“Everything we do is a little bit subversive,” says The Vera Project’s Executive Director, Ricky Graboski. This unofficial mission statement will come as no surprise to those familiar with Vera, an all-ages, drug and alcohol-free music and arts space on the Seattle Center campus that offers over 250 concerts a year, classes in screen-printing, audio recording, sound mixing, concert lighting, and other artistic mediums, and frequent ad hoc workshops that serve as training opportunities for youth interested in entering creative industries. Where the Vera Project’s subversiveness really shines, however, is in its management structure: Seattleites aged 14-24 who put in at least twenty-four annual volunteer hours at Vera earn voting rights on everything that happens in the space and make all major administrative decisions, from voting in board members to allocating funding to new projects and initiatives. The level of agency afforded to youth members fosters a spirit of volunteerism and social responsibility that Ricky believes is what Vera is all about: “We want the young people who move through our space to take over this city.”
For many years, the same spirit of joyful anarchy that ruled Vera’s programmatic offerings also defined its organizational growth – the team moved in as many directions as possible at once, picking up new goals and objectives and putting established ones aside. Now, they’re working on an approach that balances its one-off programs with more consistent offerings that have specific academic benchmarks and post-engagement job placement opportunities. The Community Accelerator Grant has been instrumental to Vera in achieving their current level of stability, largely by supporting salary increases and allowing them to offer benefits to a larger percentage of staff, approximately 30% of whom were once youth members at Vera. “We’re getting to a place where people can stay here because they want to stay here,” Ricky says, “which gives us more consistency with our budget, our capacity-building, and, most importantly, our mentorship and youth development. Having familiar faces around to help bring youth through our programs is invaluable for us.”