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  • The Children, Youth and Families System of Care (CYFSOC) Training Academy and Responsive Integrated Health Solutions (RIHS) are excited to announce the 2022 CYFSOC Conference: Peers in Children, Youth and Families Services, Expanding our Community with Peers. We invite you to the Peers in Children, Youth and Families Services Conference to explore the roots of peer support, recovery fundamentals, and the improvements to the system of care when peers and lived experience are part of the service community supporting children, youth, and families. Here's what you can expect: - Explore what it means to be a recovery-oriented system of care and how it is integral to providing comprehensive and trauma-informed health care - Plenary sessions and workshops that offer an overview of how to build a supportive organizational culture and increase your staff’s sense of belonging by prioritizing staff integration of peers and lived experience - Discuss strategies to engage, retain, and provide professional development opportunities for peers - Assess your organization's readiness to integrate peer workers Date | Thursday, May 26 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Location | Online Register here! General admission is $75. For more information, please visit theacademy.sdsu.edu/programs/rihs/cyfsoc-conference-2022 or call (619) 594-0923.
  • San Diego American Indian Health Center’s Pow Wow is a celebration and showcase of Native American culture and traditions. Native singers, drummers, and dancers in their beautiful regalia from throughout the Southwest will gather in Balboa Park to practice their traditions and you’re invited to come and celebrate with us. Pow Wow’s are a spiritual experience for American Indians and an opportunity to preserve and pass on the customs and traditions which keep our Native heritage alive. Each day, the Pow Wow will showcase traditional activities such as Kumeyaay Bird Singing, Gourd Dancing, Inter-Tribal Dancing, and Honoring of community leaders. We will also be honoring figures from the Native community who have dedicated their lives to service. Date | Satuday, May 14 and Sunday, May 15 from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Location | Balboa Park This event is free and open to the public. For more information, please visit sdaihc.org/powwow or contact Shurene Premo at (619) 209-9044.
  • Sometimes you can find new interests in old places. For me, it was taking ballet classes alongside a group of around 20 Chinese ladies, all of them starting ballet as adults.
  • The winners confronted stigma and health equity in some countries with their tech ideas to help LGBTQI+ youth reach out for help and let women access private OB-GYN care.
  • Rian Johnson's film centers on a billionaire who's invited an assortment of so-called "disrupters" to his private island for a long weekend getaway to play out a murder mystery game.
  • Brian Feldman has long been fascinated by Twitter's efforts to contextualize trending topics with short descriptions. So he documented more than 450 from this year and put them in a public archive.
  • Los Angeles' school board decided to launch a bilingual ASL and speech program for young deaf children. But several months into the school year, the policy's implementation is riddled with confusion.
  • Karen Bass previously represented Los Angeles as the District 37 U.S. House representative. She defeated opponent Rick Caruso in November to become the first woman mayor of the city.
  • Women are underrepresented as artists and songwriters and make up less than 3% of credited music producers. For women of color that number is even lower. That's why Willie Mae is so important.
  • What started as a Christmas countdown has increasingly become a retail opportunity. While Advent calendars have evolved over the centuries, they still accomplish some of their original objectives.
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