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By Brian Denitzio
News Editor
"Whenever the job is
done, you feel good about yourself. You did that,
you completed it," says Tony Dang.
Dang, 21, was a member of
a crew of young workers that recently finished the
total renovation of a home at 27 Norwell Street in
Dorchester. Last week, the city of Boston cut the
ribbon on the home and Paulino and Alice Sequeira
moved in with their two teen-age children.
The renovation work was
done by Dang and his fellow workers from
YouthBuild, an apprentice and training program that
gives young people real, on-the-job training in
construction trades. The hope is to set young
people on a path to a job in the building trades.
Dang is a carpenter. He
came to YouthBuild last March, and in a few months
will come out of the program ready to find a
carpentry job on his own.
"I think that by the time
I'm done with this program I probably will be able
to go at it on my own without YouthBuild," says
Dang.
He came to YouthBuild
with no previous experience in carpentry, but has
come to enjoy working with his hands.
"That stuff, making
something out of nothing is really fun for me, I
really like that," says Dang.
Working on the home on
Norwell Street was particularly gratifying, Dang
says, because of the street's history.
"I heard that before we
came in there, a couple of years ago, it was a bad
neighborhood," he says. "Fixing it up, plus it was
my first project, it really made me feel
good."
The Boston chapter of
YouthBuild is based on Dudley Street in Roxbury. At
that facility, low-income young people ages 18-24
receive training and work on projects at the
facility. Programs begin each July and run for
approximately 10 months. For those who need it, the
program also helps its students gain their
GED.
Using YouthBuild for the
Norwell Street project, as well as others, is a
win-win, says Charlotte Golar Richie, the city's
director of neighborhood development. The students,
who often hail from the neighborhoods they end up
working in, have a special attachment to the
projects.
"They're proud of what
they've been able to accomplish, and now they have
real tangible skills," says Richie.
YouthBuild Boston is part
of a national organization with 227 chapters across
the country, and 11 in the commonwealth. Since its
founding in 1990, the Boston chapter has trained
over 800 young people in the building trades, and
helped those who needed it gain their high school
diplomas, said Patricia Barnsworth, Boston
YouthBuild's director of administration and
development. Those students have renovated 67 units
of housing in the greater-Roxbury area, says
Barnsworth. Next up on their radar is a plan to
construct a duplex on Arbutus Street.
At the ribbon cutting for
the Norwell Street project last Thursday,
YouthBuild also received a grant for $700,000 from
the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, money that will allow YouthBuild to
train 58 young people, and finance two
rehabilitation projects.
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