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Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Annual Public Meeting


Public Invitation

Annual Meeting
March 9, 2018
12:00 pm
Mercer County Courthouse
Commissioner's Assembly Room
Ground Floor

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Tuesday, December 19, 2017


Advisory council to eye youths’ needs

·         By NATALIE EASTWOOD Herald Staff Writer and Eric Poole Herald Assistant Editor | News

·         Dec 17, 2017

— It’s a Catch-22.

One of the most daunting issues facing at-risk young people in Mercer County is the need for jobs and transportation, said Summer Knapp, executive director of the newly formed Youth Social Service Advisory Committee.

The problem is, Knapp said, if a teenager doesn’t have transportation, he or she will have a difficult time getting a job. Without a job, and the paycheck that goes along with it, transportation is often out of reach.

“A lot of these kids, they think, ‘I have to learn how to get a job and be an adult, but I have no way to get to the job,’” Knapp said.

The advisory committee, which held its first meeting last month, is working out a way to overcome that conundrum. Representatives from more than 10 groups, including Mercer County Children and Youth Services, Mercer County Communities that Care, Catholic Charities and Prince of Peace, attended that first meeting, and Knapp expects more organizations to join up.

Knapp said the committee will meet once a quarter, with the next session to be held in February. Initially, the group will discuss the needs of young people either affected by poverty or in the juvenile probation system.

In addition to transportation, necessary in rural areas like much of Mercer County to reach jobs, Knapp said one significant deficiency is a lack of mentors.

“A lot of these kids are in the system or transitioning out of the system, and they have no one as a positive influence,” Knapp said.

In the committee’s second phase, she said the agencies will work on plans to address those needs. The third phase will be for the groups to band together and to get help through federal and state funding so they can implement the plans.

With the agencies all communicating with one another, Knapp said they will all be pulling in the same direction, which will increase their ability to gain state and federal support.

Another advantage to the interagency communication is the elimination of duplicate efforts.

Thomas Hawkins, treasurer for MCJAC, said the committee will offer greater opportunities for cooperation and efficiency among agencies.

“We’re taking not a new tactic completely, but a new strategy on how to work together,” Hawkins said

Hawkins cited the county’s opioid epidemic and said that the community needs to ask what is wrong in peoples’ lives that would cause them to turn to drugs.

Many agencies are so focused on fixing current problems that they don’t try to find the root causes, he said. The committee wants to take preventative measures by collaborating with different agencies such as the school system, legislative bodies, social services and anyone trying to help at-risk youths.

It’s more effective to work together, Hawkins said, because all of the agencies are trying to help kids.

“You have to be stronger,” he said. “It’s like a team. The team members practice together. They don’t practice in separate rooms and then go out and try to play the game. And we’re trying to win the game.”

Follow Natalie Eastwood on Facebook or on Twitter at @natalie_herald. Email her at neastwood@sharonherald.com.







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Monday, December 18, 2017

New Youth Service Advisory Committee


New youth advisory group wants to fill in the gaps of services

By MOLLY MOSER

mmoser@recordargusnews.com


EAST LACKAWANNOCK TOWNSHIP — Summer Knapp (right), executive director of the county’s Juvenile Advisory Council, speaks to a group of youth specialists Friday at the first meeting of the Youth Social Service Advisory Committee. 
Molly Moser/R-A
EAST LACKAWANNOCK TOWNSHIP — Summer Knapp (right), executive director of the county’s Juvenile Advisory Council, speaks to a group of youth specialists Friday at the first meeting of the Youth Social Service Advisory Committee. Molly Moser/R-A EAST LACKAWANNOCK TOWNSHIP —

Mercer County is home to an array of programs geared toward helping children and young adults lead successful lives, whether it be Children & Youth Services, the Behavioral Health Commission (BHC) or the Children’s Aid Society.

But because each program has a unique focus and arsenal of services, Summer Knapp said gaps can be created between where one service ends and another begins.

“What we want to do is eliminate all of those gaps,” said Knapp, executive director of the county’s Juvenile Advisory Council.

Friday, Knapp gathered 10 representatives from eight youth-centered county organizations for the first meeting of the Youth Social Service Advisory Committee.

The purpose of the committee, she said, is to create a collaborative environment in which the leaders of these organizations can work together to identify what their needs are, and to create solutions.

After state Auditor General Eugene De- Pasquale released a statement early this year labeling Pennsylvania’s child protection structure as “broken,” Knapp said she didn’t want to wait for the state to solve the problem.

“The best thing we can do is come together as a community, and start this at the grass-roots level,” she said.

One of the largest aspects of the committee will involve finding volunteers to help lighten the load currently placed on individual case workers, as well as provide services that may not be currently available.

Because of the increased liability that can come with it, most of the organizations in the room Friday reported that they do not currently use volunteers.

This, Knapp said, has resulted in the paid employees becoming “underpaid and overworked.”

“The average case worker at CYS has 20 cases at a time,” she said. “There isn’t enough time, and there isn’t enough money, and we can’t let these kids suffer because of it.

“You have plenty of good community members in Mercer County,” Knapp said to those in attendance. “We need to find the people who are willing and want to donate the time.”

Participating agencies filled out a survey early in the month, identifying what they feel are the needs that are not being met in the youth community.

The two areas that received the most votes were mentoring and transition-age services, referring to young adults who have aged out of the programs currently offering them assistance.

“There is a lot of homelessness — there’s nowhere for these kids to go; it’s huge with our transition-aged kids,” Knapp said.

Transportation was named as another major area of concern in the county.

According to Knapp, a young person may want to get a job, but has no way of driving themselves to and from work; or a young mother may need groceries, but can’t afford to spend money to take a bus.

That is where, she said, a volunteer could step in, offering transportation services to those who need it to get back on their feet.

Individuals who have volunteered for various events associated with the BHC will be contacted about offering their time once again, and Knapp said she also has plans to reach out to colleges in the area that require their students to complete volunteer hours.

In addition to the volunteer recruitment program, the committee will include the Social Service and Community Education Program.

This program will include training sessions for officials at the various organizations, as well as the community at large, to educate individuals about services offered within each county organization.

It will also allow the leaders of county organizations to come together to “advocate, champion and support youth-centered policies at local, state and national levels.”

The committee will meet quarterly at the BHC, with the next meeting scheduled for February.
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