In preparing our proposals for recommendations to the UUA Board, each member of the Committee drafted an individual proposal that was circulated to all members of the Committee. (These proposals are available in the proceedings of the Committee.) Viewpoints varied considerably (what else could be expected from UUs?); proposals ranged from recomendations for the continuation of the status quo in funding and programs to total discontinuation of funding for LRY and the establishment of UUA progrpmming for youth.
Through three days of meetings, the Committee examined each individual proposal, combining, adapting, adding and eliminating, in the process of preparing these proposals for presentation to the UUA Board.
I. OFFICE OF YOUTH PROGRAMS (concern for both Junior High and Senior High).
We recommend that an office of youth programs be established, with the following functions, staff, and budget.
A . Functions
| 1. Salary of Associate Director for Youth Program and Benefits | $21,000 |
| 2. Secretarial and Benefits | 9,000 |
| 3. Travel | 5,500 |
| 4. Office expenses, publication and program workshop expenses | 5,000 |
| Total: | $40,500 |
II. YOUTH/ADULT ADVISORY COMMITTEE
The SCOYP reconized that the present Youth / Adult Committee of the UUA Board has responsibility for demoninational contact with both high school and college age programs.
We recommend that the focus of the Youth /Adult Committee be narrowed in its concept to youth generally of high school age and that the UUA Board establish another means for denominational contact with and for college age persons.
This recommendation represents a significant change in the nature of the Youth/Adult Committee, a change that we believe is critical to the support of youth programs for the denomination.
A. Functions of Continental Youth/Adult Committee
Membership on the Committee shall be made up of eight members--four adults and four youth-with consideration given to the following qualifications and categories:
C. Budget
III. LIBERAL RELIGIOUS YOUTH
The Committee's recommendations regarding denominational financial support
for the Liberal Religious Youth (LRY) evolved from the following observations
and perspective:
The history of Unitarian and Universalist youth movements spans many decades
of growth and change. The current youth organization, Liberal Religious Youth,
is the product of a merger of groups that preceded merger in the adult
denominations by seven years. LRY and its predecessors have been the vehicle for
personal growth for many young people, and they have provided a starting point
for many of our denominational leaders. In the face of this, it comes as a blow
that LRY is currently held in disfavor or ignored by a majority of our churches
and fellowships, that it does not represent anything approaching a majority of
UU teenagers, and that many locals have little progrpmmatic or guiding
philosophy that can be called Unitarian Universalist in intent, even though the
continental LRY charter does have such.
An important guiding principle for a denominational youth movement should be
a strong connectedness to Unitarian Universalism. The Comittee believes that a
denominational youth organization should examine, espouse, and live the ideals
of our religion. A strong argument could be made for complete withdrawal of
denominational funding for LRY, and for funding a new group with a clearer
denominational identity (i.e., Unitarian Universalist Youth). Such a change
might clear the way for renewed interest and support from ministers and church
or fellowship leaders who view the name "LRY" as a red flag.
Such an action, however, would be a withdrawal of commitment to those young
people who struggle to make LRY a productive organization. The Committee feels
these young people need to be encouraged and supported, and, while not
recomending a name change, urges that it be considered.
Peter Drucker, in The Age of Discontinuity, noted:
An effective youth group helps its members to face organizational and
institutional realities, to assume full and responsible participation in
denominational affairs, and to develop the idea of accountability for one's
actions. This implies the nurturing of decision making abilities.
The Committee recommends that our denomination adopt strategies for the
development of a youth organization with the characteristics defined in . .the
position papers and noted above. The Committee makes no specific suggestions,
since such changes will have to come through a joint effort of youth and adults.
The Committee has specific recommendations relating to
denominational financial support of LRY. Our study indicates that the
continental executive committee, as presently constituted, is not entirely
representative of LRY local interests, is frequently out of contact with locals,
and is frequently in itself a discouraging experience for the exec officers. The
Committee recommends that financial support for the LRY officers in
Boston be discontinued and that funds allocated to LRY be designated as
support for continental LRY Board meetings, leadership and program planning
workshops (including travel), dues to international organizations,
and/or other purposes that LRY may designate.
The Committee further recommends that LRY develop expenditure guidelines for
presentation to the Youth/Adult Comittee before funds are allocated. The
Committee urges LRY to consider maintaining its continental executive officers
in various locales, and that these individuals promote much closer contact
between themselves and the federations.
The Committee reminds all congregations that LRY itself initiated the
formation of the Special Committee on Youth Programs, and strongly urges that
all congregational leaders take an active role in making denominational action
on youth affairs a top priority.
Budget:
IV. RECOMMENDATION TO ALL UUA DISTRICT BOARDS
We recommend that all Districts establish a District Youth Activities
Committee (with equal number of youth and adults and with appropriate budget).
The purpose of the Committee would be:
V. YOUTH PROGRAM FIELD WORK TEAMS
We recommend that a resource bank of people with demonstrated skill in
working with youth and adults be appointed. These people would be appointed by
the Interdistrict Council with the assistance of the I.D.R. and would have the
support and resource skills of the Continental Youth Adult Committee available
to them.
A. Functions:
(2) UU Service Committee projects
(3) Dept. of Education multi-media kits
Budget
It is expected that the services of the Youth Program Field Work Tean
members.will be volunteered. Transportation, housing, child-care, or any other
expenses incurred by their participation on the Field Work Team would be paid by
the fees of the workshop participants or their district or local society.
The first question that we must ask ourselves -- society, district, or
denomination -- is: "Why do we do it?" Decisions about specific youth programs,
about what they will be like, about the distribution of money, about staffing
and training, cannot really be addressed until we have answered this first
question. One clear theme in response to the work of the SCOYP was that we have
no real sense of purpose about program for high school people. Folks of all
generations within the denomination need to converse and to confront the reality
that if it is worth investing money in our youth, it is worth taking the time to
invest it wisely and well. We cannot do that until we have resolved same
fundamental issues, all of them responsive to the question: "Why do we do it?"
We need to determine:
Until we have entered this conversation or dialogue, it is doubtful if
anything we fund will be really satisfying. We are concerned about the many
questions.raised by youth and adults in every level of the denomination, but
only briefly considered within this report. We feel strongly that these more
philosophical questions, or ethical questions, should be discussed broadly
within the denomination by the largest number possible.
Therefore, this recommendation of SCOYP to the Board is designed to
facilitate the process of dialogue in hopes that purposeful and lasting youth
programs will evolve and remain strong.
In consideration of the above and of the proposal that follows, we wish to
stress the importance of the following:
General Outline
The Dialogue would be entered into three times over a two-year period: first,
on the local level; next, on the District level; and finally, on the
denominational level.
A. Local Dialogue
The conversations would address the general question, "Why do we do it?" in
such a way as to give articulation and direction to future youth program. They
would explore and begin to define the relationship of UUA youth to the larger
body, and vice - versa, considering what youth program frameworks will allow
the greatest flexibility and still preserve the integrity of a denominational
program.
Hopefully, the Dialogues will be facilitated by people with experience and
expertise in group work, within the congregation. Following the Dialogues, a
team of adults and youth would be selected to participate in the District
Dialogue.
The District Dialogue would be focused on developing and strengthening
leaders and leadership skills, effecting communications, ard building
communications skills. It would be the Durpose of the Dialogue workshops to
train, rather than to converse on topics. It may be that Districts will select
representatives to the Cortirnental Dialogue from among the participants of
the workshops.
It will be helpful for Districts to locate and recruit volunteers from
their churches and fellowships who will work as trainers for the workshops.
High quality trainers will be of great importance, and trainers should be
prepared to meet with the Interdistrict Team to work through the training
design.
Every effort would be made for diversity of age among participants.
Therefore, accurate information from District to churches would be essential.
Every fellowship and church would be contacted and encouraged to participate
following their local dialogue. Diversity of experience would be important, as
would the ability to articulate ideas and think creatively.
In addition to communications skills, training in futures would be a
desireable component of the Dialogue training. Training for leadership, in
both youth and adults, together and separately, would be an important focus --
it was one of the most strongly expressed requests in responses to SCOYP.
The organizational aspects of the Dialogue would be implemented by District
YAC'S.
Food services would be provided, the cost to be absorbed by the UUA.
Transportation subsidies, provided by the UUA, would be along guidelines
recommended for GA.
Facilitators, in a ratio of ten to one, would be recruited as volunteers if
possible, with food and transportation costs provided. Interested clergy would
be a valuable resource.
Each District would send five representatives to the Dialogue. The Dialogue
agenda would be built from suggestions from District and local Dialogues;
topics might include:
Continental Dialogue would hire a Director to administer, help, and train
staff for the event.
The Continental Dialogue's prime purpose would be to develop a position
statement from which the broadest range of denominational youth activities
could be affirmed or designed and program recommendations made. Specific
findings and recommendations would be passed on to the existing structure
(staff, YAC, LRY, other youth groups, Districts, and local groups) for
implementation. Youth staff and denominational YAC, and the Dialogue Director,
will be responsible for planning, promoting, administering, and evaluating the
event.
UUA Budget:
There would also be supportive contributions from individual societies and
groups as well as Districts.
Continental Dialogue Director - Job Description
Accountability and Responsibility
Accountable to the UUA YAC through the Youth Staff member, and responsible
for all administrative and functional aspects of the Continental Dialogue.
General Responsibilities:
Meetings
$7,000
Publications
$ 500
$ 7,500
"Young people in the society of organizations (today's society) need
systematic information on how to make organizations serve their own purposes,
values, and aspirations. They will have to learn organization as their
forefathers learned farming." (pp. 259-260)
Allocation to the Liberal Religious Youth for
programs listed above
$ 20,000
B. Membership of "Resource Bank"
(1) Youth service projects and summer camps
"Thank someone for being that one. Walk with them to the center of a place
and back again singing a little song. Burn something. "
--Seneca
The local Dialogue would take place between October and May of the first
year. It would take place in every fellowship and society possible, several
times during the year. Societies would attempt to include every spectrum of
age -- junior high, senior high, college age, adults, and elders. It would be
open to all who wished to participate; larger churches might choose to move
from neighbourhood dialogue to a larger congregational dialogue.
B. District Dialogue
Budget:
$00.00 The District Dialogue would take place between October and May of the
second year and would span a two - or three - day time period. It would be
held at a central, convenient location in the District where hospitality would
be provided to participants. It would include adult and youth representatives
from societies within the District. We suggest that this Dialogue replicate
the model being developed in the Greenspon proposal funded by the UUA Board
and using the Interdistrict Field Teams, should the Board choose to advise
them.
C. Continental Dialogue
Budget:
for local churchs and fellowships,
transportation expense of participants in Dialogue; for Districts, food
expenses of participants and minimal program expenses such as pader,
markers, flyers, etc. This would take place in June or July of the second year for a five - to
seven-day period. It would be held in an outdoor residence setting within the
northeast, preferably owned within the denomination. The site use for the
duration of the Dialogue would be donated if possible.
Continental Dialogue would seek all ages, as in local and
District Dialogue.
Transportation Subsidy for Dialogue
meeting
$12,000
Food and administrative costs for Dialogue
$3,000
Administrative overhead
$2,000
Program and office supplies
$1,200
Continental Dialogue Director, 2-month
salary
$1,800
Total
$20,000
Job Requirements
Salary: $1,800 for two - month period, first month for 20
hours per week, second month full time.
[BACK TO TABLE OF
CONTENTS]
[NEXT
PAGE]