Youth Services offers volunteer training

BRATTLEBORO- Youth Services is offering a volunteer training on Monday, January 7, from 6 to 9 pm, at their offices at 32 Walnut Street, for community members interested in becoming more involved with the nonprofit. Volunteer opportunities range from helping on an ad hoc basis with transportation, meal prep, sharing parenting and life skills, to more formal roles such as volunteering as a mentor for a youth-led screen printing business, sitting on a once-a-month diversion panel, or serving as a temporary host home.
The first part of the evening will orient prospective volunteers to Youth Services’ philosophy and trauma-informed approach to building communities where young people and families are healthy, empowered, and valued. The second half of the evening will provide specifics about each of the volunteer opportunities currently available.
Mentors are sought from the area’s vibrant small business and art community; adults who can apprentice young people ages 17 to 24 in bookkeeping, design, sales and marketing, and entrepreneurship, among other skills needed to run a business. This commitment is twice a month for two hours on an afternoon or evening.
Host homes are volunteer households that agree to provide shelter, food, and include youth in family activities while they stay up to 21 days during a family crisis. Host home applicants undergo a screening process that includes an interview, home visit, and criminal background check. Youth Services provides shelter parents with training, ongoing support, and a small stipend to help cover costs.  Shelter parents also have access to 24-hour on-call services at Youth Services.  Shelter parents aren’t responsible for any type of counseling or case management.
 Diversion boards involve victims, offenders, and community members in a constructive restorative justice process that helps offenders make amends to victims and the community while taking responsibility for their unlawful actions. Volunteers as a group meet once a month with individuals referred to Youth Services by the State’s Attorney after involvement in delinquency or criminal activities. It is a voluntary alternative to the court process and has been quite successful in reducing repeat offenses, according to Youth Services.
For more information contact Michaela Stockwell at (802) 257-0361 or email michaela.stockwell@youthservicesinc.org.

The Deerfield Valley News

797 VT Route 100 North
Wilmington, VT 05363

Phone: 802-464-3388
Fax: 802-464-7255

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