Youth Outreach Services Is Bringing Positive Vibes To Austin With End of Summer Bash

With the many news headlines about the ongoing violence plaguing the Austin neighborhood on Chicago’s West Side, Vanessa Sanchez worries that the youth growing up in the community are unable to think positively about their futures.

“[Austin] is so often featured in the media as a dangerous area,” says Sanchez, the prevention program manager at Youth Outreach Services, a nonprofit based in Austin. “We want to give the neighborhood a different light.”

So Sanchez came up with the idea to host an afternoon block party, called the Austin End of Summer Bash, to help kids and families in Austin dream of a brighter, peaceful and safer future.

“We wanted to cultivate a positive outlook for the youth in the area and let them know that Youth Outreach Services is here as a resource for them” Sanchez continues.

Blocking off a portion of Mayfield Avenue at Division Street, just outside the YOS’ Austin office, the End of Summer Bash will have free food, music and games for residents of all ages from 3-7 PM. For the kids specifically, YOS is giving away school supplies and providing fun activities such as rock climbing, a dunk tank and an appearance by Power 92 radio personality, HotRod.

The goal is to create an environment where Austin youth can let their guards down and enjoy being a kid while feeling safe to do so, Sanchez says. Simultaneously, Sanchez wants families to learn more about the programs YOS has to offer – including drug and pregnancy prevention, juvenile justice, child welfare and counseling.

Additionally, a portion of the End of Summer Bash will take place in YOS’ community garden. Dubbed the Austin Garden, Sanchez said YOS turned an empty lot into a beautiful space for the community to grow herbs and vegetables to cook. So far, the garden is home to watermelon, collard greens, tomatoes, eggplants, green beans, strawberries, basil, mint and more.

“The hope is to have the garden be something that the community can take care of and pick from,” Sanchez says. “It’s growing and we’re hoping to keep it growing for years to come.”

The garden isn’t the only thing Sanchez wants to keep growing. After the End of Summer Bash, she hopes more people will look to YOS as a resource so the organization can help more people in the community.

“We hope to see a lot of unity,” Sanchez adds. “We want the community to know that we’re here.”

This is a story about the Promote Community Safety and Peace strategy of the Partnership for Safe and Peaceful Communities.

Tiffany Walden is Co-Founder, Editor-in-Chief of the Triibe.  This story originally appeared on The Triibe.