., Hon. Teddy Reese moderating a panel discussion featuring Shamarion

Smith invited Shamarion and his mother to share their story with members of the YAP Board of Directors during a recent meeting in Atlanta.

YAP Board Members Janet Lincoln and Kamia Brown.

“Some people don’t have the right people to lead them and guide them to the right choices and he helped me with that,” Shamarion told the YAP Board members when sharing about his experience working with Smith. “Now, I feel like I’m better at making choices and thinking through some of the things I do. I’m not saying I’m perfect because I’m still growing, and I still making mistakes, but I’m better at how I carry myself.”

YAP Fulton County Program Director Haasan Smith.
Mother and son.

Shamarion aspires to be a successful real estate broker and music industry artist.

He’s a great kid who just needed to see and believe in his strengths,” Smith said. “I’m helping him figure that out and will be introducing him to people in the fields he’s interested in to provide some additional support and guidance.”

Learn more about YAP at YAPInc.org.

Overcoming his own struggles, New Harrisburg YAP Director Helps Others Tackle Theirs

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Harrisburg, Pa. – Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. Dauphin County Community Treatment Center (CTC) Director Craig Gittens connects with young people before their actions could lead to lifelong repercussions in adulthood. 

Many of the program participants CTC serves are inner city, gang affiliated, have minor drug and firearm charges, and some use marijuana to self-medicate from other issues they may be experiencing, according to Gittens. 

“I was working with grown men with issues with substance abuse, incarceration, abandonment and rejection from fathers,” Gittens said. “Now I get to work with youth so maybe we can stop the process before problems continue to grow, take root and create damage. The youth we work with think their biggest penalty is going back to jail but the biggest penalty is that they’re dead on a T-shirt.”

Headquartered in Harrisburg, YAP is a 49-year-old national nonprofit in 35 states and Washington, D.C., that partners with youth justice, child welfare, and public safety systems to deliver community-based services as alternatives to incarceration and placement. YAP also uses its community-based wraparound services model as part of its  public safety  and violence interruption work. 

In an interview with theneighborhoodadvocate.org, Gittens, a father of six – four of whom are teenagers – said he has been drug and alcohol free for 1,586 days (and counting). A drug and alcohol counselor and public speaker, he has led YAP’s Dauphin County CTC since August 2023. CTC program participants are ages of 14-18. They attend the afterschool program where they are fed, get help with homework, participate in recreational activities, complete chores, and receive treatment and training tools to equip them to make better decisions.

“In order to teach kids how to kill their demons, you must first kill your own,” Gittens said. “One of my youth has had three of his friends die. You have to know what the struggle is and it doesn’t necessarily have to be a background of violence. If you come in there perfect, they don’t want to deal with you. I share that I have done things, spent time in jail, but I don’t always share the substance abuse part because for a lot of them they haven’t had major drug abuse issues.”

A Bronx, N.Y., native, Gittens has lived in Boston and Atlanta but eventually put roots in Harrisburg where as a little kid, he attended Bible Camp. He said although he had it rough growing up, his family sustained him, saying he grew up in a different era compared to today.

“It was a horrible time, but our family unit was so strong that I was protected. It was still a strong sense of community and I think that is what is different now,” Gittens said, adding that he grew up in poverty and in the projects. “It may be that parenting or the legal system has failed young people nowadays; but we are doing what we can to help step in and fill those voids. A lot of them fall into that false narrative that gangs are a family, but it has dire consequences.”

Gittens said he didn’t know anything about YAP before he noticed the job opening, read the mission of the organization and applied.

“We have a great community here as far as the people that I work with,” Gittens said. “I work with a great group of people. There are easier ways to make the money we pay them. The people here are here for a purpose.”

In December, Gittens received the 2023 Dauphin County Male Recovery Champion of the Year Award from the Dauphin County Commissioners in recognition of his efforts to support those who are fighting to make positive changes in their lives.

YAP CTC Director Craig Gittens received the 2023 Dauphin County Male Recovery Champion of the Year Award from the Dauphin County Commissioners.

“Craig is the real deal,” said Central PA Regional Director Bob Swanson. “He brings passion in supporting our youth, day after day.”

Gittens speaks at schools and works with organizations to help reduce the stigma with substance abuse disorder.

“Kids are not going to do what you say because you tell them,” he said. “It’s based on relationships and trustworthiness and that is what we do. Some people just want to incarcerate our youth, but YAP is an alternative to youth incarceration and we have to invest in our children and plant seeds. We may never see the seeds develop, but we plant seeds of hope, trust and values.”

Gittens dedicates his work to his mother Thealo Gittens who passed away two years ago of pancreatic cancer.

“She prayed for me for two decades to get my life together,” he added. “I dedicate what I do to my mom.”

For more information on YAP, visit yapinc.org or follow the agency on X, formerly Twitter,  @YAPInc.

YAP Roanoke’s Youth and Families Receive Holiday Gifts Thanks to Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc.

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Roanoke, Va. – Program participants of Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. Roanoke received holiday toys and essential items, thanks to the generosity of the Eta Lambda Chapter of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc. at Virginia Tech University.

About 10 members of the fraternity brought gifts and other needed items and donated them to YAP Roanoke youth on Dec. 15 ahead of the holiday season.

“On behalf of YAP Roanoke I just want to thank the members of the Eta Lambda Chapter of Omega Psi Phi for collaborating with our program,” said YAP Roanoke Program Director Breyon Fraction. “We are grateful for the support and dedication of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity members and look forward to future collaborations that will continue to make a positive impact on the lives of those we serve. We are blessed to have young men in our community making an impact and building relationships with organizations like YAP.”

A national nonprofit in 35 states and the District of Columbia, YAP partners with youth justice, child welfare, education, behavioral health, and other systems to provide community-based services as more effective and equitable alternatives to youth incarceration and residential care. YAP also partners with public safety systems to implement neighborhood anti-violence initiatives.

YAP Roanoke’s youth justice program participants are provided with neighborhood-based Advocates who support their families with economic, emotional and education wraparound support. The Roanoke program also has a behavioral health program where youth are supported with intensive-therapy.

“The collaboration not only reflects our shared commitment to uplifting the youth and families in Roanoke, but also signifies the power of community partnerships,” said Fraction, who has been a member of Omega Psi Phi for 25 years. “Each Omega chapter administers internationally mandated programs annually, aligning seamlessly with the work Roanoke YAP does in the community. These programs, which include voter registration, illiteracy programs, mentoring programs, and support for charitable organizations, mirror the YAP mission of advocating for and actively serving the community.”

The students worked alongside Fraction, YAP Roanoke Assistant Director Tasha Saul, and YAP Advocate Jamie Tarnacki to ensure that program participants received basic needs items.

“By partnering with Youth Advocate Programs this winter, we were able to fellowship and bring joy to the children of the New River Valley area,” said Eta Lambda Chapter President Michael Roberts.

For more information, visit yapinc.org or follow the agency on X, formerly Twitter, at YAPInc.

They Missed Prom; So YAP Chicago’s Back to Our Future Program Gave Participants a Thanksgiving Sneaker Ball

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Chicago, Ill. – Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. hosted a Thanksgiving Sneaker Ball that allowed its Back to Our Future program participants and their families to dress up and enjoy an evening of elegance they may not otherwise have been able to experience.

“It was beautiful; it was so amazing,” said YAP Back to Our Future Program Director Monique Crisp. It was a time for us to engage with the program participants and their families into the Thanksgiving season.”

Launched a year ago, Chicago Public Schools (CPS)’ Back to Our Future gives Chicago residents ages 12-20 who have dropped out of or otherwise disengaged from school a safe system of support to continue their education. YAP, a 48-year-old national nonprofit in 35 states and the District of Columbia, partners with youth justice, child welfare, behavioral health, education, and other systems to provide alternatives to incarceration and residential placement.

Crisp said preparing for the ball provided valuable teachable moments that might have come more organically during high school milestones that program participants missed when they were away from school.

“Since we’re always dressed down, it was nice to have them put on some formal clothes and teach them the etiquette of how to dress nicer and because some of the have been out of school for six months to two years, they haven’t been able to attend a homecoming or a prom,” Crisp added.

The Thanksgiving Sneaker Ball took place on Nov. 16 with nearly 125 program participants and their families in attendance, in addition to approximately 50 Chicago area YAP staff including Back to Our Future Program Director Colby Chapman.

“We wanted to see youth in their formal wear,” Chapman said. “We invited them and their parents to come out of the south loop of Chicago, so we’re getting folks out of their neighborhood to enjoy the downtown landscape and scenery. We really provided them with a night of edutainment (education and entertainment) and bringing a holistic approach to overall youth moral and development.”

Several youth have made great strides through the Back to Our Future program, YAP staff said, including those who thanked YAP and their Advocates who encouraged them to choose positive paths.

“Another young lady said before she started with Youth Advocate Programs and received an Advocate, she didn’t know what love was but now we became the family and the love she didn’t have,” Crisp added. “I am just so excited about this program.”

Crisp and Chapman hope the Thanksgiving Sneaker Ball will be an annual affair. The event also included a catered dinner, a 360 photo booth, decorations and a DJ.

“Back to Our Future has been a great opportunity to give back to our future,” Crisp said. “Due to some of the barriers our youth may have come across, we’ve been able to show them a different way of looking at things.”

For more information on YAP visit yapinc.org or follow the organization on X at @YAPInc.

 

YAP Washington Heights Violence Interruption Team Distributed Thanksgiving Turkeys to Families in their Service Area

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Chicago, Ill. — Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc’s Chicago Washington Heights Violence Interruption team members added Thanksgiving turkeys to the many services they provide to make the neighborhood they serve safer. The Washington Heights YAP team partnered with Project Simeon 2000, Illinois State Rep. Justin Slaughter, and Chicago 21st Ward Alderman Ronnie Mosley for a Nov. 18 Holiday Turkey Giveaway, distributing 560 Thanksgiving turkeys to families in need.

YAP Washington Heights Violence Interruption Program Director Ken Lewis. All Photos Courtesy of Ken Lewis Photography.

“With the holidays fast approaching, we understand that some families may not have the necessary means to purchase a turkey, so we wanted to help take away the burden of having to worry about that,” said YAP Washington Heights Violence Interruption Program Director Ken Lewis. “We want to thank our partners for their willingness to come together with YAP to make a positive impact in our community this holiday season.”

YAP, a national nonprofit in 35 states and the District of Columbia, partners with youth justice, child welfare, behavioral health, and other systems to provide community-based wraparound services as an alternative to youth incarceration, residential care, and neighborhood violence. The YAP Chicago Washington Heights Violence Interruption program, funded through a grant from the Chicago Department of Public Health, provides violence interruption services, street and hospital outreach, crisis intervention, peace building activities, family engagement, individual wraparound services, and conflict resolution.

YAP program participants served by the neighborhood street outreach and violence reduction program distributed the turkeys to their neighbors as program staff connected with residents to offer economic, educational, and emotional tools they may need, consistent with their approach to reducing community violence.

The YAP Washington Heights Violence Interruption team members and their partners distributed the remaining 40 turkeys from their Holiday Giveaway to local first responders, police, the fire department, and the elderly. Chicago YAP’s Washington Heights Violence Interruption Program had additional help for their Holiday Giveaway project from members of Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity Inc. and The P.O.E.T. Organization.

For more information about YAP, visit: www.YAPInc.org or follow the organization on X at @YAPInc.

 

Empowered by His Advocate, Kevin is Paving the Road Towards a Promising Future

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Los Angeles – At age 18, Kevin’s best memories of his childhood were before his 14th birthday. He played and was good at just about every sport. One of his biggest fans and best friends was his grandfather, a jack of many trades, whom Kevin deeply admired and loved.

Kevin said at age 13, everything good about his life changed. His grandfather died and Kevin was confused and angry. He started skipping school and with charges related to fighting and destroying property, he found himself before a juvenile court judge more times than he can count.

Kevin with his former YAP Advocate Reggie Cooper

Kevin said it wasn’t until he was 16 that he gave any thought to his circumstances, let alone his future. The change came through Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc., a national nonprofit that partners with youth justice, child welfare, behavioral health, and other systems to provide community-based alternatives to youth incarceration and residential placements.

“I was on probation and wasn’t going home most nights,” Kevin said. “I kept missing court dates.”

Now in 35 states and Washington, D.C., by 2020, YAP had begun partnering with a Los Angeles community organization to serve County Superior Court system-involved youth.

“He was a kid and didn’t understand the seriousness of missing court dates and other appointments associated with his probation,” said Reggie Cooper, the Advocate YAP assigned to work with Kevin and his family.

YAP’s evidence-based model is centered in delivering culturally and linguistically responsive services by hiring neighborhood-based Advocates and mobile behavioral health professionals trained in empowering young people with tools to see and nurture their strengths. YAP employees connect program participants and their parents, guardians, and other families with resources to meet their individualized economic, educational, emotional, and basic needs.

Cooper advocated for Reggie, showing up for him in court and in the community

Reggie advocated for Kevin, showing up alongside his mom in court. Kevin would later learn that like himself, Reggie was also caught up in the youth justice system during his adolescence shortly after losing his grandfather.

Two years later, Kevin said he’s an entirely different person. “I’m responsible and think before I act now,” he said.

Reggie agrees saying that in addition to going to school, Kevin shows up on time at his job at a food chain and is enrolling in a program that trains young people in construction trades. When Kevin looks at his future now, things are clearer than ever.

“I’m going to work in construction,” he said. Smiling, he added, “like my grandfather.”

Kevin thanks Cooper for empowering him with tools to pave a positive path for his future

Learn more about YAP and how you can support the organization at www.yapinc.org. You can follow the nonprofit on X at twitter.com/YAPInc.

 

YAP’s Making Social Change Happen Awards: Recognizing Positive Change

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Maryland Department of Juvenile Services Secretary Vincent N. Schiraldi and Maryland Department of Human Services Secretary Rafael López joined Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. to honor youth and adults meeting major milestones in putting their lives on a positive path. Schiraldi and López were among those recognized by YAP at its Washington, D.C.-Maryland region Oct. 13 YAP’s Making Social Change Happen Awards at Baltimore’s Reginald F. Lewis MuseumThe program honored current and former justice-involved youth and adults, and other YAP program participants identified as at the highest risk for engaging in violence and those empowering them with tools to make positive change.

YAP Roanoke, Virginia Staff Now Certified in Trauma Training to Help At-Risk Youth

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Roanoke, Va. – After eight months, three staff from Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. Roanoke Valley, Va., completed certification in professional development and youth violence prevention training from the Flourish Agenda.

Program Director Breyon Fraction, Therapist Ashley Schutrum and Senior Advocate Megan Doyle received Flourish Agenda’s Healing Centered Engagement certification. The Flourish Agenda is a national nonprofit consulting firm that works with youth-serving organizations and other agencies striving to allow young people to flourish; and the certification is an online course for those who work with minority youth. The certification provides attendees with training scenarios, learning activities, supplemental learning resources and more according to the website.

“We’ve been focusing on strengthening the support and infrastructure for frontline workers and community stakeholders serving youth violence prevention initiatives,” said Fraction. “We have other activities planned with the city as well.”

YAP is a national nonprofit in 35 states and Washington, D.C., that partners with youth justice, child welfare, behavioral health, and public safety systems to deliver unique evidence-based youth and family wraparound services in homes, schools, and other community sites as an alternative to youth incarceration and residential care. YAP also partners with cities across the U.S. to use its model as part of their public safety strategy to curb neighborhood violence.

YAP Roanoke has a youth justice program where young people are provided with a neighborhood-based Advocate who supports their families with economic, emotional and education wraparound support; along with a behavioral health program where youth are supported with intensive-therapy.

The training was made possible through a $25,000 Gun Violence Funding grant awarded by the City of Roanoke’s American Rescue Plan Act Funds. YAP staff were among a cohort of people who started the training in March and completed it in October. The Flourish Agenda was founded by Professor Shawn Ginwright, Ph.D., who is the Jerome T. Murphy Professor of the Practice at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

“We are now working on a comprehensive strategy to engage the community with city officials,” Fraction added. “YAP’s dedication to making Roanoke safer and the city’s commitment to youth development is important as we embark on this journey together.”

Visit the YAP website or follow the organization on X at @YAPInc for more information.

 

 

 

 

Celebrating New Beginnings 

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Brenda C. Siler, Contributing Writer 

Joy was in the air as the Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. recognized program participants in the national nonprofit’s Washington, DC/Maryland region for successfully completing milestones in their journeys to put their lives on a positive path. 

Program participants, families, Baltimore Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement, Baltimore Police Department, Maryland Department of Juvenile Services, and Maryland Department of Human Services professionals, along with YAP staff, partners, and community volunteers were beaming with pride. They were at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum in Baltimore for YAP’s Making Social Change Happen Awards, an Oct. 6th luncheon that acknowledged the results of their teamwork. 

For 48 years, YAP has delivered community-based services as an alternative to placing young people in child welfare, behavioral health, and developmental disabilities facilities. YAP incorporates an approach that has proven to be more effective, equitable, and economical. The community-based YAP Wraparound services model places youth and adults on a restorative path when they run into trouble with the law or face complex social services challenges.  

“For years, we worked quietly using our practice with youth who would otherwise be incarcerated or placed in other residential facilities,” said YAP President and CEO Gary Ivory during opening remarks. “Our efforts have been met with success due to the YAP village that is here today. Our village includes program participants, families, dedicated YAP Advocates, credible messengers, social services staff, and YAP staff and consultants.  

Now in 35 states and the District of Columbia, in recent years, YAP has also combined its youth and family wraparound services model with community violence intervention approaches to work with young people and adults identified as being at the highest risk of engaging in violence.

YAP’s DC/Maryland region was created nearly 19 years ago. Regional Director Craig Jernigan led the awards recognition portion of the event, where program participants and supporters were given certificates and gift bags.  

“We are recognizing individuals in our YAP village who work with tools that empower those we serve and their loved ones,” Jernigan said. “We are all dedicated to putting people on a positive path.” 

YAP Regional Director Craig Jernigan, the awards program emcee, with honoree Retired Youth Circuit Court Staff Tonia Johnson

Thrilled with completing the program and his training was Andy [YAP is withholding his last name for confidentiality/safety purposes]. The Baltimore resident admitted to a past that involved getting in troubleAfter completing YAP’s Group Violence Reduction Strategy (GVRS) program, he is now employed full-time. The GVRS team members are YAP Credible Messengers, many of whom, like Adams, were formerly systems involved. 

“When they first came to talk to me about the program, I was skepticalThen I started talking to Miss Crystal [Evans, his YAP GVRS life coach]. That made me a little more comfortable,” he said. 

Former GVRS Program Participant Andy

Andy has received assistance from the program in pursuing his GED and in completing the application for his new job. He is surprised with his progress over the past six months. He now has different perspective about his future and says his family is proud of himHe looks forward to going back to school so he can get an electrician’s license. 

“Things are looking up for me nowI’ll be a building repairmanI like that type of work,” he said.

Dewayne honored by YAP GVRS team

Dewayne also shared his success story during an interview at the awards event. After serving time in a federal institution, he went back home. Things started out a little rough, but then he, too, started working with EvansDewayne calls her his “guardian angel.” He stays focused and sees the rewards from YAP. He now works for a company that delivers oven-ready meals to home subscribers.  

“This is the best thing that has ever happened to me,” DeWayne said with a big smile. “I have my driver’s license for the first time in 42 years. 

He said he realizes what he has missed in life due to the decisions that led him down a dangerous road. 

“I am getting my credit in order. I have benefits with my job like a 401K and life insurance,” he said with pride. 

Jernigan wrapped up the event by thanking everyone for helping program participants reach their education and job milestones. 

“Our YAP staff are trained to help our program participants see their strengths,” he said. “We connect them to the tools needed to build on this success. We will always be there for them. 

 

YAP’s Making Social Change Happen Awards: Recognizing People Putting their Lives on a Positive Path

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YAP’s Making Social Change Happen Awards Album 1

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Baltimore Advocate Tim
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See additional photo albums below. (Photos courtesy Keystone Productions)

Maryland Department of Juvenile Services Secretary Vincent N. Schiraldi and Maryland Department of Human Services Secretary Rafael López joined Youth Advocate Programs (YAP), Inc. to honor youth and adults making positive change. Schiraldi and López were among those recognized by YAP at its Washington, D.C.-Maryland region Oct. 13 YAP’s Making Social Change Happen Awards at Baltimore’s Reginald F. Lewis Museum.

The program honored current and former justice-involved youth and adults, and other YAP program participants identified as at the highest risk for engaging in violence and those empowering them with tools to make positive change.

YAP CEO Gary Ivory with MDJS Secretary Vincent Schiraldi

“if you go back to the 90’s they were calling young people super predators and the antidote to dehumanizing young people is humanizing young people and that’s where YAP stands out,” Secretary Schiraldi said. “You’ve always treated young people in your care as human beings and as long as you keep that as your standard you can’t go wrong so thank you for honoring me but I honor you right back.”

A 48-year-old national nonprofit in 35 states and Washington, D.C., YAP partners with youth justice, child welfare, and public safety systems to deliver community-based alternatives to incarceration and placement, and community violence interruption/neighborhood safety services. YAP has experienced considerable growth in recent years as communities have demanded more effective, economical, and equitable systems reforms.

Maryland Department of Human Services Secretary Rafael López was recognized and addressed the honorees

“What is clear to me as I learned more about these award recipients is how relentless they are how relentless each of you are in dedicating your time your talent and your love to lift up our children, youth, families and communities across this country,” Secretary López said. “I’m the son and grandson of migrant farm workers and one of the people I most admire who advocated for social change on behalf of migrant farm workers was the activist and labor leader Cesar Chavez once said, ‘Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the person who has learned to read; you cannot humiliate the person who feels pride; you cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore.’ I think I’m among people who aren’t afraid.”

YAP Program Directors Chris Campbell and Danielle Franklin and their teams honoring current and former program participants

YAP CEO and President Gary Ivory welcomed the honorees and guests, including YAP Board of Directors Treasurer Clarence Campbell, Cities United Executive Director Anthony Smith, and other Baltimore, Md., and Washington, D.C. community leaders.

Cities United Executive Director Anthony Smith was recognized and addressed the gathering

“I believe you all have decided that Baltimore and D.C. can be better than what it is and we’re going to work hard to make that happen, so I just appreciate you all I love you all and I think these kind of celebrations are what we need more of because the work we do is hard,” Smith said. “I appreciate the folks who do the frontline work who get up every day and put themselves in harm’s way to make sure somebody else can be safe so thank you all and thank you YAP for your leadership.”

YAP Regional Director Craig Jernigan, the awards program emcee, with honoree Retired Youth Circuit Court Staff Tonia Johnson

Honorees included recipients of the YAP Tom Jeffers Endowment Fund for Continuing Education scholarship, funded with YAP employee donations to ease the financial burden of college and workforce training/development for current and former program participants and their parents and guardians. YAP also recognized Baltimore Group Violence Reduction Strategy Deputy Director Terence Nash, Baltimore Group Violence Reduction Strategy Service Partnership Manager Raymond Greene-Joyner, Danise Jones Dorsey, Tonia Johnson, Maryland State Delegate Roxanne Prettyman and other community leaders who empower and support YAP’s program participants.  The program included a panel discussion moderated by DJS Director of Special Projects Richard Burton, featuring Diamond and Andre’, two former YAP program participants who credited the program for empowering them with skills to launch their own businesses.

YAP Board member Clarence Campbell with Re-entry program co-leader Tyrone Little

YAP has systems partners across the region, serving Maryland Department of Juvenile Services (community-based alternatives to youth incarceration), City of Baltimore Group Violence Reduction Strategy (GRVS), YAP Safely Home: Community Based Mentor Services for Returning Adult Citizens, and statewide county child welfare departments.

Safely Home program leaders, staff and honorees

YAP Advocates, Credible Messengers and Life Coaches connect program participants and their families with individualized educational, economic, and emotional tools to address their individualized needs. YAP services are led by participants and their families, and implemented by culturally responsive, neighborhood-based staff.

Panel Moderator MDJS Director of Special Projects Richard Burton. Also played Shamrock in HBO’s The Wire

Service is available 24/7 with crisis management, transportation, and basic needs (food, shelter, clothing, utility bills) assistance. YAP’s guiding principles include partnering with parents, guardians, and other loved ones; focusing on program participants’ strengths; neither rejecting referrals, nor ejecting participants; working as a team; delivering community-based services with unconditional caring; empowering participants with tools to succeed and give back; and delivering programs with YAP model fidelity.

Former YAP program participants/panelists Andre and Diamond

John Jay College of Criminal Justice research found 86% of YAP’s youth justice participants remain arrest free, and six – 12 months after completing the program, 90% of the youth still lived in their communities with less than 5% of participants in secure placement.

Learn more about YAP at YAPInc.org

YAP’s Making Social Change Happen Awards Album 2

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YAP’s Making Social Change Happen Awards Album 3

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