Over the last little while, I've been posting about Project Black Feather. This program received its initial funding from the federal government through its Building Safer Communities Fund in partnership with Langley City and Township. The program is for students in the Langley School District who are at a high risk of becoming vulnerable to unhealthy influences and habits. Such influence could include gangs, and habits could include problematic substance use. Langley City Council previously received a presentation on the number of students helped and the positive outcomes. Last week, Council heard more, including about an outcomes report based on eight program participants who were followed for about a year.
The key outcomes for reducing vulnerability for young people in the program include:
- Crisis prevention through surge capacity: The program provided the right support when needed. Knowing that sometimes little support is needed, and sometimes a lot of support is needed.
- Trust durability exceeds expectations: Young people stayed connected to the program, where traditional programs would fail.
- Capacity-building, not dependency: Young people acquired transferable skills and reliance as part of the program to remain sober and stay employed.
- Youth began learning to set healthy boundaries on their own: Young people left harmful peer connections.
- Family stabilization enabled youth stabilization: The program also worked through coaching and supporting young people’s caregivers.
- Workplace integration emerged as a high-leverage pathway: Young people who got connected at their workplaces developed positive connections.
- Youth moved from being service recipients to contributors: Several young people in the program became peer leaders and even volunteered to support other program members.
- Partner corroboration confirmed distinctive reach: Other organizations and government ministries noted that Project Black Feather was reaching young people that they would otherwise be unable to reach.
The program's success is based on how it works. Its foundation is to build trust with young people participating in the program, which means being reliable and there for a young person whenever. The report noted that bringing a sandwich to a young person helped them become fully engaged in the program. The program is also wrap-around, and if the young person needs to connect with another service provider, the Project Blackfeather team would make the arrangements, including transport, and be with the young person during appointments if required. The program also directly engaged the young person’s caregivers.
It was really encouraging to hear about the good work of Project Black Feather and how it is having a positive impact on young people in Langley.


