Image: City of Abbotsford / The SWIFT Program has been working with approximately 60 at-risk youth between 13-24 years old in Abbotsford. Pictured (left to right) are Melissa Johnson, Abbotsford Centre Director, Cyrus Centre; Constable Shane Dueck, Abbotsford Police Department; Aaron Adrian, youth outreach worker, Cyrus Centre; Brianne Harrison, youth outreach social worker, MCFD; Abbotsford mayor Ross Siemens; and Taylor McDonald, Youth Outreach Worker, Cyrus Centre.
Abbotsford at-risk youth

City of Abbotsford partners with AbbyPD, Cyrus Centre, and MCFD to help at risk-youth

Jan 10, 2023 | 10:40 AM

ABBOTSFORD — A coalition of government agencies and a reputable Fraser Valley charity have joined hands to meet the needs of approximately 60 vulnerable, at-risk youth in Abbotsford through a new outreach program.

In a news release from the City of Abbotsford on Tuesday (Jan. 10), the outreach program known as SWIFT has made significant great strides addressing at-risk youth homelessness through a coordinated service that goes into homeless camps, high-risk living situations and schools. It identifies and connects vulnerable youth with the necessary supports, housing options and resources they need to help them realize a better path for themselves.

The SWIFT Program is a joint partnership between the City of Abbotsford, Abbotsford Police Department, the Ministry of Children and Family Development and Cyrus Centre which aims to bring three levels of service and response together to support at-risk youth, aged 13 to 24, and respond to known unsafe circumstances, people, and potential living situations, including homelessness.

“The challenges faced by the at-risk youth in our community are complex, and trying to find and access the appropriate services and help can be overwhelming for a young person in need,” said Abbotsford mayor Ross Siemens. “By having team members go and visit with at-risk youth in their own environment and bring the information, make valuable connections and link them with services helps them realize that support is within reach and that people do care.”

Due to the vulnerability of youth, at-risk youth in Abbotsford often intersect with homelessness, substance use and mental health challenges, street disorder, educational challenges, exploitation, and poverty. Prevention and response are often considered as two different areas to address, and as such providing continuity of care for vulnerable youth can be problematic and insufficient to meet their complex needs, which the SWIFT Program aims to address.

“In addition to linking youth directly to the supports and services they need, through building relationships and rapport with them, the SWIFT Program is also helping to enhance overall community safety,” said Constable Shane Dueck of the Abbotsford Police Department. “Having members with positive relationships with so many of our at-risk youth is having an effect in solving violent crime. Some youth who would otherwise refuse to cooperate with police have found confidence in reporting violent crimes to SWIFT team members, which has directly led to important arrests in Abbotsford.”

Since starting to work together in September, the outreach team has already helped six previously homeless youth move into housing, located five youth who had been reported missing and helped four youth into detox or substance-use treatment. The team currently has a caseload of 60 Abbotsford youth.

“Youth Homelessness is a community issue requiring a community response; the SWIFT Program is a community response with MCFD, AbbyPD and Cyrus Centre collaborating and partnering together to serve the youth right where they are, building trusting relationships that begin the process of exiting the streets,” said Les Talvio of the Cyrus Centre.

Through its coordinated partnership, the SWIFT Program is able to connect unattached at-risk youth to a variety of services, respond to victimization, exploitation and abuse, provide basic needs including food, harm-reduction and housing, and identify already-established resources to help at-risk youth build on successes. The program is funded thanks to the Strengthening Communities Services grant received by the City of Abbotsford. The Strengthening Communities’ Services grant is funded by the Province of B.C. and Government of Canada and administered by the Union of B.C. Municipalities. The grant will fund the program for one year, and the City is hopeful the success of the program will help in securing long-term, ongoing funding.