YES seeks local funding
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Deirdre Newman
Youth Employment Service is asking the community it serves to
increase its financial support.
It invited top community leaders to a luncheon on Wednesday to
raise awareness of its effort to find jobs for youths aged 14 to 22.
Over the past two years, government funding for Youth Employment
Service has dried up, leaving the organization’s financial condition
murky at the beginning of each year, Director Lynne Graham said. So
it is turning to the community for help.
“It’s something we really need to do because now we’re talking
turkey,” Graham said. “It’s not philosophical anymore. [Youth
Employment Service] really needs financial support.”
Almost 50 people attended the luncheon, which also feted heiress
Joan Irvine Smith, who will be honored at the organization’s annual
Roman Feast fundraiser in May. Event Coordinator Christine Carr said
she chose Smith because she personifies the mission of Youth
Employment Service. Irvine Smith’s contributions include the Irvine
Museum and the National Water Research Institute.
“She’s giving the promise to youth of a better tomorrow,” Carr
said.
Youth Employment Service was founded in 1969 by volunteers. It
serves about 1,200 youth, mostly on a walk-in basis. The small staff
offers tips on things such as interviewing and resume writing, and it
links job seekers with employers. Computers, fax machines and
Internet service are available to job seekers, as well.
“I think what they do is terrific,” Irvine Smith said. “I think
it’s a wonderful, necessary program.”
Helping youth find work is a way to endow them with qualities they
can use, said David Calderon, president of the organization’s board
of directors.
“Getting people jobs is a way of building self-esteem and
confidence in our youth -- they seem to lack both, in some cases,”
Calderon said.
The outreach effort is paying off, as many who weren’t familiar
with the organization expressed their admiration for it Wednesday.
“I’m very impressed,” said Bob Dees, vice president of instruction
at Orange Coast College. “I didn’t know much about it. Ideally, I’d
like to see a connection between us and them because we are serving
the same people.”
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