Jack Moore, who will soon live at New Ground Kirkland, talks to the crowd gathered during a grand opening celebration earlier this month. The new eight-plex building in Kirkland will house up to six formerly homeless young adults, ages 18-21. - Katherine Ganter/Redmond Reporter
Katherine Ganter/Redmond Reporter
Jack Moore, who will soon live at New Ground Kirkland, talks to the crowd gathered during a grand opening celebration earlier this month. The new eight-plex building in Kirkland will house up to six formerly homeless young adults, ages 18-21.

Friends of Youth opens new facility in Kirkland


October 30, 2008 · Updated 12:42 PM 

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By KENDALL WATSON

Reporter Newspapers

Celebrating the opening of their fifth transitional living program in the Puget Sound, Redmond-based non-profit Friends of Youth welcomed residents and elected officials to a tour of the newly-renovated facility earlier this month.

Named “New Ground Kirkland,” the interim housing facility is a 9,200 square-foot apartment complex at 11005 N.E. 68th St. in Kirkland and dedicated to helping up to six homeless and at-risk youth between the ages of 18 to 21 years old.

Participants in the program are expected to become self-sufficient and emotionally stable through counseling and career/educational guidance services. In addition, the building is monitored by an on-site Friends of Youth residential coordinator. The New Ground program “offers a hand up, not a hand out,” according to their Web site.

An estimated 2,000 children and teenagers in King County are homeless — half of them are escaping violence in the home, while nearly 80 percent have been sexually abused or assaulted.

Earlier this summer, residential builders The Burnsteads brought around 75 volunteers to aid the renovation effort, saving thousands of dollars in labor and construction contracting.

Friends of Youth, which also operates the Kirkland Teen Union Building on Kirkland Avenue, relies on federal, state and local grants and fees to support the majority of their operations. In 2007, the non-profit spent 83 percent of their $6.8 million budget on various services helping 12,700 young people in King and Snohomish counties get their lives “back on the right track.”

More information is available at www.FriendsofYouth.org, or by phone at 425-869-6490.

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