County
Executive
Picente, UPD Recruit Officer
Starr Rae Wooden Urge
Summer Youth Employment Program Participants to Make Positive Choices In
School, Life
Telling
300 participants in the Oneida County Summer Youth Employment Program that
they have the power to change their lives and achieve their dreams, Oneida
County Executive Anthony J. Picente Jr. and Utica Police Recruit Officer
Starr Rae Wooden today urged the youth to use their summer work experience
as a springboard to new achievements in school, in the community and in
their lives.
“The
lessons you have learned through the Summer Youth Employment Program will
help you long after summer has ended,” Picente told more than 300 students
at an achievement ceremony held at the MVCC Utica campus. “You now have
new skills you can use for success in school, at work and in your lives. The
workplace teaches valuable lessons about teamwork, about diversity and about
the kinds of success you can have by staying focused. Use what you learned
this summer to succeed at school, and in life.”
Wooden, a former summer youth program
participant and the first African-American woman to join the Utica Police
Department, called upon the teens in the program to look past the easy way
out and work for long-term success. “I grew up in
Utica
. I know what it was like. I know the choices. I know the life. I also
know that there is nothing you can’t rise above if you decide you are
going to control your life, and not let anyone take your life and your
future away from you,” she said.
Citing her career as a sports star at
Proctor
High School
, she noted that her secret to success was not sports, but the hard work in
academics that earned her the President's Medal for Outstanding
Undergraduate Student for excellence both in and beyond the classroom. “I
worked as hard on the books as I ever did on the field. Even harder. I have
a bachelor’s degree. I have a master’s degree – and that’s nothing
that every one of you can’t achieve. I’ve worked for companies that do
business around the world, and now I am doing what my heart wants me to do
because I want to give something back to this community. When Officer
Lindsey was killed, it made something very clear to me that I want to share
with you – you can either live your life on the side that builds this
community up, or you can let people tear it down.”
Picente and Wooden were joined by Assemblywoman
RoAnn Destito, MVCC President Randall Van Wagoner; David Mathis, Director of
Oneida County Workforce Development, as well as representatives of the
offices of Gov. David Paterson and Senator Joseph Griffo.
Several
students also spoke at the closing ceremony:
Lucas
Walker and Ka Paw Wah spoke about the Health Occupations Program operated
through the
Oneida-Herkimer-Madison
BOCES
School
and Business Alliance (SABA). In
the program, students explored careers in the health industry,
participated in occupational training and learned basic healthcare
procedures. Students worked at Faxton and St. Luke’s Hospitals.
Kameron
Cubbage spoke about the Construction Career Project with
SABA
. In this project, students designed and built projects to assist the Utica
Zoo. Students were responsible for the entire construction project, from
measuring and deciding upon materials to the final construction work.
Paris
McLean spoke about the Civil Engineering Program operated through
SABA
. This project addresses the anticipated need for
civil engineers and technicians in the
Mohawk
Valley
. Students participated in worksite experiences with the New York State
Department of Transportation (DOT). Students learned basic civil engineering
skills.
In
addition to the programs noted above, the Oneida County Summer Youth
Employment Program, placed youth at a variety of worksites designed to help
youth gain valuable work experience and contribute to projects that assist
community and civic groups in their work. “We are all part of the
community, and we need to work together,” Picente said. “Giving back to
the community is something we all can do; by working with our local agencies
to help them operate programs for younger children, youth have learned about
responsibility and how to help the community.”
The
Summer Youth Employment Program also included a strong academic component,
featuring academic experiences at
Utica
’s
Martin
Luther
King
School
Technology
Center
.
Students
at the
King
School
Technology
Center
learned computer operations skills that can put them ahead. “Technology
skills involve a lot more than just the Internet,” said Oneida County
Workforce Development Director David Mathis. “Technology can help our
youth do better in school. The more they learn about computers and operating
them, the better they will do in school and the more they can do in an
office environment.”
“The Summer Youth Employment Program provides vital work experience for
teen-agers who would not have a job any other way,” Mathis said. “I
believe strongly in using this program to provide young people with basic
work lessons about teamwork, but also in using this to bolster academic
skills. Thanks to the funding we received from the state and the support we
received from the community, young people who would not otherwise have had
employment this summer learned about the world of work.”
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