The city’s Youth Opportunities Program celebrates 30 years of promoting youth civic engagement and leadership development.
Holiday Closures
In observance of the winter holidays, the City of Boulder is adjusting its operations schedules.
For the past three decades, the city’s Youth Opportunities Program (YOP) has empowered young people to find their voice, shape their community, and build skills that last a lifetime. The YOP offers Boulder youth opportunities to impact their lives and the lives of their peers through outreach, representation of youth voice in local government, community projects and initiatives, and funding of individual and community grants.
Since 1994, YOP has:
The program supports this work through the Youth Opportunities Advisory Board (YOAB), where high school students collaborate to advise city government and drive meaningful initiatives. YOAB encourages youth civic participation and advocates for youth voices in city planning. Over 450 students have participated in YOAB since 1994.
YOP has changed and expanded over the years and in 2019, a paid internship program for youth was launched to help youth develop leadership skills and promote youth civic engagement. So far, 30 students have completed internships with the City of Boulder.
This 30th anniversary is a celebration of the thousands of hours youth have dedicated to improving Boulder and a reaffirmation of YOP’s role in building a bright, inclusive future for our community.
The City of Boulder received a grant to establish Colorado’s first Youth Services Bureau with the intent to assess needs of first-time teen offenders in the criminal justice system, and to coordinate and provide services to decrease the likelihood or re-offending including counseling, community organization, program development and youth advocacy.
YS offered space for kids to hang out including a drop-in center, coffee house, and later a no-alcohol nightclub. YS ran the Youth Action Center, a multi-service outreach program that targeted out of school youth and the city began a closer relationship with the Boulder Valley School District (BVSD).
The Peer Counseling partnership at Boulder High School was formalized as the Boulder County Intervention Program (BCIP) as a collaboration between the City of Boulder, St. Vrain and Boulder Valley School Districts, Boulder County Public Health, the Mental Health Center and other community agencies in Lyons and other nearby towns.
YS Mediation Program began to address school dropout and absenteeism by providing a forum through which parents and teens could constructively resolve family conflicts.
Boulder City Council approved the formation of the Youth Opportunities Program, which grew out of two convergent initiatives: the results of a survey to boulder youths and a report to City Council about the extent to which city programs and services were meeting youth needs, and approval by Boulder voters in Nov. 1992 of the .15% sales tax to support “youth opportunities.” Council created the Youth Opportunities Advisory Board and charged it with:
Youth Opportunities Fund expands to offer $150,0000 in annual grants to individuals and community groups for providing volunteer and community service opportunities, special projects and events for youth living in the City of Boulder.
YOP pilots the Youth Opportunities Internship Program in collaboration with the City Manager and Parks and Recreation. Ten high school aged interns work in city offices assisting city staff in summer programs.
Head over to the city’s website to learn more about the Youth Opportunities Program, Youth Opportunities Advisory Board and Youth Opportunities Internship Program.
Or sign up to receive the city’s Housing and Human Services email newsletter to be the first to know about program updates and youth internship opportunities.