City of Vancouver axes child and youth advocate
I don’t usually blog news, but this has a direct correlation to some work I did last year with some incredibly inspiring youth and it’s shocking in its implications.
Last year I facilitated an Open Space event as the concluding act of a brilliant rights-based monitoring project co-hosted by the City of Vancouver. The idea of the project was to use the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child as a framework for looking at how well “duty bearers” were upholding human rights in Vancouver. Now this is no police state, and youth are considerably freer in Vancouver than they are in many other places in the world, but there are still some glaring examples of rights violations that go on. Police and transit security personnel often violate youth rights and, much more disturbingly, the child welfare system has come in for some harsh condemnation of late. Economic and social rights are often ignored and youth are generally outside of the civic engagement process. And that one, ironically, has just gotten worse.
The project I was involved in was beautifully conceived and executed by sara kendall and a number of amazing partners who trained youth facilitators and held focus groups around the city. At the end of the project, youth came together for a weekend to prepare a performance and hold an Open Space as a way of reporting out on their work and engaging various levels of government nad others in moving forward on solutions stemming from the project’s recommendations.
One of the partners in the process, and the host at the City of Vancouver, was the Child and Youth Advocate, Sheila Davidson, a wonderfully committed woman who has youth issues right on the skin of her heart. It was her position and office that was eliminated this week (possible linkrot). The City “saved” $150,000 in the axing, but the costs are going to be huge. In the linked article, NDP child and family services critic Adrian Dix says “One of the reasons you need this, especially in Vancouver, is for those youth living on the street. They benefit the most. I’ve attended events by [youth advocate] Sheila Davidson’s group where I would meet young people you’d never see at any other civic gathering.” He’s talking about our Open Space weekend, among others perhaps. Here’s a photo of him in intense dialogue with youth that day.
Today, some of the folks involved in the rights monitoring project released a press statement that said, in part:
It is disturbing and inexcusable that the Child and Youth Advocate has been cut during a time of well-known critical need for exactly what the Advocate’s position was fulfilling,” says Sara Kendall, a Vancouver youth and community facilitator who coordinated the rights-based monitoring project. “The youth community and children’s service providers are outraged. There is a single, viable response here: the Office of the Child and Youth Advocate needs to be reinstated.”
The work of the Child and Youth Advocate was instrumental in connecting children, youth, service providers and City government for the insurance of a healthier and safer city for young people. The erasure of this position marks the dismissal of the importance of young lives in Vancouver.
“Vancouver has previously shown leadership in investing in the lives of its most vulnerable, and most highly valued citizens, the children and youth who live here,” states Caitlin Padgett, the City’s first Youth Advocate Mentor. “Services that are now taken for granted and considered irreplaceable exist because of the work of advocates who spoke up for children and youth.”
Along with the position of the Child and Youth Advocate, the entire budget of the office was eliminated, including: The Youth Advocate Mentor, a part-time position that was the only one of its kind in Canada, mandated to directly link the voices of youth communities and City policy; a Child Care Advocacy strategy; community consultations addressing youth-police relations, a youth-police working group; Child and Youth Rights monitoring reporting.
“Young people, particularly those marginalized, rarely have the opportunity to meaningfully contribute to the decisions and policies that impact their lives,” maintains Sheena Sargeant, Executive Director of YouthCO AIDS Society, a non-profit organization that provides support services to youth living with HIV/AIDS. “With the decision to cut the office of the Child and Youth Advocate, City Council has directly impacted the quality of life of many children, youth, and their families; they have removed one of the very few ways that communities and service providers can be seen and heard.”
If you want further information, or you want to help find a way to meet this now unmet need in Vancouver call Caitlin Padgett at 604-762-4520 or Sheena Sargeant at 604-338-9697.
And for a beautiful photo gallery of the Open Space day, showing shots of the youth at work and some of the art they created, visit my Flickr gallery of the day.
[tags]Vancouver[/tags]