Embracing our Shared Resiliency: A Message from CEO Julia Luey
Julia reflects on the past year and shares how our team came together with a renewed sense of resiliency to face challenges and continue serving Alaska’s youth and families.
Julia reflects on the past year and shares how our team came together with a renewed sense of resiliency to face challenges and continue serving Alaska’s youth and families.
After transitioning between camps, cars, and couches, Topanga is celebrating more than one year in her own apartment.
As you consider your goals and resolutions for the new year, we encourage you to make your mental health a priority.
VOA Alaska’s Digital Engagement Manager gathers some of his favorite photos of the year, with a behind-the-scenes look on makes them meaningful.
For National Recovery Month and Suicide Prevention Awareness Month this September, we celebrated the strength and resiliency in all of Alaska’s youth.
A community can’t thrive without being a healthy community first. So how do we do it? Well, it all starts with you.
Being a safe and supportive environment for all youth regardless of identity means that all young Alaskans can always find a safety net of support at VOA Alaska.
2020 presented both the need and the opportunity to be fearless. During this time, we sought clarity over certainty, centering on our “why” in a year that tested us.
In 2017, a community that cares about youth houselessness came together to create our Community Plan to End Youth Homelessness through the Youth Homelessness Demonstration Project.
The REACH Pantry provides food, cleaning supplies, and other necessities to Kinship and Trailside Heights families. The feature story in our January 2021 newsletter.