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By SUNITA RAPPAI
 

Fran Heron, left, and Sarah Gregory from Youth Initiatives with Father Nick Wheeler and children from the youth group
'Beacon of hope' youth project hit by cash cuts

Community urged to back scheme that keeps teenagers off streets

A PROJECT described as a “beacon of hope” for Camden’s young people is facing severe cutbacks after its funding dries up next month.
Youth Initiatives, based in Polygon Road, Somers Town, was set up in 2000 to provides outreach services, summer activities, music projects and healthy eating schemes for many of Camden Town’s most disadvantaged 8-19 year olds.
But the project’s £300,000 a year funding from the government’s Single Regeneration Budget (SRB) is due to come to an end on March 31 – leaving managers struggling to find new funding.
The SRB, set up by the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister in 1994 to improve life in deprived areas, provided funding for projects for a maximum of seven years.
YI director Sarah Gregory said: “The idea was that these projects would eventually become part of the mainstream, with funding by other sources like the local authority. But there is no funding available from Camden Council.”
According to Ms Gregory, the project’s services would continue in a “much reduced form” thanks to a £149,000 grant from the Lottery Fund for the next three years.
She said: “From April we will only be able to afford three professional youth workers instead of the 12 we have at the moment. We are fund raising massively in all sorts of little ways to get more money.”
At a meeting organised by YI staff in Camden on Thursday to discuss the changes, Father Nick Wheeler from St Michael’s Church in Camden Road, urged the community to support the project – and warned that the recent death of 18-yr-old Mahir Osman proved the need for the project.
He said: “People think that if you are young Camden is the place to be but for those of us who live here it is a very different story. Mahir Osman went to his death the victim of the drug wars fought daily in this community. And yet the world carries on by so easily as if nothing had happened.
“Over the last few years Youth Initiatives has been a beacon of hope in Camden. But now all that is about to disappear unless our community resolves to do something about it and unless we can find a new energy to ensure that our young people have a future.”
Aisha Leigh, 13, from Agar Grove said: “Youth Initiatives has been very good to us. It’s got young people off the streets and given them someone to turn to.”
A Town Hall spokeswoman said: “Camden has been helping more than 60 projects funded by the SRB. Part of this has been to offer support and advice on how to keep the projects going by tapping into other funding streams, once the original funding stopped.
“We have agreed to discuss further with them how we can work in partnership, sharing resources and advising them on the relevant available funding they can now apply for.”
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