Chicago Sun-Times

SHAKE-UP AT YOUNG CHICAGO AUTHORS

Leadership change follows warning of ‘danger to the thousands of young people served’

- BY MADELINE KENNEY, STAFF REPORTER mkenney@suntimes.com | @MadKenney

Young Chicago Authors announced major leadership changes Thursday after accusation­s that some top executives ignored allegation­s of sexual assault and were cultivatin­g what one staff member called a “culture of silence.”

Longtime artistic director Kevin Coval was ousted and executive director Rebecca Hunter resigned Thursday, according to a Young Chicago Authors statement. Hunter, who had been with the organizati­on since 2011, had previously announced plans to leave in June.

The shake-up was a “direct result of actions by staff on the behalf of the community we serve,” the group’s board of directors said in a statement.

“We acknowledg­e community members have been advocating for improvemen­ts in YCA’s safe space protocols going back as far as 2014,” the statement continued.

Demetrius Amparan, an alum of the group, will serve as interim executive director. Previously, he was manager of donor relations and director of publicatio­ns and communicat­ion.

Founded nearly three decades ago, Young Chicago Authors seeks to promote creative writing among teens and young adults.

The shake-up comes one day after Button Poetry founder and president Sam Van Cook issued a statement, contending Coval didn’t take accusation­s of sexual assault seriously.

Van Cook said he informed Coval during a 2015 meeting that several college students alleged they had been sexually assaulted by a Young Chicago Authors mentor. Van Cook said Coval allegedly showed “disinteres­t in the allegation­s and was dismissive of the issue, the specifics and the risk to his own students” during their encounter.

“I believe that Kevin Coval’s leadership at YCA is a clear and present danger to the thousands of young people served through YCA and Louder Than a Bomb,” Van Cook said in a statement.

Louder Than a Bomb is a youth poetry festival that Young Chicago Authors has held for more than 20 years.

Attempts by the Sun-Times to reach Coval and Hunter for comment Thursday were unsuccessf­ul.

Other members of the poetry community have demanded accountabi­lity from Young Chicago Authors leadership, whom some say swept sexual assault allegation­s under the rug.

In a video on Instagram, Amparan acknowledg­ed the individual­s who came forward and shared their experience­s at Young Chicago Authors, which sends profession­al writers into Chicago schools to teach and talk about writing.

“Your voices are heard, clearly, and I want to respectful­ly say my heart is with you,” the interim executive director said. “Since I can remember, YCA has been a platform for people who have felt unseen and unheard. The moment we begin to not listen to these stories, is the moment we become a direct disservice to our mission.” In light of recent events, Ana Wright, the organizati­on’s director of programmin­g, said all programs have been paused as the staff creates a “90-day safe space plan” intended to “reverse the culture of silence that previous leadership decisions cultivated.

“We realize that we have to reestablis­h your trust and we understand that we have a lot of difficult and meaningful work ahead of us,” Wright said on Instagram. “We are very energized and unified in our collective reimaginin­g of YCA and we will continue to keep you updated on our goals, progress and initiative­s as they become available. You are the focus of the work that we plan to continue to do.”

It’s unclear how or if this program suspension will affect Louder Than a Bomb, the five-week youth poetry festival founded by Coval in 2000. That event, widely considered the world’s largest youth slam, is scheduled to take place virtually, starting March 13.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Kevin Coval
PROVIDED Kevin Coval

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