Bill Alexander

Youth Organizing Comes of Age

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- During a recent national gathering of hardscrabble youth organizers here, veteran youth worker Rudy Chavez casually noted that his 30-year-old community-based youth services agency has an annual budget of $20 million. That's when the shoe dropped.

Chavez, chief operating officer of Youth Development, Inc., had invited organizers (ages 15 through 25) from six groups, in town to network and strategize, to a pizza-and-soda lunch presentation lauding the good works of his organization. A hand belonging to 20-year-old youth organizer Fernando Abeyta shot into the air. Abeyta -- wearing a black beret and fresh from a months-long youth-led campaign of marches, rallies and protests over the number of teens allowed to be together at an Albuquerque mall -- questioned YDI's "relevance" to the "very political" problems faced by today's teens. He labeled organizations like YDI, which provides temporary shelter, free meals and counseling, as proverbial "bandaid groups" that don't provide solutions to long-festering problems, but are only in business "to perpetuate themselves."

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