Can we really do something to help kidskids in foster care, kids in
the throes of adolescence, the kids next door?
I mean, really. Can one person make much of a difference?
One is where we start: one young person, and one caring adult. We're already
helping, just by paying our federal income taxes. A tiny sharea fraction
of a penny per dollargoes to a $45 million federal program offering
Education Training Vouchers (ETVs). Child welfare departments in each state can alert
teenagers in foster care about ETVs. As they graduate from high school, these
teens can apply for vouchers and get up to $5,000 per year to help with their
education.
Do the ETVs help? Here is what I saw in early May: In one of those wood-paneled,
slightly stuffy committee rooms in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, Connect
for Kids co-hosted the first-ever meeting of the National Foster Youth Advisory
Council. The foster youth there, now young adults, had traversed a challenging
childhood. Some had been homeless, living in cars, just a few years earlier.
But now, here they were among the powerful: bright, funny, and irreverent. They
had come to Capitol Hill to celebrate this new council and to remind Congress
that yes, good legislation can make a difference.
The youth described the difference the vouchers had made in their lives. Because
of ETVs, a girl in Nevada was able to go to community college; a boy in Texas
was able to buy a computer to help him with his job; a boy in Maine was able
to go to college and now lobbies his state legislature for better, smarter support
for foster youth. The ETVs provided essential financial support as they pursued
their careers and their dreams. There was no one else to help thembut
all of us.
When the message comes in to write Congress to fight for kids' programs
and we do write, and they do pass legislationit does matter.
It means that kids like these articulate, inspiring young people get a chance.
This year, be sure to celebrate at least those few cents from the taxes you
paid that went to this programbecause to someone, that became a lifeline.
Can we help much once our own children become teenagers?
A middle school counselor visited my elementary school PTA last month. Stay
involved, she urged the parents. The kids are going through so much change;
they need you.
Yes, the counselor acknowledged, they do push you away. But they need you.
Be there.
It seems that science is on her side. The May 10 issue of TIME had a cover
story, "Secrets of the Teen Brain." The coverage included a list
of "Rules for Parents," adapted from the work of author Laurence
Steinberg. Among the rules: "What you do matters" and "You
can't be too loving" and "Stay involved."
CFK recognizes that staying involved means supporting kids all the way to adulthood
so that they can make it to successful jobs and lives. Too many struggle through
adolescence with too few supports to help them stay on track. And those that
slip up find themselves without a second chance to get the education and skills
they need to become productive adults. This year, we are determining how we
in the child advocacy community can more persuasively communicate on behalf
of those youth in transition from teenage years to adulthood.
It takes us about a third of our lives to reach self-sufficient adulthood
and that means we then have twice as long to be valuable and productive. We
need to embrace staying connected with youth, even those prickly teenagers,
because they need us. (And we need them.)
Actually, I feel rather relieved. I look at my young daughter frolicking in
the park (with the millions of cicadas here in the Washington, DC area), and
I am relieved to have "permission" to push a little, with care,
to stay deeply involved as she grows up. I know I'll need others to help
me during the tough teenage days and years ahead. But, I don't want to
miss her adventure. I want to be there for her.
My heart breaks for the mother of 8-year-old Chelsea Cromartie, the little
girl accidentally shot and killed in a gunfight on a Washington, DC street.
That mother will not have the chance to wrestle with the issues of her daughter
growing up to be a teenager. That mother will have struggles I cannot even imagine.
Could we have done something to help stop the gunplay of the youth who shot
Chelsea? Could we now? Can we give our children more support, and give our society
more hope?
Yes, we can. Each one of us, taking one action to help one childwith
a letter, with a few cents of taxes, with time. By ourselves and together.
Yes, we can. That's why we are connecting for kidsnot kidding.
Kate Mattos
A mother herself, Kate Mattos believes that it is important for communities
come together to help families and children succeed. Mattos serves as Communications
Counsel for the National Education Association (NEA) and as occasional Adjunct Professor
at American University's School of Communications.