Nova Scotia’s Bill 201: Extending Support for Youth Aging Out of Care
“Extending the age of support creates a safer and more supportive bridge into adulthood.”
“Extending the age of support creates a safer and more supportive bridge into adulthood.”
“Through the sessions, I gained practical knowledge, useful resources, and greater confidence in preparing for my career journey.”
IYS sites provide crucial mental health and wellness support for youth and caregivers
Community support is at the heart of this transformational project in Glace Bay.
“The New Dawn Youth and Family Centre will bring together community vision and innovative design to build a space that supports children, youth, and families.”
CBC Radio reporter Brittany Wentzell gets a tour of the newly opened space with youth worker Al Cusack and Youth Advisory Committee members
Natural Resources Canada’s Green Construction program was created to promote the use of innovative wood-based building technologies and systems in Canada.
AUDIO: Updates on the New Dawn Youth and Family Centre and the Icelandic Prevention Model, two projects working in tandem to reshape the future of Glace Bay, on CBC Radio’s Information Morning
Opposition members say province needs to show more urgency in opening 5 remaining sites.
Site provides barrier-free access to mental health and wellness services for youth aged 12-25 and their caregivers
AUDIO: New Dawn’s Manager of Early Childhood Education, April Benoit, in conversation with CBC Radio’s Steve Sutherland
Cape Breton’s first Integrated Youth Services site to launch this summer
Anchor Youth Space Cumberland launches in Amherst; Sydney site set to open in June
New Dawn Enterprises
37 Nepean St, Sydney, Nova Scotia B1P 6A7
newdawn@newdawn.ca
902-539-9560
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Eymu’ti’k Unama’ki, newte’jk l’uiknek te’sikl Mi’kmawe’l maqamikall mna’q iknmuetumittl. Ula maqamikew wiaqi-wikasik Wantaqo’tie’l aqq I’lamatultimkewe’l Ankukamkewe’l Mi’kmaq aqq Eleke’wuti kisa’matultisnik 1726ek.
We are in Unama’ki, one of the seven traditional and unceded ancestral territories of the people of Mi’kma’ki. This territory is covered by the Treaties of Peace and Friendship which the Mi’kmaq first signed with the British Crown in 1726.
Ketu’-keknuite’tmek aqq kepmite’tmek ula tela’matultimkip wjit maqamikew ta’n etekl mtmo’taqne’l. Ula tett, ula maqamikek, etl-lukutiek l’tunen aqq apoqntmnen apoqnmasimk aqq weliknamk Unama’ki.
We wish to recognize and honour this understanding of the lands on which we reside. It is from here, on these lands, that we work to create and support a culture of self-reliance and vibrancy.