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Myspace youth center to close due to lack of funding

Hannah Colton/KDLG

The "CANDU" grant funded the youth wellness center from 2011 through June 2015; SAFE says there's no more money in its own shrinking budget to keep Myspace staffed.

At the end of November, the Myspace youth wellness center at SAFE in Dillingham will likely close its doors, as its grant funding has run out. 

Audio transcript:  

Myspace is a series of rooms geared toward teens – an art room, a kitchen stocked with snacks, a living room with a TV and video games.

On a recent afternoon, the rooms were neat and quiet, but Myspace employee Darren Petla says it’s not always like that.

"We have days when we are like brothers and sisters, like 'Okay you need to put that down, quit bein’ mischief! No runnin’ around! Turn down that music!' *laughs* ... You know, something like that every so often. So it’s good."

Credit Myspace - safebristolbay.org
Youth watching TV overflow the big couch in the living room at Myspace.

Petla enjoys working at Myspace. He talks to teenagers about their schoolday, cooks with them, helps them with homework. But come November 30, Petla may be out of a job.

"The grant ended June 30, so SAFE has funded this, and now we’re at a hard deadline because we don’t have the money."

Karen Carpenter is the outreach and education coordinator at SAFE. She says Myspace was funded as part of the $373-thousand-dollar “CANDU” grant that a group of Dillingham organizations received in 2011. It was awarded under former Governor Sean Parnell’s campaign against domestic violence, and then extended through June 2015. 

It's the same grant that put fish art on buildings downtown and bus shacks in neighborhoods. 

Credit Molly Dischner/KDLG
Anna Rae Petla, employee Gregg Marxmiller, and other teens organize the art room at Myspace.

Carpenter says the goal of all the CANDU projects was to make the community feel safer and more positive, especially for young people.

"Kids are gonna go where the door's open. That’s the bottom line. So which door you gonna leave open for them? It’s gonna be the home of the drug dealer. Or the drinking, the parents fighting and screaming, and no food in the house, with no electricity, no heat... So if we provide this safe environment and surround them with good, healthy options, it affects them. It changes them. So our goal has been to keep the right doors open."

And kids have made good use of that doorway. SAFE records show that Myspace activities drew about 150 kids in the last year.

One of them was seventeen-year-old Brandon Dyasuk.

"There's not a lot of stuff to do. I used to get in trouble a lot... I’m gonna be getting out of treatment soon, you know? This place can help keep me out of trouble and keep me in school. It helps me stay around sober people."

Keeping kids off drugs is a high priority at Myspace. Even smelling like cigarettes is against the rules. But fifteen-year-old Anna Rae Petla says the center can also help with just the day-to-day challenges of being a teenager.

"I like Myspace because they help you with schoolwork and how to understand things when you’re alone -- when you feel alone but you’re not alone. I don’t what I would do if Myspace has closed."

Credit Hannah Colton/KDLG
Anna Rae Petla sits at the kitchen table at Myspace, filling out registration forms for school.

Petla, Dyasuk and others may have to hang out elsewhere this winter, unless SAFE can raise the $6500 dollars a month it takes to keep Myspace staffed.

SAFE is currently planning fundraising efforts, including a table at the Christmas bazaar, soliciting private donations, and applying for more grants.

Contact the author at hannah@kdlg.org. 

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