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Collaborating For Kids
Watauga County Summit On Youth
Attracts Hundreds Of Participants
By Mike Shands
Concern for High Country children is alive and well
if turnout for the 2006 Watauga County Summit on Youth
is any indication.
More than 100 people convened June 19 at the Broyhill
Inn and Conference Center for the all-day event, which
was sponsored by the Watauga County Extension and Community
Association and the Council for Childrens Community
of Advocates in Charlotte.
Watauga
County Board of Education member Deborah Miller
points out some of the high school issues her group
discussed while Ron Redmon, one of the summits
co-coordinators, holds up the list. Photos
by Mike Shands
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Western
Youth Network Executive Director Jennifer Grubb
displays some of the issues discussed at the summit
with the help of Ron Redmon, one of the summits
co-coordinators.
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The summit allowed concerned citizens and
representatives of dozens of agencies and organizations
to identify areas of need and issues affecting children,
create plans of action to meet those needs and identify
individuals or groups to help carry out those plans.
This is the start of a process
of making Watauga
County an even better place for the youth of the county.
I congratulate you for being here, said Nancy Reigel,
one of the summits co-coordinators.
Representatives of at least 21 agencies and organization
that serve children in the county attended the event.
They included Watauga County Schools, Western Youth Network,
the Childrens Council, the Childrens Playhouse,
Watauga County 4-H, W.A.M.Y. Community Action, Parent
to Parent, High Country United Way, the Alcohol/Drug Council,
OASIS, Hunger Coalition, Girl Scouts and the Watauga Education
Foundation.
Joining them were representatives of the county commissioners,
Boone Town Council, county public library, county health
department, department of social services, juvenile crime
prevention council, department of juvenile justice, area
physicians and therapists, faith community, law enforcement
community, Boone Area Chamber of Commerce, county parks
and recreation department and the Boone Service League.
They all began the summit with a learning tour of various
statistics about youth in the county and state. They then
shared observations about those statistics, listed needs
or shortfalls in childrens services and developed
areas of interest on which to focus during the remainder
of the day.
After hearing from guest speaker Dr. Jolie Bain Pillsbury,
a nationally recognized child advocate expert, those attending
the summit divided into groups to formulate plans of action
to meet the specific needs and shortfalls in local childrens
services.
Initiatives
Some of those initiatives included a community center
to serve youth; surveying area teenagers to find out what
they want out of a community center and the kinds of activities
they would enjoy there; and developing a center or program
at Watauga High School to serve at-risk students by providing
guidance, mentoring and role models.
The group discussing the area of child health and wellness
suggested increasing the medical care available to area
students, continuing the school systems Be Active
program to reduce child obesity, finding indoor locations
for children to exercise during the winter and increasing
tobacco-free places in the community.
Another group suggested giving youth a voice in the community
by forming some sort of youth advisory committee or council
that is separate from the school system and other organizations.
The final group discussed establishing a family resource
system to gather and disseminate information to provide
the public with parenting tips and information about various
resources, services and youth activities available within
the community.
High Energy Level
Reigel said she was excited that each of the groups
seemed to take on a life of its own with individuals stepping
forward to lead initiatives and help make things happen.
I thought the energy was incredible, she said.
We started off with high energy as a larger group,
then we broke up, and I saw people working for two hours
leaning forward, talking and sharing.
They came together around issues. They created.
They really seemed to understand what their issues were,
what they needed to do about them and they made commitments.
I am very, very encouraged that today created some
things that are going to change the life of the youth
in the future.
Pillsbury, who has worked with childrens issues
in dozens of states, agreed that the groups energy
was encouraging.
I dont often see communities come together
this well in a day so it was a pleasure to be here,
she said. My thought
is how easily the groups
formed in the circles around the room.
Youre seeing the people standing up and saying,
So-and-so is going to do this, and so-and-so is
going to do that. Those are early indicators that
probably out of this, something real will occur.
I love being kind of an informal, quasi-member of
the community for the day. It was a wonderful honor.
Another one of the summits co-coordinators, Ron
Redmon, said that he was encouraged by the turnout and
the perseverance of those who attended.
It really was an inspiration and the beginnings
of a brighter future for the youth of our county,
he said.
Organizers plan on holding a follow-up summit in about
six months to help keep the initiatives going.
Reigel said that its not too late to become involved
with the summits initiatives. Those who missed the
summit can still become involved with a specific effort
or obtain more information by calling her at (828) 268-0637
or sending an e-mail to nancy@reigelridge.com.
Look for more information and details about the summit
in next weeks edition of The Mountain Times.
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