th Anniversary

2004-2005 Annual Report

Our Mission: In partnership with communities, develop resources to promote the positive growth of their children. AzYP 2004-2005 Program Funding

SPRANS / DFC…..$829,365 Statement of Financial Position Saddlebrook Rotary / ….$11,546 Assets Rural Human Services / Tucson Electric Power / Cash and cash equivalents $284,477 Catalina Community Services Grants and contracts receivable $105,314 Total Funding…..$1,746,743.10 City of Tucson …..$25,000 Prepaid expenses and deposits $5,542 Pima County…..$33,320 Furniture and equipment, at cost, net of $46,474 accumulated depreciation of $70,114 $441,807 ADHS…..$160,000 Liabilities and Net Assets CPSA…..$166,502 Accounts payable $37,600 CPSA - Tohono…..$225,000 Accrued expenses $47,929 Governor’s Office…..$296,010 Total liabilities $85,529 Net assets: unrestricted $356,278 $441,807

Statement of Activities Year Ended June 30, 2005

Temporarily Temporarily Unrestricted Restricted Total Unrestricted Restricted Total Revenue gains and other support Net assets released from restrictions: Grants and contracts Satisfaction of program U.S. Department of Health and $563,257 $563,257 restrictions Human Services $1,394,613 ($1,394,613) $0 Community Partnership of $391,500 $391,500 Southern Arizona Total revenue, State of Arizona $377,538 $377,538 gains and other income $1,706,884 $0 $1,706,884 Pima County, Arizona $33,320 $33,320 City of Tucson $24,998 $24,998 Expenses: Other grants and contracts $4,000 $4,000 Contract expenses $1,442,686 $1,442,686 Total grants and contracts $1,394,613 $1,394,613 Management and general $166,477 $166,477 Total expenses $1,609,163 $0 $1,609,163 Program Fees $11,255 $11,255 Donations and contributions $6,910 $6,910 Change in net assets $97,721 $0 $97,721 In-kind contributions $277,182 $277,182 Fundraising Projects $9,380 $9,380 Net assets at beginning of year $258,557 $0 $258,557 Interest Income $3,655 $3,655 Other income $3,889 $3,889 Net assets at end of year $356,278 $0 $356,278 Total revenues $312,271 $1,394,613 $1,706,884

Page 2 15th Annual Report AzYP 2004-2005 Board of Directors

Rochelle Swanson, President Cesar Ahumada Jane Howell Non-Voting Members: Consultant EDA, Electrical Engineer D.R. Horton Homes, Sales Agent (1995) (2003) (2005) Anita Lohr Honorary Member Kim Ferranti, President-Elect Dawn Begaye Joe Johnson Albanese-Brooks Associates PC, ADHD Treatment, Project Director Teacher, Retired Pamela Treadwell-Rubin AIA Principal (2004) (2005) Goerning, Roberts, Rubin, Brogna, (2002) Enose, & Hernandez, P.C. Sonya Evans-Linsell Mark Jones (1993) Julie A. Stephens, Secretary Tucson Veterinary Housecall Pima Accommodation District, RHPRC, Office Manager Services, Veterinarian Superintendent Luan E. Wagner, Ph.D. (2002) (2003) (2003) Arizona Youth Partnership, Executive Director Barbara Jacobs, Treasurer Richard Fimbres Mary Magill (1994) Bank of America, Assistant Bank Governor’s Office of Highway University Medical Center, Center Manager Safety, Director Pediatric RN (2004) (2000) (2003)

Warren M. Alter Leyda Herring Alexandria Soto Pima County Sheriff’s Department, Human Resource Director, Ret. Behavioral Health at CARF, Captain (1999) Resource Specialist LCSW (1997) (2005) Letter from the President Dear Friends of Arizona Youth Partnership: Pima County that request our services and that we find funding to cover those services. With a new name came a 2004-2005 has brought us a year of excitement, hard work, new logo. We want to thank Pam Stone of “day nite design” phenomenal growth, friendship and many positive for her generous time and talent to provide us with this memories. The strength of our organization lies in the new image. programs we offer and the staff that bring them alive in each local community where we have been asked to serve. The Board raised a record amount on the Poker Run. Our We have recovered financially from the challenges of the Sponsors, Dr. Candace Walters, Orthodontist, and Pathway terrorist attacks and can only wonder how the catastrophic Development gave generously. Due to the inclement weather earlier this year will affect our financial bases and weather our numbers did not bring out the huge turnout we resources. Our Executive Director, Dr. Luan Wagner, and had expected. A second successful fund raiser was the her superb grant writing skills put us so close to a million monthly Twilight Cabaret at Hotel Congress. Two past dollar grant record for our agency. board members, Bonnie Brooks’ and Tom Kusian’s efforts are deeply appreciated for their complete involvement. Our agency stepped forth on a pilot project into the and Navajo counties with the hope of involving 400 youth in This is a great time for Arizona Youth Partnership. In our 3 schools. Word of mouth between parents and educators first 15 years, we have made great strides to help the youth pushed us to reach over 800 youth in 13 schools in just the and strengthen their families. I have felt we are a “bridge” first year. The grants blossomed from $25,000 to over organization. We can provide services which sometimes $260,000 as the state eagerly embraced the programs we don’t quite fit in a school, parks or recreation department, offered with the support of the community and local juvenile justice system, church or religious affiliation, or agencies. This phenomenal growth is a tribute to the other social group. We can be there for the youth and help special programs we offer with their scientific proven data them to make positive choices and help them get to and the caring, dedicated staff that are the key to adulthood. We can help communities work together to successful programs. change laws and norms for their common good. Arizona Youth Partnership- an amazing organization. With the outreach and growth into other parts of the State of Arizona, the Board of Directors felt it was time to This is the time to become involved. Our future is bright. evaluate the appropriateness of the current name of Pima Join us on our team. Youth Partnership. During this evaluation, the Board undertook reviewing their Bylaws, and a 5 year Strategic Sincerely, Plan. While the vision includes looking to provide our Rochelle A. Swanson “bridge” services to other rural, low income communities President in the state, we will continue to work with all the areas of 2003-2005 15th Annual Report Page 3 AzYP 2004-2005 Highlights

For the 15th year, Arizona Youth Partnership continued to work in rural communities to facilitate activities and foster opportunities that build and sustain community climates that promote healthy youth, families, and communities.

Ajo Total 764 Youth 553 Pascua Total 129 Youth 99 Adults 211 Adults 30

Apache Catalina Total 478 Youth 387 Tohono Total 223 Youth 172 Adults 91 O’odham Adults 51 Navajo Marana Total 285 Youth 246 White Total 869 Youth 839 Adults 39 Mountains Adults 30

(NOTE: These numbers represent unduplicated youth and adults. Except for the White Mountains youth numbers, these numbers do not include youth and adults that participated in our Abstinence Only Education program. See below for those numbers.) Pima Abstinence Only Education Total Youth 5,792

Pima Total 5,858 Youth 4,994 White Total 798 Youth 798 County Adults 66 Mountains

Life Skills Education Almost 500 5th to 8th grade youth participated in AzYP Life Skills Education classes. Goals were: 1) to increase school attachment and 2) increase delay and refusal skills. We used two (2) curricula to reach these goals.

Changing Scenes: Teen Outreach Program (TOPs) is composed of three (3) parts: To the question “The thing I community service, small group discussions, and service learning. Youth design, like the most about this implement, and evaluate their community service projects. program is….” youth responded: Botvin’s LifeSkills Training (LST) addresses critical substance abuse/use prevention issues that help youth develop: alcohol and drug resistance skills; • Probably just talking personal self-management skills, like positive self-image, and goal setting; and instead of listening. We got general social skills, like overcoming shyness, communicating effectively, and to say what was on our decision making. minds. • How we get to talk freely Life Skills Education programs occurred in Ajo, Catalina, Marana, New Pascua about what we know about Yaqui Reservation, Old Pascua Yaqui, and the Tohono O’odham Nation. drugs and not be judged about it. Number of Life Skills Education Youth By Community • We learned many ways to Ajo 128 Pascua 87 stay calm. Catalina 43 Tohono O’odham 157 • We learned to control our Marana 62 Total 477 anger. • I like to talk about ways Research has shown that youth who participate in 20 or more hours of a program that can help youth through are less likely to engage in high risk behaviors such as alcohol and drug use, life violence, skipping school, and early sexual activity. • That they tell us how to say 61% of Life Skills youth participated for 20 hours or more. no • That we can solve problems 85% of youth successfully completed the Life Skills program. • We get to have fun at the same time we learn Overall, youth reported that they thought the program was pretty great. They • We learned how to deal rated it 4.08 on a scale of 1 to 5 with “1” being “poor” and “5” being “great.” with every day stuff

Page 4 15th Annual Report AzYP 2004-2005 Highlights

Upon completion of the program, youth:

• Were less likely to plan attending a vocational school and more likely to plan to attend a 2 or 4 year college. Essay quotes from youth who • Maintained negative attitudes towards drug. successfully completed the Wake • Maintained high levels of refusal and delay skills. Up!™ program:

Funded by the Governor’s Office for Children, Youth and Families-Safe and Drug “If I ever get a friend who got Free Schools and Communities. caught for the same thing as I have, I would in fact recommend

the Wake UP! Program to them Abstinence Only Education so they get the same education and guidelines as I have. The PYP targeted 5,500 rural and Native American youth, 12-18 years of age, in Ajo, Wake Up! Program has helped Catalina, Flowing Wells, rural Marana, New and Old Pascua Yaqui Reservation, the open my eyes, and I only hope that anyone sent to take it will three western districts of the Tohono O’odham, and southern Pima County. During feel the same way.” 2004-2005 PYP expanded to Apache and Navajo Counties after receiving approval through ADHS. These communities included: Springerville, Eager, St. Johns, “The Wake Up! Program has really expanded my thoughts and Concho Valley, and Snowflake. The curricula included Choosing The Best Way, beliefs toward drugs and alcohol. Path, and Life, Soul Mate, WAIT Training and Big Talk for Parents. Before entering the program I didn’t think about the consequences that my actions 5,858 Total youth and adults 5,792 youth completed the course would have on others and completed the program 66 parents completed the course myself. I was putting myself 9 School Districts into danger and others as well. Being in Wake Up! has really 47 schools and community sites changed my perspective towards

Girls had higher refusal skills than boys. alcohol and the people that use it.” 81% of 11 year olds made a commitment to abstain until marriage. “As I look at the circumstances that have brought me to the Wake Up!™ Alcohol & Wake Up! Program, I now know that I should have made better Drug Education Prevention Program choices. First of all I should not This four-session program targets 12 to 22 year old drug and alcohol offenders have even been drinking at all. referred by Juvenile Court. It includes an orientation; a slide show presentation If I found out that one of my friends has gotten arrested for developed by the Pima County Medical Examiner’s Office of real life alcohol/drug drugs or alcohol, I would caused injuries and deaths; a 2-hour session at Tucson Medical Center’s Trauma definitely refer them to this Center; and a 4-hour prevention education session led by a substance abuse program. I felt that it helped me a lot, and it did a lot more therapist. than a few hours of community service would have done. It gave Youth must write a 500 word essay about the circumstances that brought them to me a real realization of things that could happen after doing the program and what they have learned from participating. After completing the drugs or alcohol, and it will help program, youth send copies of their essay and certificates of completion to their me when making better decisions judges and/or probation officers. in the future. I am happy that I have gone through this program, and I know that I won’t ever 103 youth completed Wake Up!™ 67 Males have to be in this situation ever 36 Females again.”

Recidivism rate for first time offenders - 11%; multiple offenders—19%. Funded by the City of Tucson, Community Development Block Grant (CDBG).

15th Annual Report Page 5 AzYP 2004-2005 Highlights Community Service Projects As part of the Life Skills Education program, youth in each community completed 4 community service projects that they designed, implemented, and evaluated.

Community By Number of Youth and Projects

Ajo 217 youth Survey findings showed that: Projects: Halloween Carnival, Safe and Sober Graduation Lock In, and Memory • 14% of adult coalition Garden for lives lost to substance abuse.

members surveyed improved Catalina 95 youth recognition of their ability to Projects: Drug Free Dances, Drug Awareness Community Poster Contest, Bake influence community Sale, and Community Garden. conditions Marana 11 youth • 8% increased their perception Projects: Cigarette Butt Clean-Up Campaign, Smoking is Not Cool Campaign, and of their capacity to solve Community Health Fairs community problems Pascua Yaqui 22 youth • 70% of youth (7% increase) Projects: Community Clean-Ups, Safe and Sober Fair, Back to School Bash, and indicated they plan to attend Elders’ Christmas Party. a 4 year college Tohono O’odham 79 youth • 67% of youth (8% increase) Projects: Elders’ Garden, Elders Christmas Party, Truck of Love, Safe and Sober reported plans that included Celebration, and Chess Games graduate or professional Funded by the Governor’s Office of Children, Youth and Families Safe and Drug Free school Communities and Schools and the Community Partnership of Southern Arizona. • 44% youth demonstrated

significant improvement in 8 of 9 skill sets measured by Community Workshops the Tohono O’odham schools Community coalitions conducted workshops for community members about the • Teachers reported impact of alcohol and drugs on the individual, the family, the culture, and the community at large. Also, community members learned about prevention and participating youth had coalition development. improved their classroom work and behavior. Over 800 youth and adults in Pima County attended these workshops.

• Youth maintained Workshop Participants by Community unfavorable attitude towards Ajo 553 youth and 46 adults drug use. Pascua Yaqui 12 youth and 75 adults • Youth maintained high level Tohono O’odham 138 adults

expectations that peers were Funded by the Community Partnership of Southern Arizona and the Center for not using drugs. Substance Abuse Prevention Drug Free Communities.

Community Coalitions Coalitions are defined as a broad range of people and organizations that share a formal, sustained commitment to enhance each other's capacity to reach a common mission by sharing risks, responsibilities and rewards. Coalitions have been shown to build consensus; minimize duplication of efforts and services; mobilize diverse talents, resources and approaches; increase the "critical mass" behind a community effort; and improve trust and communication among competitors. Through the work of community coalitions in Ajo, Catalina, Marana,

Page 6 15th Annual Report AzYP 2004-2005 Highlights

Pascua Yaqui Tribe and the Tohono O’odham Nation, AzYP facilitated the implementation of programs and strategies to decrease laws, norms, and policies favorable to substance use and abuse.

Community Coalition Names and Number of Members:

Ajo Having Opportunities for Positive Experiences

(HOPE) Coalition 12 Community Outcomes

Catalina Catalina Community Coalition 42 6% increase in community Marana Drugs, Alcohol, and Violence (DAV) Coalition 12 cohesion and 13 % increase Pascua Yaqui Our Elders’ Truth CORE 15 in community action. Tohono O’odham CORE Coalition 51 Adults across all sites Funded by the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, Drug Free Communities reported 14% less favorable and the Community Partnership of Southern Arizona. attitudes at post survey.

Youth Advisory Councils (YACs) The Youth Advisory Councils (YACs) are designed to promote youth leadership by focusing on the reduction of laws, norms, and policies favorable to substance Honoring the Memory of abuse. Florentina Camilla Molina

75 youth participated on YACs in Ajo, Catalina, and Marana. Community Activist, Educator,

Friend, Colleague Funded by the Community Partnership of Southern Arizona March 2, 1956—October 9, 2005

Youth and Family Resource Networks In our lives, we all have traveled AzYP community staff convened and coordinated these networks to bring together over stepping stones that lead us organizations and agencies providing services to youth and families. At monthly on a journey. network meetings, members shared information about their current work and co- Florentina Molina’s journey planned events such as health fairs, family support groups, teen dances, and brought her here with us, to substance abuse awareness workshops. Arizona Youth Partnership.

75 organizations and agencies joined the networks She wanted to make a difference. Funded by the Community Partnership of Southern Arizona. She believed that it takes a village to raise a child. She Middle School After School Program believed that if we could change the life of one child, one family, AzYP’s After School programs in Ajo and Catalina provided academic, social, and that change would positively recreational enrichment for youth in elementary and middle school. Youth were impact the community. provided with homework and tutoring assistance as well as skill-building activities, At Arizona Youth Partnership, arts and crafts, snacks, and life skills. In 2004-2005, 154 youth participated. she proved her commitment by Funded by Pima County Outside Agency, SaddleBrooke Rotary, and Catalina getting involved with the Our Community Services. Elder’s Truth CORE Coalition to educate tribal members and the community at large about the impact of substance abuse on all Family Fun Nights of us. Then she joined our staff. To provide fun family–oriented activities that included movie nights, outdoor She believed that one person barbeques, cultural events, paintball, and arts and crafts activities. In 2004- could make a difference by 2005, over 275 youth and adults attended Family Fun Night activities. Funded changing conditions in his/her by the Community Partnership of Southern Arizona. community --- and she did.

15th Annual Report Page 7 AzYP 2004-2005 Highlights Teen Nights Teens in Ajo, Catalina, and Marana planned and implemented social and recreational activities in their communities that included teen dances, bowling nights, field trips, paint-ball competitions, movie nights, and all-night graduation parties. These events provided otherwise isolated youth with alcohol, tobacco, and drug free activities in an accessible, positive, and social environment. In 2004-2005, over 340 teens attended Teen Nights. Funded by Arizona Rural Human Services.

AzYP 2004-2005 Community Partners

Arizona Youth Partnership’s community development work Community Justice Center ● Northwest Fire District ● Old Pascua ● Olsen’s IGA Market occurs in partnership with 208 agencies, businesses, ● Pascua Neighborhood Center ● Pascua Yaqui Behavioral Health Program ● Pascua community organizations, and schools in urban and rural Yaqui Boys and Girls Club ● Pascua Yaqui Development Services Division ● Pascua neighborhoods throughout Pima County. Yaqui Education Department ● Pascua Yaqui Explorers Program ● Pascua Yaqui Healthy Families ● Pascua Yaqui Information Technology Department ● Pascua Yaqui Liogue Senior Center ● Pascua Yaqui Maternal and Child Health Program ● Pascua Partnership is the cornerstone of our organization and the Yaqui Preschool ● Pascua Yaqui Facilities Management ● Pascua Yaqui Hiapsi Kuakte key to our success. The board and staff wish to thank all of ● Pascua Yaqui Police Department ● Pascua Yaqui Recreation Youth Wellness ● our partners for their support throughout 2004-2005. It has Pascua Yaqui Scholarship Office ● Pascua Yaqui Traditional Arts Program ● Pascua been a great year! Yaqui Tribal Council ● Pascua Yaqui Tribal Courts ● Pascua Yaqui Tribe ● Pascua Yaqui Tribe Yoeme Hamut ● Pascua Yaqui Victim Witness Program ● Pascua Yaqui Pima County Region Community Partners: Walking in Balance Program ● Picture Rocks Elementary ● Pima County Community Ajo Ambulance ● ACE Charter (MUSD) ● Ace Hardware (Catalina) ● Ajo Bowling Lanes Services ● Pima County Health Department ● Pima County Juvenile Court ● Pima ● Ajo Chevron ● Ajo Copper News ● Ajo Elk’s Ladies ● Ajo Elk’s Lodge ● Ajo Flower County Natural Resources, Parks and Recreation ● Pima County Sheriff’s Department ● Shop ● Ajo Garden Club ● Ajo-Gibson Fire Department ● Ajo Holt Sales/Shell● Ajo Pisinemo Development Authority ● Pisinemo District ● Pisinemo Youth Council ● Pizza Improvement ● Ajo Insurance/Chevron ● Ajo Lion’s Club ● Ajo Parent Teacher Hut (Ajo) ● Plaza Supermarket ● Project PEPP ● PRO Neighborhoods ● Quail Run Organization ● Ajo Realty ● Ajo Rotary Club ● Ajo Transportation ● Ajo True Value ● Elementary ● R&R Pizza ● Recreation Youth Wellness ● Richardson Elementary ● Ajo Unified School District ● Alice Dryer Insurance ● Altar Valley School District ● Richey K-8 School ● Roadrunner Elementary ● Round Valley School District ● Ruben’s America Citizen’s Social Club ● Amigos Liquors ● Amphitheater School District ● Barbershop ● SaddleBrooke Rotary Club ● San Ignacio Yaqui Council ● San Simo:n Arizona Cardinals ● Arizona National Guard’s Narcotics Task Force ● Arizona Rural Elementary & Middle School ● San Solano Missions ● Santa Catalina Mission Church ● Human Services Network ● Bamboo Village ● Bashas-Ajo ● Bethany House ● Bush Santa Rosa Boarding School ● Santa Rosa Ranch ● Save the Children ● Schuk Toak Sand & Gravel ● Butterfield Elementary School ● Catalina Community Services ● District ● Sells District ● Sentinel Peak High School ● Si Como No ● Sonoran Science Catalina Head Start ● Catalina Mountain Boys School ● Catalina Mountain Elks Lodge ● Academy ● Southside Community School ● Southwest Gas ● Stockman’s Bank ● Sun Catalina Mountain Shaved Ice ● Catholic Daughters ● Centennial Elementary ● Circle City Seniors-for-Kids ● Table Top Telephone ● Teens Sew Cool ● Tohono O’odham K-Ajo ● City of Tucson ● Community Food Bank of Ajo ● Community Food Bank of Community College and Career Center ● Tohono O’odham Dept. of Education ● Marana ● Concho Unified School District ● Coronado K-8 School ● Court Appointed Tohono O’odham Dept. of Human Services ● Tohono O’odham Division of Behavioral Program of Education (C.A.P.E.) ● Coyote Bob’s Deli ● Coyote Trails Elementary ● Health ● Tohono O’odham Gaming Authority ● Tohono O’odham High School ● Tohono DeGrazia Elementary ● Del Sur Enterprises ● Desert Senita Community Health Center O’odham Nation Justice Center Children’s Program ● Tohono O’odham Nation ● ● Desert Visions Youth Wellness Center ● Development Publication ● Education Tohono O’odham Planning & Recreation Department ● Tohono O’odham Police Association of Ajo ● Erickson Consulting ● Estes Elementary ● Faith Community ● First Department ● Tohono O’odham Runner ● Tohono O’odham Truck of Love South ● Safety Link ● Flowing Wells Academy ● Flowing Wells Community ● Flowing Wells High Tohono O’odham Youth Services (TOYS) ● Tom’s Pharmacy ● of Marana ● School ● Flowing Wells Junior High ● Flowing Wells School District ● Greater Catalina/ Tucson Area Literacy Coalition (TALC) ● Tucson Community Food Bank ● Tucson Golder Ranch Village Council ● Gu Achi District ● Gu’Vo District ● Healthy O’odham Medical Center ● Tucson Police Department ● Tucson Unified School District (TUSD) ● Promotion Program (HOPP) ● Hendricks Elementary ● Hohokam Middle School ● Tucson/Pima County Public Library ● Twin Peaks Elementary ● United Way of Homer Davis Elementary ● Indian Health Service ● Indian Oasis/ Boboquivari School Northeastern Arizona ● U.S. Border Patrol- Ajo Station ● Venito Garcia Library ● Vista District ● Indian Oasis Intermediate School ● Information and Referral Services ● de la Montaña United Methodist Church ● Vistoso Garden Club ●Volunteer Center of International Sonoran Desert Alliance (ISDN) ● Ironwood Elementary ● Ironwood Ridge Tucson ● Walter Douglas Elementary ● Why Not Travel Store ● Woodsmen of the High School ● Johnson Primary School ● Kinship and Adoption Resource Education World ● Y.W.C.A. (KARE) ● Knights of Columbus ● KPG Enterprises ● Laguna Elementary ● La Siesta Motel ● Lawrence Intermediate School ● Loews Ventana Canyon Resort ● Marana White Mountain Region Community Partners: Career and Technical Center ● Marana Chamber of Commerce ● Marana Community Apache County Community Action Board ● Apache County Youth Council ● Apache/ Justice Board ● Marana Family Resource and Wellness Center ● Marana Health Center Navaho County Health Department ● Bashas-Eager ● Department of Economic ● Marana High School-T.A.P.P.S and S.T.A.N.D. Programs ● Marana High School ● Security-Springerville ● IGA Store-St. Johns ● Navajo Agency Mountain High Program ● Marana Middle School ● Marana Parks and Recreation ● Marana Police Department ● Safeway Store-Springerville ● Snowflake Unified School District ● St. Johns School Marana Public Library ● Marana Recreation Center ● Marana Teen Advisory Council- District ● Electric Power Springerville Generating Station ● Wal-Mart-Show Low ● M.T.A.C. ● Marana Unified School District ● Mark Pi’s Chinese & Priced Rite Pizza ● Western Drug-Springerville ● White Mountain Academy Mercy Home ● Minerals Research & Recovery, Inc. ● New Pascua ● Northwest

Page 8 15th Annual Report AzYP 2004-2005 Agents of Change

Through the course of its work, AzYP This year’s Agents of Change are: White Mountains Region has met a tremendous group of Concho Valley Unified School District community members who have made Catalina Round Valley Unified School District outstanding contributions to their Tommy Fogle (youth) St. Johns Unified School District communities. These community Tom Shaw (adult) Snowflake Unified School District members make these contributions, not as part of a paid job, but as part of a Marana Staff life style and commitment to improving Clariissa Barrozo (youth) Robin Aguero, White Mountains conditions in their neighborhoods. Jessica Ziegler (adult) Samuel Fayuant, Tohono O’odham Amy St. John (adult) As a community development organization, AzYP realizes the need to honor and acknowledge outstanding Tohono O’odham “Agents of Change.” Francine Jose (youth) Margie Lopez(adult) Arizona Youth Partnership Administrative Office Executive Director Marana Community Development Director 4239 W. Ina Road, Suite 101 Luan E. Wagner, Ph.D. 11279 West Grier Road, Lori Andersen Tucson, Arizona 85741 Director of Youth Development Suite 103A Youth Development Director (520) 744-9595 Denice Hardy Marana, Arizona 85753 Jodi Burshia Fax: (520) 744-2127 Director of Community Initiatives (520) 616-4506 Youth Development Director, East Barbara Norris Fax: (520) 682-4785 Megan Libby Finance Manager Peer Educators Lorrie Morah Sarah Harris, David Aquino, Life Skills Team Leader, East Alicia Lopez, Emilio Perez, Erin O'Callaghan Megan Hunt, Brandon Moon Life Skills Team Leader, West Linda Fayuant Pima County Regional Director New and Old Community Development Director Jessica Stoops Carmen Soto Pascua Yaqui Circle of Life Project Life Skills 7629 S. Camino Huivisim Educators Tucson, AZ 85746 Community Development Director Florentina Molina Ajo (520) 578-9083 Mary Anne Fout Carmen Soto P.O. Box 415 , Fax: (520) 578-9072 Ajo Public Schools Room #25 Youth Development Director Ajo, Arizona 85321 Josie Robles (520) 387-3060 Peer Facilitators Teen Pregnancy Teen Pregnancy Prevention Director Fax: (520) 387-4868 Johanna Bauer, Lacy Tyron, Prevention Patricia Merrill Gabriel Korchmakis Teen Pregnancy Prevention Team Leader 4239 W. Ina Road, Suite 101 Life Skills Educator Alfonso De la Riva Tucson, Arizona 85741 Bridget Rendon Teen Pregnancy Prevention Educators (520) 744-9595 After School Coordinator Kimberly Benally Fax: (520) 744-2127 Laura Davis Lori Malangone After School Aide Jim Myers Yolanda Walls Amber Johnson

White Mountains White Mountains Regional Director Tohono O’odham Community Development Director, Robin Aguero 415 N. Butler Drive HC02 Box 300 Team Leader Life Skills/Abstinence Only Educator Springerville, Arizona 85938 Sells, Arizona 85634 Samuel Fayuant Brandy Gaston (928) 333-4003 (520) 362-2232 Community Development Director, Sells Life Skills Educator Fax: (520) 362-2730 Vivian Hedrington Rebecca Nelson Life Skills Team Leader, West Linda Fayuant Catalina Community Development Director Life Skills Educator, Sells Megan Libby 3414 East Golder Ranch Road Andrea Lochner Catalina, AZ 85739 Life Skills Educator (520) 825-0009 Francisco Montano Wake Up! Coordinator Fax: (520) 825-6899 After School Coordinator 4239 W. Ina Road, Suite 101 Martin Nemcik Virginia Madrid Tucson, Arizona 85741 After School Aide (520) 744-9595 Marlinda Heredia Fax: (520) 744-2121 Voicemail: (520) 408-4035

15th Annual Report Page 9 4239 W. Ina Road Ste. 101 Tucson, AZ 85741 (520) 744-9595 (520) 744-2127 www.azyp.org

Donors

Mrs. Elise Hendricks Hendricks Elise Mrs. Warren Alter Inc. Pathway Developments, Desert Supply Sandra L. Sulzman Carolen C. D'Andrea & Nick D'Andrea C. Lohman & Lynndell Fred M Caren L. Von Inc. Restaurants, The Graduate Donor Network Of Arizona Warehouse The Poster Karen Bowen, RV Company Beaudry

Luan E. Wagner, Ph.D. Luan E. Wagner, Kathy Cisco Associates Hall and Jim Roxann Strozzi AzYP 2004-2005 AzYP 2004-2005 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Gold ($100$499) to Copper ($25 to $50) Platinum above) and ($500