San Francisco, CA. Sunset Youth Services‘ central philosophy is that cultivating healthy attachments with stable and caring adults is the best way to support youth and young adults on the precipice of the criminal justice system. SYS works with young people aged 14 to 24 – as well as their families – in a multitude of different capacities: providing digital arts resources, workforce development, justice and mental health services, and family support. Although the COVID-19 pandemic has forced SYS to close its Youth Center and adapt many services to an online format, staffers continue to center their efforts on relationship-based support for the community.
Youth perform at Sunset Festival prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.
In the early weeks of California’s shelter-in-place order, SYS began weekly ‘Love Parades.’ Employees made signs bearing encouraging messages, piled into their cars, and drove by the houses of families they serve, honking and shouting, “We love you!” and “We’re in this together!” SYS’s commitment to the mental wellbeing of the families served is palpable in the video below of a ‘Love Parade.’
In addition to these weekly shows of support, Sunset Youth Services, in partnership with the San Francisco Marin Food Bank, Dine11, and World Central Kitchen, delivered over 2,000 meals a week to program families during the beginning stages of shelter-in-place. According to Development and Communications Associate Melissa Laureta, SYS “continues to distribute food boxes,” although staffers and volunteers have reduced the number of meals they deliver. This initiative is made possible because of food donations from Trader Joes and the SF-Marin Food Bank.
SYS employees prepare to deliver meals to families in need.
Sunset Youth Services’ Digital Arts program is a cornerstone of the nonprofit’s efforts to cultivate community with SF youth both inside and outside prison. Young people come to SYS’ Youth Center to produce music and videos, write songs, and learn similar marketable skills from industry professionals. SYS began bringing its Digital Arts program into juvenile hall and jails so that in the process of creating music, incarcerated youth form relationships with Sunset Youth employees. Once out of jail, those connections facilitate their reentry into society by connecting them to the wealth of services that SYS provides, such as a highly successful Workforce Development program. Almost 90% of the youth who graduate from this program land a job. At the junction between Digital Arts and Workforce Development is Upstar Records: a youth-led record label that cultivates young hip-hop enthusiasts into digital technology professionals.
A singer performs with a group associated with Upstar Records during pre-COVID-19 times.
SYS’s programs are structured around the research-driven concept of attachment communities: groups that provide connectedness and foster healthy, trusting relationships between volunteers and youth. Many young people lack stable relationships in their lives, which is believed to be a root cause of issues like depression, anxiety, and mental illness. Even before research released by The Commission on Children at Risk in 2005 identified attachment communities as the definitive response to myriad behavioral and mental health issues in youth, SYS had already formed its own relationship-based community in San Francisco. Instead of compartmentalizing the services they offer, SYS ensures a teen can walk into the building and have access to any of five programs. At the Youth Center, youth and young adults can make music or beats, meet with mental health professionals, case managers, and receive support caring for a young child. Laureta explains, “Youth can come into our center and hit all five of our programs and still maintain community within our family.” This idea of ‘family’ is at the core of all Sunset Youth Services programs.
Sunset Youth Services at the Playland BBQ in 2019.
Anyone interested in volunteering with Sunset Youth Services should contact Melissa Laureta at [email protected] for more information. Keep in mind, however, that Sunset Youth Services’ dedication to forging enduring relationships between volunteers and youth make getting involved more complicated than some might think. Laureta says, “We are pretty tight gatekeepers of our youth community because there’s a lot of abandonment stuff and mental health stuff with our kids. When we have volunteers who parachute in and out, abandonment issues arise rally fast. So we need dedicated volunteers to stick with a kid or a cohort of kids for weeks and months and be committed and show relationships are stable because they don’t get that from other places in their lives.”
From Sunset Youth Services: The mission of Sunset Youth Services is to foster long-term stability and growth in in-risk* youth, young adults, and families through caring relationships and supportive services. This goal is based on the simple belief that youth are inherently worthy of dignity and respect and have the potential to positively contribute to their communities when their real needs are met.
San Francisco, CA. The economic turmoil caused by COVID-19 has heightened another life-threatening issue: food insecurity. Fortunately, food banks such as the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank (pictured above) are rising to the occasion. In recent months, the SF-Marin Food Bank has nearly doubled the number of households it serves. Prior to the COVID-19 outbreak, the nonprofit provided meals to about 32,000 families per week. Now, the Food Bank serves 1,164,155 meals to around 60,000 families weekly.
Masked volunteers pick out apples for meals that will be distributed to Food Bank recipients.
Due to the pandemic, the Food Bank has faced challenges related to an increase in demand and a decrease in volunteers. The organization typically collaborates with a network of more than 275 neighborhood food pantries to distribute food. However, in March, approximately one-third of the food bank’s partner pantries had to close temporarily as a result of safety concerns. Communications & Social Media Manager Keely Hopkins explains, “To ensure our participants did not lose access to food and we could meet the growing need, we opened pop-up pantries.” These ‘pop-up pantries,’ which are set up at 25 different locations and times throughout SF and Marin, optimize participants easy access to food. They serve 5 to10 times as many people as traditional neighborhood pantries.
SF-Marin Food Bank truck transports food.
Pantry at Home is another initiative to ensure participants in the Food Bank network retain access to food. The temporary food delivery program serves 12,000 low-income seniors. According to Hopkins, “This ensures they can still get fresh groceries – like produce, grains, and protein items like meat or eggs – weekly while staying home and avoiding the risks COVID-19 presents to seniors.”
The Food Bank has also made major adjustments to its operational protocols to protect the health of employees and food recipients. Staffers reduced the number of volunteers working at their warehouse at any given time to ensure social distancing guidelines are being followed. Neighborhood food pantries are now pre-bagging groceries instead of operating a farmer’s market-style layout where participants pick out individual items, as they have traditionally done. This minimizes how many people touch the food and reduces the time participants spend waiting in line. What’s more, many pantries have switched to a drive-through model for picking up food, which offers an additional buffer against unnecessary person-to-person contact.
Food Bank participants wait 6 feet apart in line to receive food.
The SF-Marin Food Bank relies on donations and purchased food to meet the community’s needs. Two years ago, the Food Bank began its Farm to Family program that rescues fresh produce that would otherwise be thrown out by farms and instead gives it to the hungry. As a result of its success, Farm to Family has grown into a state-wide initiative.
The floor of the SF-Marin Food Bank warehouse reads “End Hunger.”
If you or anyone in your community needs access to food or could be interested in getting involved with the SF-Marin Food Bank here’s some information:
Click here to find free food. Those who do not have internet access should call 211.
Click here to learn how you can get involved with volunteering at the Food Bank today.
Click here if you are interested in organizing a food or fund drive.
Our mission is to end hunger in San Francisco and Marin. We envision a community where everyone is able to obtain enough nutritious food — in a dignified manner — to support the health and well-being of themselves and their families. Hunger is a serious problem in San Francisco and Marin. While the numbers are staggering, we believe that hunger in our community is a solvable problem. Since 1987, the Food Bank has pioneered many successful models aimed at ending hunger.
Oakland, CA. It started out as a personal mission to inspire spirituality throughout her neighborhood for Jasmine Taylor (pictured above on the right). She launched the “Stepping Out on Faith” prayer walk in October of 2014 and that led to her founding a nonprofit called 1C13 Productions.
The strategy of continuing 1C13 Productions, especially with the youth, during the COVID-19 pandemic is an ongoing discussion within the organization according to Taylor. Because the nonprofit works extensively with youth through direct interaction within school settings, COVID 19 has halted its programs. However, 1C13 remains dedicated to creating and offering programs that allow interaction with the students while adhering to social distancing mandates.
Services within the organization include youth outreach, community events, feeding the poor, and providing resources for Oakland families to fight poverty and enrich their children’s future through The Legacy Program.
One goal of 1C13 Productions is to eradicate hunger in urban communities. Given the effects of poverty and gentrification, many men, women, and children in urban communities face hunger daily. The nonprofit regularly feeds the homeless and is planning on expanding these efforts.
While initially focused on community programs,1C13 provides several programs for the youth of Oakland to acquire the skills which will bolster their confidence and create positive opportunities. The Walking in Royalty program exposes youth to many different disciplines of study and career opportunities to encourage the young people of Oakland to recognize their full potential and ensures a well-rounded exposure to different career possibilities.
Occasionally working directly with schools to provide life skills classes for both the youth and families through the Walking in Royalty programs, 1C13 also offers these programs to the public through the King/Queen Connections program. Taylor, who also holds the position of Restorative Bridge Maker at Frick United School of language to diffuse conflicts between students, describes her work with the youth as “the most gratifying” and a “beautiful and humbling opportunity”. The testimonies given from some 1C13 youth confirms their reciprocal admiration for the program and their mission; “(The Life Skills) class has changed me in many ways. It’s encouraged me to never give up. It taught me to be a young lady. It taught me to never let what other people say affect my future and who I want to be.” – Mia C., 8th grade.
From 1C13 Productions:
1C13 Productions Inc. is a pillar in the community and has created a lasting impact on youth, communities, and families throughout its 5-year tenure in the Bay Area and in its schools. Here are testimonials from some of those we’ve had the opportunity to work with.
“Jasmine Taylor has the best job in the world: empowering young kings and queens of East Oakland to live their truth and nurture their brilliance. As a teacher and trauma-informed student mentor at Frick Impact Academy, “Ms. Taylor” heals interpersonal harm through her expertise in Restorative Practices and leads students in deconstructing the forces of oppression in their lives and communities as they foster resilience, confidence, and integrity.”
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