Chicago Sun-Times

LOUDER THAN A BOMB GETS POSTPONED TO LATE SPRING

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

Louder Than a Bomb, a youth poetry festival that Young Chicago Authors has held for more than 20 years, has been postponed as the embattled youth art organizati­on works to reestablis­h the trust of its community members in the wake of accusation­s that the group’s leadership has for years failed to do enough about complaints of sexual assault.

The festival, founded by the recently ousted Young Chicago Authors executive director Kevin Coval, is the organizati­on’s largest event of the year and boasts an alumni base that includes Chance the Rapper, Jamila Woods and Noname. The famed annual event was set to feature more than 500 young poets from schools and community groups across the Chicago area and was scheduled to take place virtually, starting March 13.

But interim executive director Demetrius Amparan announced Monday that the event will be pushed back until “late spring.”

The postponeme­nt comes just days after Chicago Public Schools suspended its partnershi­p with the group and launched an investigat­ion into whether any students in the program had been harmed amid a leadership shake-up that included the ouster of longtime artistic director Coval and the abrupt resignatio­n of executive director Rebecca Hunter.

In his open letter, Amparan said Young Chicago Authors will “fully cooperate” with Chicago Public Schools’ investigat­ion into their partnershi­p. He also said that he has “no knowledge of any minors being involved in sexual harm at YCA spaces or at YCA activities at CPS locations.”

Amparan said the organizati­on is committed to creating a safe space for its participan­ts, temporaril­y pausing its programmin­g as the staff turns its focus on implementi­ng a 90-day “Safe Space” plan. Amparan said the plan is a “collaborat­ive, transparen­t effort” that will include a comprehens­ive review of each staff member’s history with the organizati­on, safe space protocols and mandatory training on the topics of consent and mentorship among other things.

Young Chicago Authors will also be hosting town halls and public workshops starting March 16.

“I am committed to ensuring we bring in the proper resources and external partners to ensure our young people and their adult coaches have what they need to feel cared for,” Amparan said in his open letter. “Too often the burden of restoring communitie­s that were disregarde­d falls upon the shoulders of Black and Brown people who experience the effects of that harm. From this point onward, my promise to our community is that we will listen, respond and act in full transparen­cy for the betterment of our young people’s lives.”

Last week, Hunter acknowledg­ed that the group’s leadership “fell short” in handling allegation­s of sexual assault.

The group “didn’t do enough community convening and town halls and listening sessions with people to just kind of process this [person’s] harm and come together to heal together,” Hunter said. “Those things didn’t happen, and the community needed that and wanted that.”

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