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    Doing Good in Dallas

    Youth-focused Dallas nonprofit sets the table for its first big chef dinner

    CultureMap Create
    Apr 10, 2018 | 12:15 pm

    As a socially involved and civically conscious Dallasite, you may be familiar with Cafe Momentum. But the acclaimed restaurant — where young men and women work in all aspects of the restaurant, learning life and social skills along the way — originally grew out of an organization called Youth With Faces.

    The nonprofit helps youth beat the cycle of incarceration through several programs that encourage foundational skills needed to be capable, contributing members of the community.

    Founded in 2001, Youth With Faces started out by providing materials and meals to the kids in Dallas County’s Youth Village. It expanded in 2008 to include rehabilitation programs, and today it annually impacts the lives of approximately 200-300 youths at Dallas County's Letot Residential Center, Medlock Treatment Center, and Youth Village.

    "Most of our kids have faced things you or I cannot imagine," says Youth With Faces CEO Chris Quadri. "It's rewarding to watch how they change the more time they spend in our classes. We want everyone to know our kids have potential, because we see it every day."

    Through programs such as Career Readiness, Culinary Arts, PREP Dog Training, and Horticulture Therapy, young men and women in the juvenile system learn important lessons in leadership, empathy, and patience. Social skills are reinforced daily, with emphasis on making eye contact, dealing with frustration and disappointment, and following through on commitments.

    Knowing that if kids can get back in school or secure a job after release, their chances of success are far greater, so the group teaches how to set goals and plan the steps to achieve them. Through career readiness and education, youth learn how to prepare a resume, interview, and find and keep culinary, retail, and other gateway jobs. Youth With Faces also connects its kids to a network of employers.

    Partnerships with organizations that include several Dallas restaurants are reinforced not only through hands-on learning and chef-led demonstrations, where the youth get to see someone who looks and talks like them achieving a productive career, but also through events like the inaugural Field & Vine wine dinner.

    The five-course, farm-to-table soiree is set for May 6 at the historic Turner House in Oak Cliff, where some of Dallas' finest chefs will prepare an al fresco Sunday meal. Matt Balke (Bolsa), Graham Dodds (The Statler), Sharon Hage, (restaurant consultant and chef), Jeff Harris, (Headington Restaurants, Commissary), and Nathan Tate (Boulevardier, Rapscallion) will each prepare a course of locally sourced fare, accompanied by paired wines. A cocktail hour will precede the dinner.

    "In the past two weeks, we've received a call every day from someone who wants to help," says Quadri. "Several of the Field & Vine chefs have worked with our kids, and with their support we're reaching so many more in the community who are ready to get involved."

    All ticket sales and sponsorships benefit Youth With Faces and its valuable programs. And if that celebrity chef lineup has whetted your appetite, you'd better hurry — tickets are selling fast.

    Youth in the culinary program learn how to cook and prepare healthy foods.

    Youth in the culinary program learn how to cook and prepare healthy foods
    Photo courtesy of Youth With Faces
    Youth in the culinary program learn how to cook and prepare healthy foods.
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    Texas tragedy

    Camp Mystic drops summer reopening plan over outrage by families, lawmakers

    Associated Press
    Apr 30, 2026 | 2:30 pm
    Memorial Service Held For Young Camper Killed In Hill Country Floods
    Photo by Ron Jenkins/Getty Images
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    AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Camp Mystic on Thursday, April 30 halted reopening plans on the Texas river where floodwaters killed 25 girls and two teenage counselors, backing down in the face of outraged families and investigations that accused the all-girls Christian camp of dangerous safety and operational deficiencies.

    The decision, a striking reversal of the camp owners' determination to reopen, follows weeks of testimony in court hearings and legislative investigations. Those hearings laid bare the camp’s lack of detailed planning for a flood emergency, reliance on poorly trained staff, and missed chances for an evacuation that came too late as floodwaters ripped through the camp over the July 4 weekend last year.

    “We never imagined a world without our daughters, and no decision made now can change that," Matthew Childress, father of 18-year-old counselor Chloe Childress who died, said in a statement.

    The camp’s owner, Dick Eastland, also died in the flooding.

    “No administrative process or summer season should move forward while families continue to grieve, while investigations continue and while so many Texans still carry the pain of last July’s tragedy,” Camp Mystic said in a statement.

    A spokesperson for the Texas Department of State Health Services confirmed Thursday that the camp has withdrawn its application.

    The decision was praised by Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who opposed the camp's reopening while investigations were ongoing.

    “I am thankful to hear that, today, the Eastland family withdrew their application,” Patrick said in a statement. “Given the tragic circumstances, this is the correct decision to protect Texas campers and to allow time for all investigations to be completed.”

    The families of the victims packed the court and legislative hearings, often wearing “Heaven’s 27” pins with photographs of their daughters. They listened to the details of missed flood warning signs, the descriptions of the flood and the decision to leave the girls in their cabins until it was too late. The testimony included video of the raging floodwaters as a girl repeatedly screamed for “help!” somewhere in the distance.

    Edward Eastland, one of the camp directors and a member of the Eastland family that owns and operates the 100-year-old camp on the banks of the Guadalupe River, offered a tearful public apology to the victims’ families on Tuesday.

    “We tried our hardest that night. It wasn’t enough to save your daughters,” Eastland said, with the victims' families sitting behind him. “I’m so sorry.”

    All told, the destructive flooding killed at least 136 people along a several-mile stretch of the river, raising questions about how things went so terribly wrong.

    Texas health regulators have said they are investigating hundreds of complaints against the camp's owners. The Texas Rangers are also looking into allegations of neglect, according to the Texas Department of Safety, although the scope of the state’s elite investigations unit was not immediately clear.

    The camp, established in 1926, did not evacuate as the storm rolled in and was hit hard when the river rose from 14 feet (4.2 meters) to 29.5 feet (9 meters) within 60 minutes.

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