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How a barbecue and a movie encouraged kids to take part in Youth Week in Langley City

‘Free food is the number one way to get kids out of the house’ organizer says
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If you want to motivate kids to get out of the house, free food works. That, according to Langley City recreation programmer and youth leader Carson Marquardt, was the thinking behind the Youth Extravaganza at the Timms centre, which offered a free barbecue and a movie to wrap up B.C. Youth Week on Saturday, May 4. (Dan Ferguson/Langley Advance Times)

If you want to get kids away from their video games, motivate them with free food.

That was the thinking behind Langley City’s Youth Night Extravaganza, which wrapped up B.C. Youth Week with a free barbecue and a movie on Saturday night, May 4 at Timms Community Centre, hosted in partnership with Foundry Langley.

“Free food is the number one way to get kids out of the house,” remarked Carson Marquardt, Langley City recreation programmer and youth leader.

Marquardt explained the event, which also included an open gym, popcorn, cotton candy and slurpees, was scheduled for a Saturday because that is the day Timms’ has its regular youth night, which draws about 100 kids to the centre when the building is open to youth only from 6 p.m.on.

“So add in a free barbecue, and there’s gonna be tons of kids,”Marquardt commented.

“There’s always a lot of talk about kids spending too much time at home playing video games, so we try to have as many events as we can to get them out of the house, getting them out in the community and doing fun stuff,” Marquardt told the Langley Advance Times.

Youth Week in B.C., held annually during the first week of May, is a celebration of youth intended to highlight the interests, accomplishments, and diversity of youth across the province.

It started in 1995, the brainchild of some municipal planners and youth recreation leaders who first considered a Youth Day, but decided something bigger would be better, so they decided to make an entire week focused on youth.

“Youth Week in general is just all about celebrating the youth in our community, Marquardt summarized.

“Making sure we have events and [other] things for them.”

All Langley City Youth Week events were free for youth 12-18 with the City Youth Week Activity Pass from May 1-7.

Among the week’s events, a month-long Youth Writing Contest for students in Grades 6 to 12 was launched in partnership with the Fraser Valley Regional Library with a top prize of $100, and H.D. Stafford Middle School hosted a trivia showdown for its students.

READ ALSO: Langley celebrates Youth Week with sports, community events

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Dan Ferguson

About the Author: Dan Ferguson

Best recognized for my resemblance to St. Nick, I’m the guy you’ll often see out at community events and happenings around town.
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