Y.E.S.S. is a proactive collaboration between law enforcement, schools and the community to develop life skills for our future leaders.
Y.E.S.S. instructors primarily teach middle school students in 7th and 8th grades health classes about:
teen relationships (bullying, harassment, abuse)
Internet/digital safety (cyberbullying and sexting)
substance abuse
School Resource Officers assist the Y.E.S.S. program by teaching topics, including abuse, sexting, dating violence and the use of Text-A-Tip, at the high school level.
Parents
Parent Academies on issues such as Internet/digital safety, substance abuse, and physical/emotional safety. These free academies are offered several times a year.
Questions and Answers from the Community. You type in your question in the search and hopefully it'll find it with an answer attached to it. TitanTV offers fast, customizable TV listings for local broadcasting, cable and satellite lineups. Quickly view program, episode, cast credits, and additional airing. It also includes updated Questions and Answers in Attachment 3. This memorandum supersedes CACFP 01-2018, G rain Requirements in the Child and Adult Care Food Program; Questions and Answers, October 19, 2017.
To view safeTALK or ASIST events please visit the Events Calendar or email [email protected].
safeTALK training prepares anyone over the age of 15 to identify persons with thoughts of suicide and connect them to suicide first-aid resources.
The Y.E.S.S program offers a community suicide prevention program that includes free safeTALK (suicide awareness for everyone) training. Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) workshops are also offered at a minimal fee in partnership with the Douglas County School District and Rotary of Castle Pines.
For more information on training offered please contact Phyllis Harvey, [email protected] .