G20 Youth Festival – Raising Funds
Background to establishing youth base in Maryhill
‘Having a base will enable us to give young people in Maryhill the chance to learn skills, make friendships and raise aspirations. Let’s support young people to be their best and make Maryhill a great place to grow up in.’ (July, 2019)
Please help the G20 Festival to raise a minimum of £2,000 to cover rent for a youth base in Maryhill while we work towards a more permanent base for our young people.
Here is some more information about why they need a space.
Since 2005 Glasgow’s violence levels have plummeted. This is thanks to the work of the Violence Reduction Unit (VRU). John Carnochan was one of the founders of the unit and in his Postcards from Scotland book – Conviction- he sets out what they did. For example, they took a public health perspective on violence and gangs, and made the problem the responsibility of lots of agencies, not just the police. They interacted with young people in gangs and provided alternative activities. The approach they instigated has led to a reduction in violent behaviour, including knife carrying, across Scotland.
Since the VRU started in Glasgow it has had most impact here and Glasgow rightly has become a model of good practice across the world. However, despite the VRU’s undeniable success in reducing Glasgow’s violence, the problem is far from fixed. I live in Maryhill and we have recently seen a rise in gang related activity and violence. So too have other local areas such as Lambhill, Possil and Cadder. Police Scotland describes the area on Maryhill Road as a MATAC – a Multi Agency Tasking and Coordinating spot. What this means is that it is a small geographical hotspot for violence. The police are now focusing their efforts to reduce crime there.
In Maryhill community there are some great initiatives for young people, but very little for teenagers involved in street gangs.
Established indoor clubs often don’t work for these young people anyway. This is because their behaviour is often seen as unacceptable: lots of swearing, play fighting, and graffiti, for example. They often don’t mix well with other groups of young people because they feel judged by those more in control of their emotions and behaviour. Many of them have multiple ACEs (adverse childhood experiences).
These children and young people are often unable to benefit from mainstream schooling. It’s pretty well impossible for teachers to handle such a wide range of needs and abilities in a single classroom. In many cases the young people’s challenging, anti-social behaviour leads to suspension or exclusion from school. This exacerbates the young people’s challenges, reducing the chance of developing the soft skills they need to integrate with mainstream activities, and potentially putting them at risk of being back in a vulnerable home or out on the street. They then fall further behind developmentally and this can be disastrous for their future lives.
Even out in the community our young people are facing barriers. They are often banned from various shops and other places they might congregate because of the number in their group and the way they behave. They are also at risk of taking dangerous drugs and misusing alcohol.
We keep hearing people saying of these youngsters involved in street gangs, ‘It’s their own fault’. But how would your own child fare if he or she was in their shoes and had to contend with some, or all, of the following? – little to no parental support emotionally or physically; exposure to various forms of implicit or explicit violence; extreme poverty; no money for out-of-school activities or personal transport to get there at night; exposure to casual substance abuse, and a local community, or school, which fails to provide support. Many have to overcome barriers that are more horrendous than most of us could imagine. How would you have fared between the age of nine and fifteen in these circumstances?
Yes, there are exceptions – those who excel in spite of extremely challenging circumstances. Others manage, despite difficult circumstances to create a reasonable life for themselves but too many struggle and never manage to turn their lives around.
Many of our most vulnerable young people are getting caught up in gang related behaviour and spiralling out of control. To stop this happening we need to involve them in diversionary activities. We also believe that the reason for their antisocial behaviour is not the young person’s fault but the result of inequality and poverty which is stressing parents and leaving the young people with nothing to do and no money for hobbies and activities.
The problem is we cannot see this situation getting any better unless something radical happens. Young people need something to have control over, to hope for and to believe in. They need others to believe in them too. They need a place they can go to where people ask them: ‘What do you need?’ ‘What do you hope for?’ and ‘What do you enjoy? They need communities who are supportive. A lot of this is about developing trusting relationships.
This is what the G20 Festival is trying to do through collaboration with local schools and groups like Police Scotland, Patrick Thistle Charitable Trust, McDonald’s restaurant, Lambhill Stables, Glasgow City Council and Queen’s Cross Housing. They have been working with a gang of young people for the last year and taking a bottom up/grassroots approach to finding out who they are, what do they need to flourish and how can we best support them. Thanks to various funding streams there is an amazing team of youth workers engaging in diversionary activities, but there is no physical base to work with our young people and as a result work is mostly outdoors, in McDonald’s or in a local church. These places are not long term solutions. Something quite special has been created with the young people and now need to build on this; having a safe indoor space will provide greater opportunities.
The am is to give them a place that is theirs, a space where they feel safe and supported and which they can create and have control over. This will give the young people power and confidence to work on their self development. Numbers are increasing and other ‘gangs’ from different areas are coming to seek us out. G20 can no longer hold the youth club in McDonald’s, or out in the open air, because there are too many young people to work with. It makes more sense to have a base to work from; we can venture out to do outreach work, forest school, canoeing, football, climbing and other outdoor activities.
‘We have found a temporary base but we need help with funding for the rent and doing it up. Please can you help us with this until we work towards a permanent solution. Every little helps.’
This section: Events, Fairs, Festivals and Fundraisers, G20 Festival, Kids and young people
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