All posts by Redwood Voice

Del Norte Youth #GetLOUD for Local Candidate’s Forum

On Thursday, October 20th, candidates for the District 1 Del Norte County Board of Supervisor’s seat and the District 4 Del Norte County School Board seat will come together at Mary Peacock to answer questions on topics ranging from youth homelessness to bullying. One might be surprised to find that many of the passionate hosts of the forum are not yet of voting age.

The nonpartisan candidate’s forum was designed by youth, organized by youth, and will be run by youth with guidance from True North Organizing and partners with Building Healthy Communities, Redwood Voice, the Opportunity Youth Initiative, and College of the Redwoods.

“We as youth have a responsibility to not only represent the issues we care about, but also have the responsibility to represent ourselves in this new age,” says organizer Kevin Vue, age 18, “youth have problems too, we suffer and our peers suffer, we would like to see how [the candidates] are going to address our problems.” Organizer Alexxa Herrera, age 16, adds, “This forum also tells people that youth do care about what goes on in our community. Because we care enough to put this on, [the community] should care enough to listen and vote.”

The youth organizers selected the Del Norte County School Board and Del Norte County Board of Supervisors to create the opportunity to ask the candidates questions around decisions they will make that directly impact youth.

College of the Redwoods professor, Will Meriweather, will also be providing brief information on the many propositions that local voters will have on their ballots this year.

For the Del Norte County School Board candidates, Judie Cordts, Charlaine Mazzei, and Roger Daley, the youth selected questions regarding LGBTQ+ issues, bullying, supporting minority students transitioning to higher education, and updates to Del Norte County Schools. For the Board of Supervisors, Roger Gitlin and Kathryn Murray, the youth have selected questions around youth homelessness and shelters, mental health resources, businesses, and other major challenges for youth living in Del Norte County.

The entire community is encouraged to attend to learn more about their candidates and how they are responding to the issues important to our youth. The forum will be held Thursday, October 20th from 6:00pm-8:00pm at the Mary Peacock Gym. Voter registration, childcare, and translation will be available.

Fusion: Crisis on Tribal Lands

CRESCENT CITY, CA—More than a year has passed since 13-year-old Dante Hat-Anew Wayne Romannose-Jones was shot and killed at point blank range near his home on the Yurok reservation in rural Northern California.

For his family members and tribal community, closure has not yet come.

Last January, when District Attorney Dale Trigg dismissed the case against Dante’s suspected killer (a 16-year-old Native boy from the same community) citing insufficient evidence, Dante’s mother, Martha Romannose-Jones, expressed her anguish on Facebook:

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Since then, the family’s outcry for justice has grown louder. Family members publicly expressed outrage over what they believe was a mishandling of the case by law enforcement, and have organized marches and rallies under the banner “Justice for Dante.” The most recent march took place on May 14 to mark the anniversary of the tragedy and was attended by roughly 100 tribal community members, family and friends who took to the streets of nearby Crescent City.

“This is part of growing up Native. We were raised to be this way, to fight,” said Dante’s cousin Jessica Banuelos, who organized the march. “He can’t speak from the other side of the grave, so it’s up to us to fight for him and make sure he gets justice.”

Read the rest of the article here: http://fusion.net/story/312808/crisis-indian-reservations/

To read more about writer, Jacob Patterson and her Rise Up; Be Heard! Fellowship with Fusion, check out our article here: http://www.redwoodvoice.com/local-youth-journalist-selected-for-fusion-fellowship/

Real-Life Superhero – 1st Place Winner in Directing Change

Sixteen-year-old Jed Hawkins is your average junior at Del Norte High School. He plays tennis, enjoys being with friends, loves music, and is a creative storyteller. Jed has dreams of becoming a famous actor, helping people struggling with mental disorders, and changing the world. However, Jed’s daily life is also made more complicated by Asperger’s Syndrome. Asperger’s is a developmental disorder that makes socializing and focusing in school difficult for him. He often finds himself feeling depressed, isolated, and misunderstood. Despite these challenges, Jed continues to reach out, trying to make a difference in the lives of others. So, when he heard about the Directing Change Statewide Film Contest, he was immediately up for the challenge.

The Directing Change Program and Film Contest is part of Each Mind Matters: California’s Mental Health Movement. The program offers youth opportunity to participate in the movement by creating 60-second films about suicide prevention and mental health that are used to support awareness, education and advocacy efforts on these topics. Program participants – whether they are making a film, acting as an adult adviser, or judging the films – are exposed to appropriate messaging about these topics, warning signs, how to appropriately respond to someone in distress, where to seek help, as well as how to stand up for others who are experiencing a mental health challenge.

Redwood Voice, a local youth media program funded through the Building Healthy Communities Initiative, provided equipment, training, and support for youth interested in submitting to the contest. Jed worked with Makenzy Williams and Jacob Patterson, leaders of Redwood Voice, as well as community partners including Meng Lo with Harrington House and Michelle Carrillo with Building Healthy Communities. The message Jed wants to share was clear: he doesn’t want anyone to feel alone, and wants the world to know that we need to support, love, and care for each other regardless of any mental health challenge that may be complicating our lives. Fifty percent of us will experience a mental health challenge in our lifetime, according to CDC: U.S. Adult Mental Illness Surveillance Report, and Jed wants to end the negative stigma existing around these mental health challenges that affect such a significant portion of our population.
Jed created a 60-second film called “Real-Life Superhero.” On April 14th, it was announced that “Real-Life Superhero” won 1st place in the state in the Youth and Young Adult, Mental Health Matters category. This was the first winning submission from Del Norte County since the beginning of the contest in 2014, and Redwood Voice took first place over submissions from UC Davis, Mount San Jacinto College, California Baptist University, Pasadena City College, and University of California Riverside. Jed, Makenzy, and Jacob will attend a red carpet award ceremony in Glendale, Calif. on May 20th. They also attended a local showing in Eureka, Calif. on May 7, and presented at the local Economic Summit in Crescent City on April 29. Jed won $500 and Redwood Voice received $1000 to support suicide prevention and mental health awareness projects.

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Fusion: Need for LGBTQ Inclusive Sex Ed in Del Norte’s Schools

CRESCENT CITY, CA– Growing up queer in a remote Northern California town of just 7,500 people, I experienced firsthand how a rural school can fail to meet the needs of LGBTQ students. It’s a failure with dire consequences.

I experienced abuse in a relationship for the first time at age 13, in part because I lacked any knowledge of what it means to consent. And without healthy queer relationships to model, I presumed my partner’s manipulations were normal. Suffering abuse, dealing with intolerance in my community and lacking any institutional support to speak of, I developed some unhealthy coping mechanisms: I was self-medicating by age 14, and self-harming at 15. At the time, I hated myself and was feeling ashamed. In an attempt to leave Del Norte, I had my first experience in sex work at 16, with a man three times my age.

Sadly, this ripple effect is not altogether uncommon among LGBTQ youth, especially for those of us living in geographically and culturally isolated areas. When we don’t see ourselves reflected in the world around us, when we are systematically marginalized and when our very identities are painted as deviant, we can become that self-fulfilling prophecy.

California took a positive step toward addressing the problem with the passage of AB 329, otherwise known as the California Healthy Youth Act, late last year. The bill expanded on existing law to ensure that students will receive “comprehensive” sex education, including “affirmative” examples of same-sex relationships and education about gender identity.

But how will it actually play out in the classroom? If taken seriously and applied thoughtfully, the new law could make a huge difference in the lives of queer youth, especially those living in rural communities. So, I went to my local high school, Del Norte High, to ask queer students: What would you like to see covered in your new, “comprehensive” sex-ed classes?

Read the rest of the article here: http://fusion.net/story/284851/queer-lgbtq-sexed-ab329/

To read more about writer, Jacob Patterson and her Rise Up; Be Heard! Fellowship with Fusion, check out our article here: http://www.redwoodvoice.com/local-youth-journalist-selected-for-fusion-fellowship/

Local Youth Grant $11,000

On Friday evening, youth leaders granted $11,000 to 14 organizations in Del Norte and Tribal Lands in collaboration with Building Healthy Communities. Manuel Saavedra, age 20, says the grant-making process was an opportunity for them to experience having the decision-making power. “It usually feels unattainable,” Saavedra says, “You often hear people say ‘If only I could change this.’ This opportunity let us get behind the steering wheel and get to choose what work we want to see create those changes in our community.” While Saavedra says the responsibility was intimidating, it was also exciting, and he saw his team grow as leaders. “Sometimes, I would take a step back and just watch everyone. It made me really proud seeing everyone step up to that leadership role.”

The youth leaders forming the Youth Philanthropy team, Manuel Saavedra, Steven Williams, Tyler Harrison, Teng Lee, Alex Fallman, Ryan Wait, and Chris McDonald, started work in November of 2015, and dedicated countless hours of volunteer work to manage the grant-making process from start to finish. The group learned a lot from the process, and further developed as leaders.

Michelle Carrillo, Youth Program Manager with Building Healthy Communities, says she also saw the youth “develop a deep respect and appreciation for people’s time and a higher level of care for what people in the community are trying to do.” The group received 21 grant applications, and unfortunately, had to decide what projects to partially fund and what applications to turn down. “It was so hard to say no to any of them,” says Carrillo, “All of the applications were great, and many of them were actually submitted by youth who had never written grants before, and that was exciting.”

Richard Myers with the Golden Eagle Freestyle Wrestling Club, received a grant for his youth wrestling group located in Weitchpec that currently has 19 youth attending and “one and a half well-used mats.” Additionally, the Tribe recently declared a state of emergency in Weitchpec due to the alarming rates of suicide, occurring within weeks of each other. “There was a call-out for male mentors to help our youth,” he says. “And I wondered what youth are doing for themselves to release stress and excess energy. Wrestling changed my life, and I knew I could use it to help. There were a lot of youth who wanted to wrestle, but had no transportation to get to classes that were a two hour drive away.”

“The grant won’t just be for wrestling,” Myers adds “It will be used to bring in more physical activity opportunities to our underserved community. I am very grateful for what Building Healthy Communities is doing.”

Carrillo summarizes, “I have a sincere appreciation for how much time the youth leaders put into this. It just shows how much they care about this community. They are not the leaders of tomorrow, they are the leaders of today.”

Photo Credit: Nancy Raskauskas-Coons

Get PINK with Gender Talk’s Women’s Health Celebration

Do you know where you can access women’s health resources? Do you know where to direct a friend in need? Are you interested in learning more about local resources and women’s health issues? Gender Talk has a solution, and it comes in the form of a celebration. Gender Talk’s Pink Party is a fun, free event open to all ages and genders organized with the purpose of broadening interest in women’s health and youth development through performances, art, music, and presentations from your local health agencies.

Gender Talk is a community group housed at Coastal Connections that advocates for promoting gender and LGBTQ+ equality in addition to providing a safe space for discussion and creative outlets for local youth. Jacob Patterson, facilitator of Gender Talk states “Our goal is that with the Pink Party, we will bridge gaps between local services and maximize this opportunity not only to educate the community, but to allow agencies to network and learn about each other. We want to make it a fun event that makes health more approachable and that also makes talking about health issues less scary for people.”

The event will include live performances by Spare Change, a youth group with Planned Parenthood NorCal, in the form of educational skits on healthy relationships, gender equality, domestic violence, and bullying. Other presenters, booths, and guests include Building Healthy Communities, CASA, Del Norte Child Care Council, Del Norte High School’s new GSA, Expanding Youth Horizons, Harrington House, the Inter-Tribal Council of California, North Coast Rape Crisis Team, Open Door Community Health Center, Planned Parenthood, Redwood Voice, Tolowa Dee-Ni’ Nation, True North Organizing Network, Universal Heart Shamanic Drummers, Wild Rivers Community Foundation, Yurok Tribe, and more.

“Agencies don’t always have a venue to mingle and learn what each other is doing” Patterson says, “We want to break down health silos and perpetuate community discussion around health issues.” If you are an agency looking to educate the public about what you do, you are welcome to bring along any promotional materials (pamphlets, flyers, business cards, etc) to make available to attendees during the event at a local resources booth.

“Women’s health issues have impact on the community as a whole,” says Patterson, “At the Pink Party, you will have the opportunity to educate yourself, meet with groups whose services you may not have been aware of, and learn how to be an advocate by familiarizing yourself with services available. If someone in your life is in need, you will have names and face that you can refer them to.”

The Pink Party will take place Friday, February 19th from 5:00pm-8:00pm at the Veteran’s Hall 810 H St, Crescent City. There will be door prizes, catering by Bar-O Boys Ranch, music, and art. All are encouraged to attend! For any questions, visit Gender Talk on Facebook at facebook.com/GenderTalkCC

Local Youth Journalist Selected for Fusion Fellowship

Redwood Voice would like to congratulate one of our local, dynamic youth facilitators/freelancers, Jacob Patterson, who was one of 12 young journalists in the state of California selected for Fusion’s Rise-Up and Be Heard journalism fellowship.

On their website, Fusion is described as, “a joint venture between Univision and Disney/ABC, built to embrace and embody diversity from the inside out.” Fusion’s mission is to “champion a young, diverse, and inclusive America through the stories we share, the voices that tell them, and ways in which we bring them to the world.”

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The fellowship, made possible in partnership with The California Endowment, gives 12 young Californians (ages 18-25) an opportunity to take part in a 7-month journalism training and mentorship program. Each youth will be working closely with an editorial advisor and a journalism mentor from Fusion.

The goal of the fellowship is to “empower a new generation of leaders and media makers through journalism training, access to media production tools, and a publishing platform to amplify their voice and the voices of those in their community around issues of health and social justice.”

Jacob Patterson is a 24 year old, vegetarian, Queer activist living in Crescent City who has a passion for social justice, women’s health, domestic violence prevention, mental health, substance abuse prevention, sex education, racial equality and gender equality. She is highly involved in the community, being currently involved with work in Building Healthy Communities, Wild Rivers Community Foundation, Opportunity Youth, Coastal Connections, and leading Redwood Voice, in addition to facilitating a community program called Gender Talk, which includes a weekly radio show on KFUG.

“I got involved in journalism because I care about telling stories,” Patterson says, “The power of storytelling is something that we cannot sell short. Our stories and our lived realities are priceless and they are what make us human and what make us identifiable to others. Having a pre-established audience and knowing people are listening is also really powerful, especially for young people who often don’t feel reflected in the media presented to them.”

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Patterson says she wants to write hard-hitting content for the fellowship, “Journalism has the power to motivate. It can make people angry and it can inspire them to change. What I hope to do is to make people here who feel marginalized, who feel victimized, who feel the system and its status quo level of operation are not serving them; I want to give these people a voice and I want them to feel like someone out there is listening and that they are heard.”

Are you a young person in Del Norte interested in journalism or multimedia production? Redwood Voice is looking for youth interested in writing, photography, video production, social media campaigns, and creative media. For more info and to keep up with Jacob’s work, visit RedwoodVoice.com or visit Redwood Voice on Facebook at www.facebook.com/redwoodvoice.dnatl/

You can also visit Gender Talk on Facebook at www.facebook.com/GenderTalkCC and tune into Gender Talk’s radio show on KFUG 101.1 FM or kfugradio.org, Thursdays 7:00pm-9:00pm.

 

Help Wanted: Redwood Voice Recruiting Youth Media Producers

Are you a young person in Del Norte and Adjacent Tribal Lands? Do you have a story to tell? A message people need to hear? A creative digital masterpiece brewing in your mind? Interested in learning more about media production? Need equipment, training, or a push in the right direction? Redwood Voice wants YOU!

Our team at the Redwood Voice is looking for youth and young adults who have an interest in
utilizing multimedia production, creative expression, and/or community journalism to tell the
untold stories that need to be heard.

The Redwood Voice is a youth media organization in Del Norte and Tribal Lands with the
mission of providing a creative outlet for amplifying local youth voice and shining a light on
disparities as well as lifting up the great community work and the positive local stories that don’t
always make “the news.” We believe in the power of youth voice and its ability to ignite changes
in policies, ordinances, and the narratives of the community.

Redwood Voice is a mobile organization funded by Building Healthy Communities with work
stations currently residing within Coastal Connections: Youth and Young Adult Resource Center
and Wild Rivers Community Foundation. There are plans to expand these work stations beyond
Crescent City, with hopes of reaching Smith River, Klamath, and the Gasquet/Hiouchi areas.
We are in the early stages of our new beginning, being led by Makenzy Williams, who is now
working as the newly-hired Youth Media Coordinator with Building Healthy Communities, and
Jacob Patterson, youth journalist, social activist, and facilitator of Gender Talk.

Redwood Voice owns equipment that is available for youth working on projects to borrow,
including camcorders, DSLR cameras, iPads, tripods, audio recording equipment, lighting
equipment, a small green screen, and several iMacs with iMovie and Adobe Creative Cloud.
We are available for guidance and support to youth, groups, or organizations working on media
projects from brainstorming and storyboarding to publishing your work. If you have a media
production you would like to have shared on our website and social media pages, please share
it with us! We are always in search of great, local media that we can help uplift!

To keep up with us, please visit out website, www.RedwoodVoice.com and follow us on
Facebook at www.facebook.com/redwoodvoice.dnatl For more information, questions, to share
content, or if you are interested in joining, please contact Makenzy Williams, Youth Media
Coordinator with Building Healthy Communities at (707) 465-1238 x123, email
mwilliams@wildriverscf.org, or stop by Wild Rivers Community Foundation at 990 Front St. in
Crescent City.

Enjoying the Little Things in Life on Walker Road

When you enter Walker Road (off of Highway 199) you encounter a beautiful dirt and gravel road that runs through the redwoods that is very pleasing to the eye. If you follow the road as it forks to the right it will lead you to the Smith River.

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As you walk down the stones to the waters’ edge, there are many things you can see such as frogs, toads, deer, snakes, mice, osprey, dragonflies, fish and even water spiders.

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The frogs are likely to be sitting right at the water’s edge ready to hop in and away the second they see you. However, if you don’t make any noise or let them see your shadow, you might be able to get closer without one hopping off.

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Although they are still interesting little critters as you view them on land, the water is the other half of the frog’s natural habitat and also the habitat where they move most gracefully. As opposed to their frantic hopping about on land, they fluidly swim through the water with ease. They also have special membranes similar to an eyelid that covers their eyes as they swim, allowing them to see clearly under water and hunt all variations of water life.

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Toads are also a critter that you have a chance to find on shore. At certain times of year you may even see piles of baby toads huddled up for safety, that is if you can tell them apart from the sand and rocks. Or you may see a larger adult toad sitting in a moist spot somewhere waiting for food to pass by. Toads can burrow into dirt and sand to make a home, though not nearly as deep as a gopher. However in some areas, toads have been known to crawl into an empty gopher hole and call it home.

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Snakes are yet another thing you have a chance to view at Walker Road. Water snakes are amazing little guys that have taken a semi-amphibious turn to life. They are like little garter snakes that swim underwater to hunt small fish, water bugs of all types, tadpoles and small toads. Even frogs make up a large part of their diet. On top of water hunting they are also land hunters and eat a wide menagerie of small land creatures. Water snakes are also pretty fun to catch and are completely harmless, but that does not mean the snake will thank you for bothering them and typically will “skunk” you. This is a defensive reflex that covers whatever part of you is touching the snake with a VERY stinky hormone-based fluid meant to repel predators. However, this fluid does come out of the rear end of the snake adding to the gross factor. The snake, in its displeasure, may also bite you.

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Yet another living thing you have a chance to see are lizards, as surprising as it sounds. Lizards will pop up in the hottest part of summer mostly and at higher elevations where it is warmer. You can hear them skittering off in the grass when they see you. Lizards are found in hot places because their digestion depends on being warm. They cannot generate their own heat so they bask in the hot sun to regulate their body temperature, which is where you are likely to find them. On Walker Road, lizards are often found on the rocks sunning themselves or looking for bugs in the grass. They are hard to catch as they dart through the grass and under rocks. I can’t count the times I’ve seen a predator sit there, frustrated, trying to catch one of these fast little guys or get a face full of dirt due to literally not looking before they leap.

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Water spiders are the last, but not least, thing I would like to tell you about. I find water spiders to be especially interesting. One of the neatest things about them is their ability to walk on water, which is accomplished with many tiny hairs that cause something called surface tension. These spiders are a type of ground spider that does not make a web to catch prey. Instead, it ambushes its food by sitting and waiting in one place very patiently. They can even catch small water prey with the same method. These fuzzy little spiders are sometimes hard to see as they are the same light gray color of the rocks at Walker Road. They are nonetheless fun to watch.

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These are a mere few of the many living things that can be found at Walker Road if you have the patience to look. Though Walker Road is an amazing swimming and family area, sometimes it pays to take some time to enjoy the little things in life. You may be surprised at what you find.

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Trail Notes below are courtesy of Richard Weins and the Del Norte Triplicate:

THE HIKE: A 2.2-mile double-loop through old-growth redwoods off of Walker Road north of U.S. Highway 199. Start on Leiffer Trial, then make a series of right turns onto Leiffer Loop, Ellsworth Loop and eventually back to Leiffer Trail.

HIGHLIGHTS: A giant walk-through redwood stump in the middle of the trail. Numerous benches, some at the end of short side trails, with philosophical engravings left behind by preservationists.

SWEAT LEVEL: Some moderately strenuous climbs at the start of each loop, and a few newly fallen small trees to pick your way through in a couple of spots.

GETTING THERE: From Crescent City, drive north on U.S. Highway 101, then east for almost 3 miles on Highway 199. Turn north on Walker Road, drive just under a mile, veer left at a fork, then drive another half-mile to the trailhead for Leiffer Trail, which is on your left. There’s a small parking area, but the trailhead sign is set far back from the road and easy to miss. On the way there or back, you might enjoy a few short side trails off of Walker Road.

True North Seeks End to Racial Profiling with Passing of AB953

The statewide push for accountability with law enforcement in their relations with communities of color has come to Del Norte County and Tribal Lands. Local organizing network, True North, have been collecting prayer cards signed by citizens urging Governor Brown to pass Assembly Bill 953, the Racial and Identity Profiling Act, a data collecting bill making it mandatory for law enforcement to track and report the race of persons they make contact with.

Redwood Voice reporters followed some of the leaders and organizers of True North as they made their trek through our region on their way to the State Capitol.