Footprints to Employment
Sometimes the best way to learn is to teach — that’s the lesson Keisha learned as a Neil Squire Society youth intern at the Penticton Indian Band’s Footprints to Technology Centre.
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Skip to NavigationSometimes the best way to learn is to teach — that’s the lesson Keisha learned as a Neil Squire Society youth intern at the Penticton Indian Band’s Footprints to Technology Centre.
The Community Foundation of the South Okanagan | Similkameen awarded a $10,000 grant to the Neil Squire Society in April, 2015.
Ryan, who’s 19 years old, has right side hemiplegia, a partial paralysis of one side of the body that results from disease of or injury to the motor centers of the brain.
The Neil Squire Society announced today that the TELUS Vancouver Community Board will be providing $12,000 to support the Youth Employ-Ability Program; a pre-employment/employment program for youth with physical disabilities in Metro Vancouver.