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Youth center to fill niche
By Rodika Tollefson
KP News
A new youth center currently in the
planning stages will aim to provide recreation and
socializing activities for Key Peninsula’s young people.
The center, which has been in the works for nearly two
years, is being planned at the Key Center complex that
is also home to Communities in School of Peninsula.
Known to many as the “red barn,”
the three-building center once housed a manufacturing
facility for disposable cameras. CIS-P is located in one
building, and the group appropriately calling itself the
Red Barn plans to lease the other two. The facility has
been undergoing extensive remodeling and is in the
process of obtaining necessary permits from Pierce
County.
The Red Barn group is operating
under the auspices of the Vaughn Community Church, but
as a separate entity. The facility will be intended to
attract all youth, regardless of religious affiliation,
said Pete Hedin, the chair of the Red Barn Committee,
which has six officers currently. “It’s more of a
community building, not just spiritual,” Hedin said.
The theme of the center is a coffee
lounge, where young people could drop by (or be dropped
in) during open hours, usually after school. Organized
activities will be planned, but the kids could simply
hang out, do homework or socialize. Other groups will be
able to utilize the facility for their events, and while
youth activities are the primary focus, that will not be
the exclusive use.
“Some of us were talking about the
lack of things to do for youth on the peninsula,” Hedin
said. “There are all sorts of ideas floating around.
We’ll start out slowly and expand with time.”
Some of the ideas discussed include
a stage, an indoor gymnasium for sports like basketball,
computer facilities and a coffee shop.
According to the Red Barn Committee
vision statement, “The Red Barn is a response to the
limited opportunities for socializing and indoor
constructive recreation on the Key Peninsula… The goal
is a safe and desirable location for Key Peninsula
residents to mingle and recreate.”
A steering committee helped get the
project off the ground, and a variety of volunteers have
stepped up to the plate to staff the facility. Hedin
said all the positions needed to open the center,
including a program coordinator, have been filled with
part-time volunteers. Funding has been provided through
organizations such as the Angel Guild and private
donors, and much of the renovation is being done by
volunteers to keep the costs low.
The Red Barn group hopes to see the
center open by fall 2007, and plans to have more details
available by next spring.
The Red Barn Committee may be
contacted via mail at P.O. Box 1032, Vaughn, WA 98394.
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