THREAD: I filed this story last Thursday, hours before the first night of protests in Louisville. It was published on Monday, but, understandably, I doubt you saw it.
Last night, while covering the #LouisvilleProtests, I found myself on East Broadway, under an interstate overpass.
And while I was doing my best to capture the powerful demonstration that was unfolding, I turned and locked eyes with a young man.
He wasn't there to protest.
He was just walking by.
Instantly, I was jolted by the realization: I knew him.
We met last summer, when I was spending many hours at the YMCA SafePlace drop-in center for homeless youth.
Unlike other youths there who knew each other by name & used SafePlace as a spot not just for food and internet, but also social connection, this young man kept to himself
When I saw him there on Tuesday nights, he typically grabbed a few slices of pizza and sat at a table, always aware of his surroundings.
One evening, he asked if it would be OK to sit by me.
And little by little, he started talking.
I wish we weren't in a pandemic right now and I was in the newsroom so that I could dig out my notebook and truly tell this young man's story with the detail it deserves.
What I do remember clearly is that he had been homeless for quite some time -- sleeping, often, in junkyard cars, he said.
He talked about having to make sure he woke early, getting out of dodge before the sun rose and was caught trespassing.
He was older than the other youths at SafePlace.
He said he had spent a few years in one of the Carolinas -- I can't remember which -- where he had a girlfriend, a job and a roof over his head.
But things with the girlfriend didn't work out.
And he felt the tug of Louisville, the city he grew up in, pulling him back. So he returned.
He stayed short on details about what followed once he got back, but it was clear that whatever happened, he was making the choice at the time we met to distance himself from his own family.
He told me he was trying to get clean.
I'm not sure the last time I saw him at SafePlace.
And at this point, I haven't been back over there in months, so he could still be stopping by. When I saw him last night, it was clear by his appearance that he was still homeless.
Even though I was wearing a baseball cap and a mask, it was clear he recognized me, too.
Over the protesters' chants, I tried to explain who I was, to see if he understood our connection.
He smiled and nodded. Maybe he knew. Maybe he was just being polite.
I said something silly like "Are you OK? Are you safe?" and he nodded some more.
Then, with no further conversation possible amid the chaos, we waved goodbye and he continued on his way.
I watched as he, a young black man, walked on, his body directly between the shouting protesters and a line of armed police officers.
I wish I knew what he made of it all.
I'm recounting this to you now because if the pandemic and the protests have reminded me of anything, it's this:
Louisville's disconnected youth are hurting.
And whether they're shouting their pain at a protest or holding it all in, they are counting on city leaders to help.
INBOX: Some news related to Louisville's disconnected/opportunity youth efforts.
@louisvillemayor has made two appointments to expand the city's Office of Youth Development -- which in recent years, as the @courierjournal has reported, was not treated as a priority.
From June:
Dr. Aishia Brown has been appointed to be the new Director for OYD, and Dr. Billie Castle has been appointed as a Special Assistant for Resilience and Community Services (RCS) with a special focus in OYD, according to a release from Fischer's office.
Brown will retain a joint position at UofL's School of Public Health and Information Sciences.
“I’m excited to engage in what will be a shift from viewing youth as problems that need to be fixed to agents of change in our community,” she said.
Can't believe how much has changed since this story published on July 13th (and that's saying a lot in 2020!). courier-journal.com/story/news/edu…
But a quick reminder as @JCPSKY starts back virtually tomorrow: These educators miss their kids.
They wanted to be back. They wanted to make socially distant school work — even though it could put their own health at risk.
And that's the type of people teachers & other public school staff are.
They are selfless, often to a fault.
But when circumstances change, they make it work.
They create Bitmoji classrooms. They green-screen themselves into virtual field trips. They hand-deliver school supplies. They learn how to use Google classroom to support kids traumatized by COVID-19 and murder.
More than 6,500 staff members are tuned in for @JCPSKY's live virtual kickoff for the 2020-21 school year.
Among the morale boosts this morning, a video of students surprising teachers with heartfelt "Thank you" messages.
Taking the podium, @JCPSSuper starts by poking fun at himself -- says he has a swollen lip because weekend yard-work resulted in a pretty bad case of poison ivy.
"So, if I drool on myself or anything you will know why I did."