We're following their lead
Programming at RYSE is anchored in the belief that young people have the lived knowledge and expertise to identify, prioritize, and direct the programs, activities, and services necessary to benefit their well being.
Our Approach
We envision strong, healthy, united communities where equity is the norm and violence is neither desired nor required, creating a strong foundation for future generations to thrive.
Our Staff
Meet the people who are helping create safe spaces grounded in social justice.
Our Programs
RYSE Programs are designed to provide our youth with the tools to build a better city.
Resources
RYSE strives to be a space that meets the needs of Richmond and West Contra Costa County youth. For those who are unable to access the Center or whose needs are beyond the scope of our services, we offer these resources.
Know a potential member?
To become a member, youth can sign-up here to get a tour of the space from one of our staff members and complete their member enrollment.
Latest News
Today we celebrate the life of Angela Davis. Her powerful legacy reminds us that love and rage are two sides of the same coin in the ongoing fight for justice and liberation. Her birthday comes at a time when we reflect on the vision of MLK Jr., whose message of the beloved community continues to inspire us to build a world rooted in justice, equality, and care. As we honor them, we gathered in the spirit of collective action during RYSE’s Youth Up Mobilize: We Take Care of Us Paint N Sip workshop held during the Anti-Police Terror Project’s “Reclaim MLK’s Radical Legacy Week of Action”. This was a space where our young people’s love and rage could converge, fueling our resistance, our healing, and our creative expression.
RYSE stands in solidarity with the displaced residents of the Southern California communities of Altadena-Pasadena, the Pacific Palisades neighborhood and San Fernando Valley. As the wildfires have entered a fourth day, more than 180,000 residents are under evacuation orders and all LA schools remain closed. As an organization that is committed to racial equity and social justice, we center and uplift the voices of our Black, Latinx and Indigenous communities of color who bear the brunt of environmental destruction and cuts to emergency response resources. We send our grief, care and love to our kin, movement partners, and to young people trying to practice as much physical, mental and emotional safety for themselves and others as possible. This calamity exacerbates the already existing inequities and injustices reflecting the crisis of Capitalism.
Each year, we ask young people how RYSE is living and sharing our values using The Member Liberation Impact Tool (LIT).
On October 18th, RYSE celebrated 16 years of serving young people in Richmond and Contra Costa County. Community partners and staff shared space in the RYSE Village to recognize the journey so far and plan for the road ahead.
One year ago, RYSE released a statement in response to the ongoing genocide happening in Gaza.
“As an organization that addresses the root causes of violence, RYSE recognizes that these same children and young adults who are facing genocide in Gaza right now were born under a longstanding colonial occupation resourced and ratified by the US. And fortified by the lies and slander of the mainstream media against oppressed peoples everywhere, from Richmond to Gaza.”
In remembrance, grief, love and rage, RYSE continues to stand in solidarity with Palestine through our words, actions, and spaces.
On September 17th, National Voter Registration Day, the RYSE community (including youth members and adult allies) created a street mural in front of RYSE Commons. The call to action, "Vote for Us" encourages people old enough to vote to learn about local issues important to young people.
RYSE staff organized a week of activities and informational resources to celebrate Xicanx/Afro Latinx Heritage Month (September 15 - October 15, 2024).
RYSE kicked off October by welcoming Attorney General Rob Bonta and DOJ staff to RYSE to learn more about their work and efforts in public safety and public health and to listen to local partners share their perspectives and work on public health and public safety.
In August, RYSE and Pacific Southwest MHTTC co-hosted “We Are the Medicine: Culturally Sustaining & Healing Practices for Youth & Young Adult Service Providers.”
Over 60 health care providers across the country, state, and Bay Area convened on-campus at RYSE to share healing practices that draw upon indigenous, holistic, and somatic techniques.
RYSE was born from Black, Indigenous and Young People of Color creating new ways to make meaning of loss, grief, and injustice. This meaning-making over two decades has cultivated youth space, place, and power. Over the past few years, young people have experienced life-altering events that no other generation has, such as enduring a global pandemic, with few opportunities to reflect on how this has influenced what they want and need.