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Abbotsford anti-gang youth program losing vital funding

Abbotsford News - 8/18/2018

On a late-July afternoon, Harley Jones practises a new hip hop song in a second-floor space of an Abbotsford Community Services building. He just came back from his first B.C. tour, performing his music for crowds in 18 spots across the province.

Just a few years prior, he was stabbed in the wrist while selling drugs.

Had he continued on the path he had been taking at just 14 years old, Jones said by now he would likely be dead or in jail.

Now 19 years old, Jones credits the turnaround to the In It Together program, which offers services such as case management, youth outreach, parent and youth groups, recreation, essential skills and counselling for at-risk youth and their families. But the program itself is now at risk, with federal funding set to end on Sept. 30, no opportunity to regain funding for six months, and no guarantee that it will come through in April.

For Jones, the wake-up call came violently when he was 14 or 15 years old.

He was selling drugs at the time and he often walked past the police station, which he lived close to. But with others spotting him walking near the building, someone became suspicious that he had spoken with police.

He was put up to a deal set to go bad, and he was stabbed with a knife through his wrist.

"That had changed my whole perspective on everything, and I realized that it was time to do something else in my life, because it's not really worth it," Jones said.

He went into hiding for four or five months, all the while slowly getting back into school as part of a probation order. Through his program, separate from regular schooling, he was approached by someone from Abbotsford Community Services.

"It seemed like he actually cared about my well-being, other than just making another dollar or just being a talker," Jones said, adding that the support worker would take him to fields to play lacrosse, play video games, take him to school when he needed a ride or even just talk. "Anything I could literally think of."

Having that support, as the In It Together program was kicking off, was part of what helped Jones to build himself back up. But Jones said one of the biggest things the program did was to give him an avenue to write and record music, even setting him up with recording tools at home.

"When I started getting into the recording, I wanted to learn everything so that I could help more kids," Jones said. "I wanted to learn so I could bring kids in and help them, too, for kids that were like me that didn't have the stuff to do it. … It got to the point where I was getting shows."