YouthBuild WPG 2000-2014

YouthBuild WPG 2000-2014 YouthBuild Winnipeg was a dynamic Indigenous youth program on Ellice Avenue in the West End of Winnipeg. Save our School! This program is completely non-profit.

The program served the needs and aspiration of young men and women between the ages of 18 and 29 that wanted to build a better life for themselves. Northern Stars Education Program
We are setting up a new program in order to save the school. We've incorporated the name "North Stars Education Program" as a not-for-profit organization that will serve as our foundation for the new school. We already

have teachers and staff from the old school who are ready and willing to start new - and we have many organizations and First Nations interested in helping out. But we need to raise seed money to get our program going. They know that we have the experience and credibility to keep our program running. But we need to save our school before September, so our students can return! The Northern Stars Education Program Inc. board is comprised of seven Aboriginal and Non-Aboriginal members and three advisors with formidable experience in education, program development, cultural programming, business management, finance, construction, green technology and advocacy. With your help we can make our new school a reality. Our New School
In order to make our new school a reality we need to raise seed money to get our program going. Your donation will go towards the bricks and mortar of our new facility including things like tables, chairs, computers and new tools. Making a Difference
For the past fourteen years our program has made a real impact with over 150 graduates in the last six years alone. Our successes also go well beyond the classroom with our graduates strengthening the fabric of their families and of their communities. With many of our students traveling to Winnipeg from their northern communities, our program becomes their home away from home. Without our program our students may not find the supports they need in order to succeed. Real Challenges
Moving to Winnipeg to go to school is a reality for thousands of Aboriginal Youth across Canada. Manitoba is home to 63 First Nation communities yet 42 of them do not have a high school. This means that many Aboriginal Youth must leave their families behind to go to school during a critical time in their life. Fitting in, finding the right school, making new friends, loneliness and racism are some of the barriers Aboriginal Youth have to face in the big city. Our school offers the supports our students need so they can deal with the stresses of life in the big city including counselling, peer supports, cultural teachings and life skills classes. Other Ways You Can Help
Some people just can't contribute, but that doesn't mean they can't help:
• Ask folks to get the word out and make some noise about your campaign. SHARE OUR PAGE!
• Donate to our Fundraising Campaign! Visit our Indiegogo site to make a contribution: https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/northern-stars-education-program-inc
Check out our website: http://saveourschoolwinnipeg.wordpress.com/

07/25/2024

I am very sad to report the loss of one of our former students and bright stars Dean Young.

Dean did well at school, was always helpful, had a great attitude and loved playing basketball. He participated actively in all school activities and even participated in one of our E-Spirit projects and conference in Quebec City.

He always had a big smile and made everyone’s day better when he was around.

Our condolences go out to the family. May you rest in peace Dean.

Good things are coming to Manitoba and help is on the way. To all of my former students at YouthBuild, I encourage you t...
08/31/2023

Good things are coming to Manitoba and help is on the way. To all of my former students at YouthBuild, I encourage you to stay strong, believe in yourself and get involved if you can. Never forget that just a bit of COURAGE is always more than enough. Thinking of you. Take care.

Hello all former students. Hope you’re all doing well? Back in 2013 I think, a friend of mine, Liz Przybylski, came by t...
08/05/2023

Hello all former students. Hope you’re all doing well? Back in 2013 I think, a friend of mine, Liz Przybylski, came by to talk about Poetry and HipHop. She just shared with me an awesome playlist related to her new book. SONIC SOVEREIGNTY. Have a listen, share and take care.

Sonic Sovereignty · Playlist · 31 songs · 5 likes

Nice to see Will Morin again today. He was our first Valedictorian at YouthBuild back in 2003.
07/02/2023

Nice to see Will Morin again today. He was our first Valedictorian at YouthBuild back in 2003.

05/06/2023
11/12/2022

Today we honour Veterans who fought for Justice, Equality, Respect and Compassion. Fighting a war against fascism makes sense. Fighting a war on crime doesn’t. Not during a pandemic, not when life is less and less affordable and not when our schools are being cut.
A war on crime against our own is not what Veterans fought for.

Brandon Sun November 10, 2022
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Stefanson’s new war on crime

Last week, Manitoba’s Progressive Conservative government announced a war on what they call a crime in this province. They created a new interprovincial police unit to target persons involved in repeat transgressions.

The PCs gave more money for downtown street patrols in Winnipeg. They provided money for a new detention centre space in Brandon, suggesting the bigger space was needed for new arrests that are looming as the PCs adopt a tougher approach to dealing with transgression.

The PCs are out in full force talking about going after bad guys and getting tough on crime to anyone who will listen. No doubt some Manitobans are, especially wealthy property owners. These kinds of ideological stunts can be popular with conservative thinkers, and the PCs in Manitoba clearly have a punitive mentality on issues of transgression and distress.

They would rather lock someone up, punish them, push them further to the margins, than fund social services groups and community outreach that will actually help people.

This punitive thinking doesn’t lead to long-term safety, and you don’t have to have a PhD in criminology to see that. For more than 50 years, we have had a carceral, colonial approach to responding to transgression and distress in this province. We have funded the Winnipeg Police Service to an extent that it is now bringing the municipal budget into a position of structural deficit.

If a police-first approach to dealing with transgression worked, it would have already. We would have less transgression in Manitoba’s cities. We would have healthier communities and neighbourhoods. We do not, and this is because we have defunded the community groups and social development programs that actually keep people healthy and safe, that deter transgression before it happens.

Instead, we have given that money to law enforcement agencies, who really have no tools to help people be safer or healthier. Police simply respond with violence after a transgression has already occurred, and then lock people up. Some Manitobans might think that makes them safer, but it does not.

There’s a book by Todd Clear called “Imprisoning Communities,” which shows the more we imprison people in certain neighbourhoods that already tend to be racialized and marginalized, the more those neighbourhoods go into a socio-economic decline that is associated with future transgression.

Policing doesn’t stop crime, but causes conditions for transgression to flourish over time.

That is what’s going to happen if this war-on-crime announcement resonates with enough Manitobans that the PCs sneak back into power next election. Declaring a crime war is cyclical, part of how conservatives cling to power, and it has disastrous effects on already marginalized families and neighbourhoods.

This war-on-crime declaration is also designed to make us forget about the way this PC government abandoned people during the pandemic.

If enough Manitobans forget how the PCs refused to fund initiatives to expand health care, if enough people forget how the PCs have cut public education from kindergarten to post-secondary, we will have another four years of PCs widening the punitive carceral net and dismantling the social safety net. All that will remain is a bulky, expensive criminal justice system that does not actually produce real safety — a night-watchman state.

If enough Manitobans are seduced by this war-on-crime rhetoric, it will not end well. The more we pump money into policing and imprisonment, the less healthy our communities will be.

This declaration of a war on crime by Stefanson is a hail mary for the PCs, and it speaks to the poverty of their platform. They want to turn the page. They have nothing to say about the crisis in health care that they’ve created by closing emergency rooms and failing to hire more nurses and doctors. They have nothing to say about the pure horror that is happening right now in hospitals across the province.

The PCs want people to forget that they abandoned Manitoba during the pandemic. They want to project blame onto others, people who are already on the margins of society. Declaring a war on crime is a classic conservative approach to scapegoating the poor.

To the extent this war-on-crime rhetoric works, the lesser Manitoba will be, and the more pain and suffering it will guarantee for racialized, marginalized, everyday working people across the province.

KEVIN WALBY Winnipeg

08/03/2015

Our school has been saved. We are now YouthBuild MITT Winnipeg. Thanks to all our contributors

Here is a project we have been working on for YouthBuild MITT. An amazing school with talented and hardworking students ...
12/18/2014

Here is a project we have been working on for YouthBuild MITT. An amazing school with talented and hardworking students led by some passionate teachers.

YouthBuild MITT is an adult learning centre by definition located in the heart of the North End of Winnipeg, but what sets it apart from other schools is their outside…

10/09/2014

We are now in full swing at 765 Main Street. Come and visit us.

Address

Winnipeg, MB

Telephone

+12045103880

Website

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