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Blog: Terrance Stone


Nonprofits, businesses, partner to feed needy on Thanksgiving

posted Monday, November 16, 2009 2:09 PM

Nonprofits, businesses, partner to feed needy on Thanksgiving

Debbie Pfeiffer Trunnell, Staff Writer Posted: 11/14/2009 06:11:00 AM PST 
 

Last November, more than nearly 500 people showed up for the free Thanksgiving feast provided by Catholic Charities at a San Bernardino nightclub.

This Thanksgiving, at the end of yet another tough year for countless families, the number could easily grow.

So to ensure there is enough turkey, mashed potatoes and pumpkin pie to go around, the nonprofit is partnering with other organizations and businesses.

"It takes many entities working together. For example, it's not just Catholic Charities making this happen, it's the community that makes it work," said Beverly Earl, director of the San Bernardino County Family and Community Services Department for the nonprofit.

The organization, that reaches out to the needy in Riverside and San Bernardino counties, is one of many partnering with others to make sure they can provide food and other services during the holiday season.

In the case of Catholic Charities, it is working with nonprofits, including Young Visionaries and Time for Change Foundation. to provide a meal for the needy from 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., on Thanksgiving at the Brandin Iron Saloon in San Bernardino.

Bill Thomas, owner of the saloon, said it is a big enough facility to provide the service and he is happy to do it.

"One of our philosophies is to be part of the community, and I couldn't think of anything better to do on Thanksgiving than feed the needy," he said. "It also offers our guests the opportunity to participate in serving the less fortunate."

To ensure everything works out for a Thanksgiving dinner and coat giveaway slated for 4 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 24, at San Bernardino's Family Focus Center, the center has partnered with a nearby high school and a Redlands-based radio station.

"We operate from the perspective that when you bring to gether a number of people who have a passion for the poor and the underserved, you can definitely make a difference," said Linda McDonald, vice president of mission services for St. Bernardine Medical Center, which operates the center.

Athletes from San Bernardino High School will serve food and clean up at the center.

And Redlands-based radio station KSGN, is helping out with the drive to collect gently-used coats, jackets and sweaters, which will be donated to families after the dinner.

People are invited to drop off items at valet parking at the main entrance of St. Bernardine Medical Center, in the week ahead.

"We all have a different role we play, and in our case we use the airwaves to get the message out to the people," said Peggy Stapleton, account executive for the radio station.

Another long existing partnership is between Inland Empire Job Corps culinary students and the Salvation Army's Hospitality House shelter on Fifth Street in San Bernardino.

The culinary students typically bake hundreds of pies for the annual Thanksgiving feast, which has brought as many as 800 people to the Salvation Army.

This time around they will donate, 300 cherry, apple and pumpkin pies to the shelter for the dinner at 11 a.m. on Thanksgiving.

The students then stick around to volunteer.

"They are a joy to work with," said Roosevelt Carroll, director of the Hospitality House shelter. "And by doing this together, we touch everyone not just one or two people."


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San Bernardino Community Police Academy aims to improve communication, trust between police, residents

posted Saturday, November 14, 2009 1:13 PM

San Bernardino Community Police Academy aims to improve communication, trust between police, residents

"We need to get some sensitivity in there, put together small events so we can both better understand each other," said Stone, who is president of the Young Visionaries Youth Leadership Academy. "Then regular folk might have a different idea when there's a police shooting or other incident."

The Police Department's first Community Police Academy concluded last week and about 30 residents who varied in age, ethnicity and neighborhood graduated from the six-week class.

Out on patrol Friday, San Bernardino police Officer Jose Loera, left, updates Westside Food & Liquor employee Bassem Hassanieh about a recent burglary. (Al Cuizon / Staff Photographer)

They got crash courses in crime analysis, SWAT training, graffiti investigations, traffic laws and how Internal Affairs processes complaints of police misconduct.

Karla Miles, a teacher at Riley Elementary, brought a dozen sets of parents to class with her to ease their uncertainty about police. She was delighted that the department provided a Spanish translator so the parents could fully understand.

Thomas McCaa, 65, is a former taxi cab driver and said he joined the academy to enhance "situational awareness" in his neighborhood and better learn how to lower crime in San Bernardino.

"There's a lot more people than there are police. We can't leave it all to them," he said. "I think most of the problem is the fear of the unknown. A little understanding on both sides can do a lot of good."

Police instructors said they also learned and appreciated the questions asked by attendees because it gave them insight into community concerns.

Homicide Sgt. Dave Dillon knows people are afraid of being labeled a snitch. He is no longer surprised when a witness refuses to identify a killer or even give a statement.

"People are afraid. They're scared to death to come forward," Dillon said. "But if they're not willing to cooperate, there's not much we can do."

"It's a shame. We have hundreds of unsolved cases that we can't solve because people won't talk to us."

stacia.glenn@inlandnewspapers.com, (909) 386-3887


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Nonprofit, high school partner to keep kids safe

posted Monday, November 9, 2009 9:15 AM

Nonprofit, high school partner to keep kids safe

Debbie Pfeiffer Trunnell, Staff Writer Posted: 11/08/2009 06:02:38 AM PST

To ensure students at San Bernardino High School do not experience gang violence or other negative influences as they walk to and from school, an area nonprofit is working with the school on a new safety program.

Young Visionaries, a nonprofit that helps youth stay on the right path, the mayor's office and high school staff are behind an effort to get Operation Safe Passage up and running.

"We know we live in a city that has its challenges, so this is a way to be proactive, to put eyes and ears in the community to keep students safe," said principal Sandra Rodriguez.

There have not been specific problems at the high school, but it is on the border of one of the city's most crime-ridden areas, where there were 65 felony arrests in October.

And incidents near the school have included a jogger targeting young women and students getting their pockets checked for cash, iPods and cell phones, said Roberto Martinez, program coordinator for Young Visionaries.

To make students feel safe the program will entail placing easily identifiable volunteers, wearing orange vests with the Operate Safe Passage logo, at locations near the school as students walk to and from school.

If the monitors see any signs of trouble they will use two-way radios to contact school police.

The high school and Young Visionaries had hoped to get the program under way in October.

But it needs volunteers, preferably people who live near the high school, to get off the ground.

The volunteers will need to go through background checks to ensure they do not have a history of violence or a criminal background.

So far, steps taken to start up Operation Safe Passage include creating a logo for the program.

The artwork, a large hand clasping a small hand in front of a backdrop of buildings, a city street and mountains, was created by San Bernardino High School student Fernando Sosa, before he recently graduated.

In addition to appearing on vests worn by monitors, the logo will be posted on some business and nonprofit windows in San Bernardino to let students know they can enter the offices, if they run into trouble.

Safe passage programs have meet with success in the Los Angeles Unified School District and the Moreno Valley Unified School District, said Martinez.

Khalid Shah, board member of the Regional Violence Prevention Coalition in Moreno Valley, said Safe Passage was created in the school district there after a fight at a middle school in 2007, that led to a parent being pulled from a car and knocked unconscious.

It has proven to be successful, with teachers reporting no major outbursts since, he said.

Eventually, organizers hope to see Operation Safe Passage implemented at other San Bernardino district schools.

"A safe community is a community where residents are actively engaged in keeping it safe," said San Bernardino City Unified School District Police Chief Gary Underwood. "So we hope to get this running by the end of this month."

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Program urges youth to become advocates for social change

posted Tuesday, November 3, 2009 2:07 PM

Program urges youth to become advocates for social change

Debbie Pfeiffer Trunnell, Staff Writer Posted: 10/25/2009 07:02:32 AM PDT 

 Young Visionaries  a program that gives kids and parents more individualized attention in areas like anger and stress management and building potential that has had an impact on youth in the community," she said. "So we felt how can we get youth to be empowered to make changes in their own community."

Around 30 teens and their parents showed up at Friday night's orientation at the Young Visionaries office.

Parent Pete Hernandez, who was there with his son Sammy Hernandez, 12, said he came because it sounded like a good project for teens.

"I used to be involved with gangs and drugs myself, when I was around his age," he said. "So I want to see my son take the right path."

Teens who attended the orientation and enrolled in the project will attend an annual youth violence prevention/intervention leaders training retreat, help establish a youth and parent violence prevention council and attend community organizing and advocacy training with Congregrations Organized for Prophet Engagement, C.O.P.E.

In addition, they will attend creative writing workshops through The Let's Write Out Loud Program and develop a Pistols 2 Pencils online newsletter and a public television talk show, as well as participate in showcases, radio shows and concerts.

"I want my son to get involved in writing and other activities to utilize his hands in a better way," said Delita Woods, who attended with her son Chris Campbell, 15. "I really hope it is a life changing experience for him."

deborah.pfeiffer@inlandnewspapers.com

(909) 386-3879

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YOUNG VISONARIES AWARDED $79,755 FROM CALIFORNIA ENDOWMENT

posted Thursday, August 20, 2009 8:45 AM

YOUNG VISONARIES AWARDED $79,755 FROM CALIFORNIA ENDOWMENT FOR YOUTH ACTION CORE AGAINST VIOLENCE

  Young Visionaries Youth Leadership Academy has received an award from the California Endowment in the amount of $79,755 to target issues of gun violence. The award provides funding for the Youth Action Core Against Violence advocacy group, which is a youth led project that will advocate against issues of gun violence. The project will train local youth leaders on how make social changes in their local community. They will learn how to conduct community organizing activities, implement local advocacy strategies, and how to garner community support. Ultimately they want to impact political power bases to promote an awareness of and education centering on the issues of gun violence, illegal access to weapons, community risk factors, and resulting impacts. The group will use four key strategies:

 

·         Hosting an annual Youth Violence Prevention/Intervention Leaders training retreat

·         Establishing a Youth and Parent Violence Prevention Council that will work in conjunction with a project youth organizer to identify and develop outreach and education activities

·         Provide community organizing and advocacy training through a partnership with Congregations Organized for Prophet Engagement (COPE), Minister Sam Casey

·         Provide stipends to youth team leaders that assume leadership roles and make a significant contribution to the project

 

Young Visionaries Youth Organizer, Monette Miles will recruit youth and coordinate youth services with the support of a project advisory team. The grant proposal was inspired by the California 13 Cities Gang Prevention Network, which the City of San Bernardino is involved with. Young Visionaries CEO Terrance Stone and the San Bernardino Countywide Gangs and Drugs Task Force Coordinator Kimberly Epps are members of the City of San Bernardino network panel, and both wanted to initiate a project that empowered youth through skill building and training to be local leaders.  Terrance Stone noted, “This is an important issue that needs to be on the minds of everyone-youth, parents, politicians, you name it.”  His sentiments were echoed by Kimberly Epps who added, “Gun violence is a very real issue. As a Probation Officer I taught court ordered Weapons Diversion classes for ten years. Probation recognized this issue early on, and we were the first to offer local classes that informed youth and parents about the civil, social, and legal consequences of youth possessing guns, accessing guns within the home, and safe storage laws. This project will take the issue to a different level that will hopefully garner local system changes through youth action.”

###

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Young Visionaries receives grant for “From Corners to College Program”

posted Friday, April 24, 2009 4:09 PM

Young Visionaries receives grant for “From Corners to College Program”

Press release

Terrance Stone CEO

Young Visionaries Youth Leadership Academy

(909) 881-3382

April 24, 2009

   

Young Visionaries is the $7,500 recipient of a 2009 Community Impact Fund grant from The Community Foundation Serving Riverside & San Bernardino Counties. The From Corners to College (FCTC) Program will focus on youth who reside in the County of San Bernardino , who are between the ages of 14-18, are gang associated, and desire to participate in the program. The project goal is to assist high risk gang associated youth to find a way to receive the support that they and their families need to refrain from gang involvement and graduate from high school. This program will utilize several strategies to support the youth in the community. Each youth will be assessed for unmet needs, they will be assigned a volunteer mentor who will commit their time to each youth, each youth will be scheduled to meet and design an educational plan that reviews strategies to assist the youth in getting to the goal of graduation from high school, each youth will meet weekly for gang intervention and tutoring services, each youth will be required to complete 20 hours of community service yearly, and each family will be engaged in the process. The assumption is that if youth are engaged and supported in their environment the likelihood of graduation from high school increases and the likelihood of repeated criminal (gang) activity decreases.

These services also include access to a therapist, crisis intervention as a means of support for the family, and case management. Once the youth has been able to achieve positive outcomes they will be assigned a summer internship in the community. This program is unique in that its focus is on high risk gang associated youth who are often overlooked and underserved. There are a few programs that attempt to complete the same goals, but none that exist in the County of San Bernardino at this time. This program also utilizes summer internships in the community and emphasizes community service as a means towards pro-social ideology.

For more information Contact,

Terrance L. Stone
President/CEO
Young Visionaries Youth Leadership Academy
office (909) 881-3382


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Actor Inspires Murphy Students With Real Story

posted Tuesday, March 10, 2009 1:11 PM

Actor Inspires Murphy Students With Real Story

 

Students at Bob Murphy County Community Day School could relate to Jason Finn as an actor watching the movie "Freedom Writers" on March 4. They embraced his message personally when he showed up to their campus following the screening.

"I went to a school like this," Finn told about 150 Murphy students in their packed multipurpose room. "I was 18 and basically had my last chance to get it right before I went off the deep end.

"I actually do care about you, because I've been in the same position you are right now."

Finn was brought to Murphy by Terrance Stone, president of the Young Visionairies Youth Leadership Academy in San Bernardino.

Stone said he felt that Finn's message and story, not to mention his role in the "Freedom Writers," would resonate with the Murphy students.

He was right. Following the movie, the students gave the movie rousing applause. The movie portrayed the true story of high school students in Long Beach who overcame tough circumstances to flourish academically because of a teacher and graduate from high school.

After Finn spoke to the students, most stayed after the presentation to have him sign autographs and meet him. "He gets paid a lot of money and yet he wanted to come and share his story with you," Principal George Bowser told his students. "Give him a round of applause."

The students did.

What turned Finn's life around, ironically, was getting shot, he said. He had been kicked out of his L.A. high school and had attended a continuation school. Finn said he realized he needed to stop living for himself and started living for his family, his little sister, his nephew, his mom.

It was soon after being shot that Finn was able to land a role in the movie, "Freedom Writers," in 2006. It was a video where his comments about being shot were seen that landed him an audition to play in the movie.

Finn told the Murphy students that they needed to have a vision of what they could become, develop a plan to make that vision possible and foster hope to make sure it happened.

"Don't be stupid," he said. "Y'all know the right way. Do it the right way."

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Looking for a Few Good People

posted Tuesday, October 21, 2008 8:52 AM

Program Aide

PURPOSE

Assist the Lead Teacher in planning and implementing lesson plans, incorporating all component Plans, and leading large and small groups of children; as well as assist in coordinating and conducting developmental screenings, health services, and may involve family services, depending on the number of scheduled hours for the position, including family visits and participate in planning, training, and parent meetings.

REPORTING RELATIONSHIPS

Reports To: Program Supervisor

ESSENTIAL FUNCTIONS

• Be familiar with the component work plans, the YVYLA Performance Standards, YVYLA Personnel Rules, and the YVYLA Policy and Procedures Manual.

• Provide support in all areas of the recreation center maintaining a clean, safe, and cheerful environment; as well as assist conducting developmental screenings, observations of children's behavior, and in developing Individual Learning Plans (ILPs) for each child, including evaluations.

• Prepare materials as needed to carry out the weekly lesson plans.

• Develop and maintain a positive relationship with the children, their families, and volunteers; ensure that all feel welcome, and receive on-the-job training and communicate with parents on a regular basis.

• Attend staff meetings; assist in developing the weekly lesson plans, and overall program activities (e.g., arts and crafts, dramatic play, story time, cooking, music, fine and gross motor, etc.).

• Manage small groups of children, and evaluate activities regarding appropriateness and effectiveness and interest of the children.

• Provide support in implementing the component work plans including education, health, handicap services, and family and community partnership.

• Be prepared to assume the duties of the Program Supervisor in her/his absence.

• Assist Program Supervisor in completing all required reports and distributing them to the appropriate people at the appropriate time; and assist in maintaining up-to-date files for all children, safeguarding privacy of records and confidential information.

• Assist in recruiting and enrolling eligible children and collecting all needed.

• May participate in on-site and out-of-town training sessions (may include evenings and weekends).

• Responsible for obtaining a substitute aide whenever possible when unable to report to work, first checking for parents as volunteers.

• May assist in completing janitorial duties.

• Perform other duties as assigned.

NECESSARY SKILLS AND KNOWLEDGE

• Ability to work with families from all socio-economic levels.

• Ability to work as a team with co-workers.

• Knowledge of applicable state and federal laws and requirements.

• Ability to work effectively with executives, managers, supervisors, employees, and employee representatives.

• Knowledge of program rules and requirements.

Program Supervisor

 

JOB SUMMARY

Under supervision, incumbents supervise direct service delivery to clients and families. Coordinates and supervises the daily operation of a program, implements treatment plans, supervises and trains staff, maintains regulatory and/or licensing standards, program manager as needed, and maintains program budget and financial records (i.e., special funds, petty cash, etc.).

RESPONSIBILITIES & DUTIES

 

1. Works closely with staff providing training, coaching, support and evaluation.

2. Implement treatment plans under supervision and program manager.

3. Applies sensitivity to cultural differences in managing situations and interacting with clients and families.

4. Completes client evaluations and incident reports as required with a view to providing clinical staff with thorough information.

5. Maintains and monitors site budget.

6. Ensures licensing and regulatory standards, as appropriate, are met.

7. Interfaces with outside agencies (e.g., Juvenile Probation, DFCS, schools, etc.) about the status of clients; may act as an advocate for client.

8. Completes reporting as required, including use of agency information systems.

9. Other related responsibilities, as assigned, to support specific department/business needs.

 

CORE KNOWLEDGE COMPETENCIES

 

„h Exhibits understanding of emergency response techniques appropriate to the position.

„h Adheres to YVYLA mandates, policies and procedures.

 

CORE SKILL COMPETENCIES

 

„h Demonstrates safe work practices and exercise discrete judgment.

 

„h Actively works toward organizational improvement and professional growth.

 

„h Focuses on understanding and meeting customer needs.

 

CORE ABILITIES

 

Ability to:

„h Maintain standards of confidentiality.

„h Maintain positive work relationships in a respectful and collaborative manner.

„h Maintain good communication to ensure others have necessary information.

„h Maintain self-initiative, reliability, and resolve problems in a timely manner.

„h Sensitivity to working with culturally diverse populations.

 

QUALIFICATIONS

 

To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential duty satisfactorily. The requirements listed below are representative of the knowledge,

skill, and/or ability required. Reasonable accommodations may be made to enable individuals with disabilities to perform essential job functions.

 

Minimum Education and/or Experience

 

A combination of education and experience equivalent to a Bachelor of Arts or Science in behavioral science Current First Aid/CPR Certification

 LCSW or MSW

 

EXAMPLES OF DUTIES:

  • Interviews clients, family members and other interested parties to assess needs for social services; gathers and evaluates information regarding employment history, housing situation, physical functioning, financial status, capacity for independent living and availability of domestic services; evaluates clients concerns and observes behavior; develops service plans and establishes case files.
  • Counsels clients on available resources, barriers to employment, independent living skills and other areas involving defined problems or concerns; explains procedures, rights and responsibilities.
  • Assists clients in identifying and obtaining basic services needed for independent living; identifies and makes referrals to a variety of public and community agencies providing food, shelter, clothing, medical, educational and other services; schedules client appointments; acts as client advocate in obtaining services.
  • Manages assigned caseload; prepares narrative and statistical reports, documents and correspondence regarding client status; documents case files; prepares and serves legal documents; testifies in court.
  • Develops service treatment plans, evaluates family behavioral adjustment and monitors client progress toward delineated objectives; counsels clients using a variety of counseling modalities.



      Terrance L. Stone
    President/CEO
    Young Visionaries Youth Leadership Academy
    office
    (909) 881-3382
    fax (909) 881-3385
    cell (909) 222-0096tstone@yvyla-ie.org www.yvyla-ie.org http://www.myspace.com/youngvisionaries  



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    Keeping children safe

    posted Thursday, October 9, 2008 5:54 PM

    Keeping children safe

    Juvenile justice officials honor those helping kids Jason Pesick, Staff Writer Article Launched: 10/08/2008 09:51:52 PM PDT
    counseling for victims.

    Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties, which offers educational programs about reproductive health, body image, nutrition and domestic violence.

    Youth Alternative Solutions Program, which aids teenagers arrested on drug and alcohol-related offenses.

    Individual award recipients were:

    Karen Bell, chief deputy district attorney for the juvenile division, who has worked to stop truancy.

    Martin Chavez, who distributes food at Adelanto-based Community Tool Box, runs the Adelanto Youth Connection and Adelanto Youth Leadership programs.

    Malcolm Driggs of the County Schools Alliance for Education, who works with business, labor and other community leaders so students can learn about various professions.

    G. Christopher Gardner, chief deputy public defender, who has worked on various juvenile delinquency issues and other youth-related ventures.

    Rich Randolph, a Colton police officer, who started the Cops `N' Jocks program, which works to bring high school students together with police officers.

    Terrance Stone, founder of the nonprofit Young Visionaries, which runs anti-gang programs.


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    Awards fete service to youth

    posted Thursday, October 9, 2008 5:54 PM

    Awards fete service to youth

    By Jason Pesick, Staff Writer Article Launched: 10/08/2008 08:54:45 PM PDT
    counseling for victims.

    Planned Parenthood of Orange and San Bernardino Counties, which offers educational programs about reproductive health, body image, nutrition and domestic violence.

    Youth Alternative Solutions Program, which aids teenagers arrested on drug and alcohol-related offenses.

    Individual award recipients were:

    Karen Bell, chief deputy district attorney for the juvenile division, who has worked to stop truancy.

    Martin Chavez, who distributes food at Adelanto-based Community Tool Box, runs the Adelanto Youth Connection and Adelanto Youth Leadership programs.

    Malcolm Driggs of the County Schools Alliance for Education, who works with business, labor and other community leaders so students can learn about various professions.

    G. Christopher Gardner, chief deputy public defender, who has worked on various juvenile delinquency issues and other youth-related ventures.

    Rich Randolph, a Colton police officer, who started the Cops `N' Jocks program, which works to bring high school students together with police officers.

    Terrance Stone, founder of the nonprofit Young Visionaries, which runs anti-gang programs.

    jason.pesick@inlandnewspapers.com

    (909) 386-3861.


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    Rest in Peace Bo Taylor

    posted Wednesday, August 13, 2008 8:46 AM

    -->

    August 12, 2008

    Rest in Peace Bo Taylor

    terrance and BO.JPG
    The late "Bo" Taylor (left) with Terrance Stone

    Among those mourning Monday's death of Darren "Bo" Taylor is Terrance Stone of Young Visionaries Youth Ministries in San Bernardino.
    "Man, that was a good dude," Stone told me this afternoon. "He was my mentor. He was the one I called for advice whenever I needed it."
    Taylor gained fame as a former Los Angeles gang member turned interventionist. He crusaded against gang violence, working the streets, hosting a radio show and helping to organize, with USC's Pete Carroll, UNITY One, which focuses on intervention and prevention.
    He died of cancer.
    "I remember when I was still in gang, and he had this intervention thing going, and it helped convince me to turn things around," Stone said.
    Today, Young Visionaries is among the most respected gang intervention efforts in the San Bernardino area. When Stone and his group held the first Mynisha's Circle awards ceremony at Cal State San Bernardino in May 2007, Taylor made sure he attended. He also paid Stone's tuition at Cal State LA.
    "His personal honesty, his opinion, meant so much to me and others."

    Posted by Steve Lambert at 4:33 PM | Permalink | Comments (0)


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    Anti-gang activist Bo Taylor dies of cancer

    posted Wednesday, August 13, 2008 8:44 AM

    Anti-gang activist Bo Taylor dies of cancer

    Staff Reports Article Launched: 08/12/2008 09:39:25 PM PDT
    The death of Darren "Bo" Taylor won't mean an end to his grass-roots war on gangs.

    In San Bernardino, Taylor's protege Terrance Stone said the fight goes on.

    "Man, that was a good dude," said Stone, who runs Young Visionaries Youth Ministries. "He was my mentor. He was the one I called for advice whenever I needed it."

    Taylor, who died Monday of cancer, gained fame as a Los Angeles gang member turned interventionist. He crusaded against gang violence, working the streets, hosting a radio show and organizing UNITY One, which focuses on intervention and prevention.

    "I remember when I was still in a gang, and he had this intervention thing going, and it helped convince me to turn things around," Stone said.

    Today, Young Visionaries is among the most respected gang-intervention efforts in the San Bernardino area. When Stone and his group held the first Mynisha's Circle awards ceremony at Cal State San Bernardino in May 2007, Taylor made sure he attended. He also paid Stone's tuition at Cal State Los Angeles.

    "His personal honesty, his opinion, meant so much to me and others," Stone said.


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    Youth-cops interplay stands on shaky legs

    posted Monday, July 28, 2008 9:02 AM

    Youth-cops interplay stands on shaky legs

    Robert Rogers, Staff Writer Article Launched: 07/26/2008 11:13:37 PM PDT
    personal cars.

    The lunches, T-shirts and some equipment is all paid for out of the police union's coffers, and the approved expenditures are nearly gone, Stone said.

    On Saturday, a half-dozen off-duty police officers played basketball and lifted weights with the youths, most of whom hail from the Waterman Gardens and West San Bernardino housing projects.

    "It's important to keep this going," Stone said. "It's one of the few opportunities these kids have to interact with police in a mentorship role."


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    Saving young lives

    posted Monday, July 28, 2008 8:59 AM

    Saving young lives

    Robert Rogers, Staff Writer Article Launched: 07/27/2008 09:55:04 PM PDT
    Photo Gallery: Waterman Gardens

    SAN BERNARDINO - Jermontay Belton is a diamond in one of the city's roughest neighborhoods.

    The 12-year-old runs faster than all but the fleetest adults. He sprints, flips, and vaults off his hands into mind-bending spins like a gymnast.

    Self-taught.

    His raw but quick mind picks up board games in a blink. But for all his prodigious talent, Jermontay's future is shrouded in the haze of poverty and gang culture into which he was born.

    He's aggressive, and his salty language is already tailored to the streets.

    Jermontay stands at the razor's

    Jermontay Belton, 12, plays with his brother Darreon Thompson, 6, on Thursday at the youth center at Waterman Gardens in San Bernardino. The center provides games, fun and activities for the children of the housing project despite its meager budget. (Gabriel Luis Acosta/Staff Photographer) edge of his young life - he can go either way.

    It's children like Jermontay who Top Flight Education and Sports Organization, a nonprofit organization that serves youths in the Waterman Gardens housing project, is contracted to provide after-school activities.

    "We do what we can with what we have," said Jason Williams, 23, a part-time manager for Top Flight who runs the Waterman Gardens Community Center. "These kids need us."

    Waterman Gardens, located on the southeast corner of Waterman Avenue and Base Line, is a 252-unit subsidized housing project that has always been poor. In recent years, it has been marred by violence.

    In June 2006, a 16-year-old boy was shot and killed on his mother's porch in a dispute over a cell phone. In April 2007, a 15-year-old boy was shot in the head and killed on Waterman Avenue, near the complex. The assailants fled into Waterman Gardens.

    Both crimes - and boys - are well-remembered by kids here.

    Within this grim milieu, nonprofits like Top Flight represent the only safe, constructive community outlet for children whose parents often have neither the time nor means to provide much more than food, shelter and clothing.

    And they do the job on the cheap.

    Top Flight's contract with the County Housing Authority provides about $53,000 annually, most of which goes to part-time, $8-per-hour employees to monitor the center four hours per day. Two other nonprofits, Young Visionaries Youth Leadership Academy and the Bobby G. Vega Foundations, have contracts splitting the remaining $37,000 to provide services.

    All totaled, there is about $90,000 annually for youth programs, or about $357 per apartment unit, a figure even the Housing Authority itself admits is undesirably low.

    And the money hasn't grown with the times.

    "There is not much funding for youth programs compared to past years," said Alison Crawford, a County Housing Authority spokeswoman.

    Crawford said the Housing Authority hopes the future brings more resources from the federal government and from private sector partners, but says the reduction in funding in recent years has diminished the amount and effectiveness of their youth programs.

    In the past five years, the funding the Housing Authority receives from the Department of Housing and Urban Development has been on the steady decline, Crawford said.

    "We used to have basketball, baseball and football leagues," Crawford said.

    Will Gray, Top Flight's executive director and himself a former child of urban poverty in South Central Los Angeles, bemoaned the loss of sports programming.

    Top Flight and the Housing Authority first partnered in 1999 with the intention of running all-ages youth sports leagues. Meanwhile, Top Flight would run after-school programs in the Waterman Gardens Community Center and Johnson Hall on the Westside.

    But money for the sports league dried up by 2004, Gray said, leaving him enough to run the center for four hours per day, and only for children up to age 13.

    The other two nonprofits in the gardens focus on older children and offer computer and conservation training.

    "With sports, you can change kids," Gray said.

    But not all is lost, not by a long shot. On a recent afternoon, Jermontay and about 20 others, a band of scrappy kids like 13-year-olds Cortez Porter (he excels at pingpong) and E.J. Green (rarely without his skateboard) took to the field to play a disorganized game of football under Williams' watchful eye.

    Jermontay dominated, as usual, but something happened that was slightly different. When Cortez asked for the ball, the typically bullying Jermontay paused, then flipped it to the smaller boy.

    "I promised his family we'd look after Jermontay," Williams said, smiling at the boy's subtle growth.


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    Prison promise drives ex-gang member to help kids

    posted Monday, June 30, 2008

    Prison promise drives ex-gang member to help kids

    Debbie Pfeiffer Trunnell, Staff Writer Article Launched: 06/28/2008 07:11:23 AM PDT
    into trouble.

    "I was a latchkey kid growing up in `Sin Town' in Pomona, at a time when the Crips and Bloods were getting established there, so there were bad influences all around," he said.

    By the time he was 14, he was heavily into the gang lifestyle and dealing cocaine on the streets.

    "My dad was dead, most of my uncles were into gangs and drugs, especially one uncle, who was a big-time drug dealer," he said. "So I really did not have any successful African American role models."

    At age 15, he was in a shootout with sheriff's deputies in the San Gabriel Valley and ended up in California Youth Authority.

    He lived at different youth authority institutions in the state until age 19. At some there was so much tension and violence that it felt like attending "baby gladiator school," he said.

    As a result he came out more hardened than when he went in.

    At 19, he violated his parole and went back to the Youth Training School in Chino for 18 months, and violated his parole again by leaving the state for Denver.

    He was caught and sent to Tehachapi State Prison.

    "I was so hardcore that I remember feeling a sense of accomplishment, like I was graduating from high school and going to college," he said.

    Upon his release, he drove buses in El Monte but still had ties to the gang lifestyle.

    "I would go to the neighborhood and hang out with my homies," he said.

    When one of them committed a crime, he was linked to it and sent to West Valley Detention Center. He could have been sentenced to two life sentences and 25 years to life, but served 11 months.

    During that time, the visits from his daughter and those rides to the courthouse scared him straight.

    And when he was released, he began going to church, spending more time with his daughter and working.

    While driving shuttle busses back and forth to the airport and attending Chaffey College, he decided his true calling was to be a youth counselor.

    In 1999, he created the Young Visionaries Youth Leadership Academy.

    The organization's purpose is to help enrich the lives of young people through life building activities and instruction in the areas of education, employment, health, mentoring, and community service.

    In the beginning, he and a friend who was also a former gang member spoke at group homes and schools.

    The nonprofit now offers programs including youth violence prevention, forward focus leadership, healthy options for teens, youth employment development and youth advocacy training at nine different locations in San Bernardino County.

    The youth service organization recently partnered with the San Bernardino Police Officers Association, American Sports University and The California Wellness Foundation to offer Team VIP.

    In the program, off-duty police officers and university trainers work on a fitness program with area youth.

    Stone is so into it that he often drives children who otherwise could not make it to the university.

    "My goal now is to be the role model that I did not have as a child," he said. "And I feel great about the direction we are heading in and the direction we point these kids in."


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