Community Corner
As RivCo Youth Prepare To Leave Foster Care, Gifts Arrive
"These gifts show us the community cares."
RIVERSIDE COUNTY, CA โ Riverside County social workers on Monday delivered holiday bags loaded with goodies and gifts to 160 young adults who are preparing to leave foster care for independent living.
Outside her apartment, Anahi Reyes, 20, said youth in foster care can experience feelings of isolation during the holidays when celebrations center on family gatherings. This year, she said she thinks the pandemic has increased those feelings of isolation and loneliness even more.
โThese gifts make us feel special,โ Reyes said. She entered foster care at age 10 and has been in care for a decade. She smiled at the gift bag brimming with cookies, a knitted beanie, soft blanket, personal care products, gift cards and kits to decorate holiday items delivered by her social worker Jacqueline Pintado.
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โThese gifts show us the community cares," Reyes continued.
Reyes' brother, Gerardo Reyes, 19, also felt the same way when he received his bag and said the gifts helped to brighten his mood.
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The brother and sister are just two of hundreds of Riverside County youth in Extended Foster Care. Foster youth can choose to exit at 18, however, the extended program helps young adults between ages 18 and 21 learn life skills, including budgeting, job assistance and finding community resources.
Anahi will be 21 early next year.
โSheโs learning important life skills she can use and is going into the real world knowing whatโs expected of her as an adult,โ said Pintado, who is also Gerardoโs social worker.
Church groups and community organizations contributed to the gift bags, which traditionally have been shared at a sit-down holiday dinner.
โHelping these kids gives me great joy,โ said Julia Gardner, who joined volunteers at Immanuel Lutheran Church, which paid for gift cards in the holiday bags. โThis is whatโs in my heart to do.โ
Older youth and young adults in foster care overcome significant obstacles to successfully transition to adulthood, said Charity Douglas, assistant director of Childrenโs Services, a division of the countyโs Department of Public Social Services.
โSupport from our community and faith-based partners has helped our youth develop resiliency and know that they are loved and valued,โ Douglas said.
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