
Some 300 at-risk youth are set to benefit from targeted social interventions, under the European Union (EU) BRIDGE Project.
The EU-funded project, which is implemented by a non-governmental organisation the MultiCare Youth Foundation (MYF), seeks to prevent youth crime and violence by targeting at-risk youth, aged 15 to 29, in specific communities. The project focuses on Building through Reintegration, Intervention, Development, Growth and Education (BRIDGE).
Alicia Glasgow Gentles, executive director of the MYF, explained that the project is targeting five communities.
“We are providing opportunities for 300 youth in five communities across four parishes. It’s a 30-month project and the skills and opportunities that we’re hoping to provide are targeted at those young people who reside in volatile communities in those parishes and who need access to skills training and job opportunities,” Glasgow Gentles told a JIS Think Tank on March 14.

“In playing our part to reduce crime and violence among youth, we are exposing youth to opportunities, to a mindset, to alternative behaviours that they would not necessarily have access to without our intervention,” she added.
The project is being carried out in Effortville in Clarendon; Salt Spring, St. James; Russia, Westmoreland; and Trench Town and Whitfield Town in Kingston and St. Andrew. It began in January 2023 and sees the youth receiving support for reintegration into school, employment, mentorship, skills training and psychosocial intervention.
The BRIDGE project is being implemented for J$75 million.
Luca Lo Conte, programme manager of the EU Delegation to Jamaica, explained that the EU provided funding for the project through its civil society organisations (CSOs).
“This project is not a stand-alone initiative. It is part of a larger EU intervention, a partnership within the European Union in Jamaica called Support to Citizen Security in Jamaica, a programme of €20 million, that is over J$3 billion,” Lo Conte noted.

Mitzian Turner, director of projects and strategic management at MYF, explained how the MYF goes about identifying persons who need their intervention.
“We do screening and assessment by using the Citizen Security and Justice Programme tool. We go into the various communities, we liaise with the members, groups and community development centres, and derive our risk profile of the participants,” Turner added.
She said that based on the risk profile, the MYF partners will develop activities around those who are deemed medium to high risk. Youth are placed on a path to be reintegrated into school and the older
participants, internships are given that lead to gainful employment.
“So far, we have seen a real turnaround in the participants. We see students improving academically and no longer displaying disruptive behaviours,” Turner said.
Persons can reach out to the MultiCare Youth Foundation by contacting them at 876-922-6670 or visiting their offices at 7-9 Harbour Street in Kingston.
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