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星期三, 1月 29, 2014

麻州要減少青少年累犯 撥款二千七百萬辦"為成功付費“項目

MASSACHUSETTS LAUNCHES LANDMARK INITIATIVE TO REDUCE RECIDIVISM AMONG AT-RISK YOUTH
$27 million Initiative is Largest Financial Investment in a Pay for Success Contract in the Country

CHELSEA – Wednesday, January 29, 2014 – Governor Deval Patrick today announced the launch of the nation’s largest financial investment in a Pay for Success (PFS) initiative, which is designed to improve outcomes for hundreds of at-risk young men in the probation system or leaving the juvenile justice system. The Massachusetts Juvenile Justice Pay for Success Initiative will not only improve the lives of young people, but also reduce crime, promote safer and stronger communities and save taxpayer dollars.

This initiative, in partnership with Roca, Inc., Third Sector Capital Partners and commercial and philanthropic funders, is the largest PFS financial investment in the country and is designed to encourage innovative solutions to chronic social problems and improve outcomes for individuals in Massachusetts. PFS contracts allow governments with limited resources to expand innovative social programs and only pay for those that actually make a difference.

“By working with our partners at Roca, the Pay for Success initiative will allow us to marry smart financial solutions with programs proven successful in helping high-risk youth become employed, stay employed, and break the cycle of violence,” said Governor Deval Patrick.

The Commonwealth’s PFS initiative is part of an ongoing commitment by the Patrick Administration to reform the juvenile justice system and provide tools to keep youth on the right track to achieve future success. The program will allow Roca, a nonprofit service provider, to serve 929 young men in Boston, Cambridge, Chicopee, Everett, Holyoke, Ludlow, Lynn, Malden, Medford, Revere, Somerville, Springfield, West Springfield, Westfield and Winthrop by providing intensive outreach, life skills and employment training that will reduce recidivism and help these young men become assets and resources in their community.

PFS contracts, also called Social Impact Bonds, combine nonprofit expertise, private sector funding and rigorous evaluation to transform the way government and society respond to chronic social problems. In a PFS initiative, funders assume up-front financial risk, and taxpayers pay for a program only if a third party evaluator and validator determine that the initiative has achieved specific outcomes that both create benefits to society and generate savings for government.

“The Massachusetts Pay for Success Initiative is about changing the odds,” said Molly Baldwin, founder and executive director of Roca, In. “It’s about confronting the stubborn trends of incarceration and poverty among justice-system-involved young men, and standing in solidarity to say to these young men, ‘We will not leave you behind, you deserve more than jail or prison, and we will give you our time and support to help you make a better future for yourself and your community.”

The program’s success will be determined based on reductions in the number of days young men served by Roca spend in jail, and improvements in their employment and job readiness. The Commonwealth will repay funders if Roca’s services are proven to produce positive societal outcomes and savings for the Commonwealth. Roca was chosen because of their historical and ongoing commitment to intensive data and outcomes tracking that have proven the organization is well-equipped for a rigorous and long-term evaluation of its programming through the PFS initiative.  To reduce incarceration rates among high-risk young men, Roca’s intervention model combines relentless outreach; intensive case management; life skills, educational, pre-vocational and employment training; and work opportunities with community partners.

Success payments will come from the Commonwealth, which has committed up to $27 million for this seven-year project, and from the U.S. Department of Labor, which awarded the Commonwealth a first-of-its-kind PFS grant of $11.7 million in September 2013. The additional funding for success payments from the Department of Labor will enable the Commonwealth to extend the project, should it prove successful, to an additional 391 young men, thereby serving a total of up to 1,320 young men over nine years.

Third Sector Capital Partners, a nonprofit advisory firm serving as project intermediary for this initiative, secured the $18 million in private financing for the project: $9 million in loan financing from the Goldman Sachs Social Impact Fund; $1.5 million in loan financing from The Kresge Foundation; $1.5 million in loan financing from Living Cities; and $6 million total in grants from Laura and John Arnold Foundation, New Profit, and The Boston Foundation. Remaining grant funds will be re-cycled into future projects at the conclusion of this initiative.

The social and financial costs related to recidivism for the Commonwealth are enormous. Currently in Massachusetts, 64 percent of young male ex-offenders reoffend within five years, and only 35 percent of these young men gain employment within a year of release. Roca’s groundbreaking approach to positive youth development aims to interrupt the cycle of recidivism by filling a gap in services for high-risk populations.  Through this project, Roca will aim to reduce the number of days that young men in the program are incarcerated by 40 percent. If this goal is met, the project would generate millions of dollars in savings to the Commonwealth that fully offset the cost of delivering services. 

“Pay for Success has the potential to transform how government procures some of its most important social services, and to redirect vast resources towards the social interventions that are best able to deliver the results our communities need," said George Overholser, Third Sector Capital Partner's CEO and Co-Founder.

“This partnership is a creative way to test new approaches to solving deeply rooted social problems,” said Secretary of Administration and Finance Glen Shor. “We are focused on government paying for demonstrated results, rather than simply the hope for success.”

“We are pleased to work with Governor Patrick, Roca and all of our partners to help high-risk youth in Massachusetts secure access to life skills training and employment opportunities,” said E. Gerald Corrigan, Managing Director and Chairman of Goldman Sachs Bank USA.  “We are proud to be an investor in projects such as this that rely on public sector-private sector cooperation to better achieve social and economic public policy goals.”

“This is a promising program with the potential to improve public safety, save taxpayers money, and directly impact the lives of hundreds of young people who are at high-risk of incarceration," Laura and John Arnold Foundation (LJAF) Vice President of Public Accountability Josh McGee explained. "Yet, the people of Massachusetts don’t have to invest millions of dollars into the program and just hope that it will work. The unique Pay for Success funding model means the Commonwealth will only pay for the program if it is proven to be successful. LJAF supports social innovation financing as part of our overall effort to promote evidence-based decision making. By rigorously evaluating programs, we are better able to determine what works and then scale those programs that actually make a difference.”

“We applaud the Commonwealth's leadership on this program and we have high confidence that Roca will improve many lives and help transform communities through it," said Tripp Jones, Managing Director of New Profit. "The Pay for Success approach is a promising way to mobilize critical private sector resources and ingenuity to drive greater impact in local programs, while also saving taxpayer money. It's rare to be able to achieve both, and we are looking forward to working on this and other similar initiatives in the future.”

“While much of the attention for this project will be based on its game-changing model for addressing major social issues in a cost-effective and socially responsive way, that is but one part of the reason the Boston Foundation is supporting it. This effort also takes on a major challenge for the Commonwealth by attacking the problem of juvenile re-incarceration, using a proven model, on a scale that would have been unimaginable in traditional scenarios. The potential social benefit for the Commonwealth is immense,” said Paul S. Grogan, President and CEO of the Boston Foundation.

“The Kresge Foundation has a long history with Roca. We’re pleased that, as we’ve expanded our social investing footprint, we’re able to support Roca’s outstanding work in a new way and to partner with these other funders,” said Kimberlee Cornett, director of Kresge’s Social Investment Practice. “CEO Molly Baldwin has been recognized as one of the most innovative service providers in the country for rigorous data intensive approach. We think the impact here is going to be tremendous.” 

“The payoff for this transaction goes above and beyond the almost 1,000 lives we hope to positively impact. The ultimate success will be inspiring a new way for government, philanthropy and the private sector to collaborate that funds outcomes, not outputs. That’s how we’ll expand opportunities and make a dent in inequality,” said Ben Hecht, President and CEO of Living Cities.

PARTICIPANTS IN THE JUVENILE JUSTICE PAY FOR SUCCESS INITIATIVE

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts: PFS stemmed from Governor Patrick’s dedication to reducing recidivism rates and a vision of a government that improves lives, is driven by results and in which principles of performance management and accountability thrive.  The Commonwealth’s work in the PFS project spans multiple governmental branches and agencies.  The Office of the Commissioner of Probation, and the Department of Youth Services, a juvenile justice agency within the Executive Office of Health and Human Services, are responsible for referring the high-risk young men they serve to Roca.  The Department of Criminal Justice Information Services in the Executive Office of Public Safety and Security is providing data required to execute the project. The Executive Office of Labor and Workforce Development is helping measure employment outcomes and performing fiscal management for the U.S. Department of Labor grant.  The Executive Office for Administration and Finance is managing the disbursement of success payments. 

Roca, Inc.: Roca's mission is to help disengaged, disenfranchised young people move out of violence and poverty. Founded in 1988, Roca is an outcomes-driven organization committed to serving the highest risk 17-24 year olds in the Massachusetts communities of Chelsea, Boston, Malden, Everett and Springfield. Roca's cognitive-behavioral Intervention Model re-engages young people in society—moving them out of violence, poverty, and incarceration into educational, employment, and life skills programming. Since its inception, Roca has helped more than 20,000 young people make positive, profound changes in their lives, creating a nationally-acclaimed model for violence intervention and youth development (transformational relationships), pioneering effective local, regional and national relationships with government, state, religious, health and community partners.

Third Sector Capital Partners: Third Sector Capital Partners (Third Sector) is a nonprofit advisory services firm whose mission is to accelerate America’s transition to a performance-driven social sector. Third Sector works with government, service providers and funders to develop and launch PFS projects. Third Sector is currently developing multiple projects with federal, state and local partners. Third Sector received pro bono legal assistance from Ropes & Gray, LLP throughout the establishment, structuring and negotiation of the Pay for Success initiative.

Goldman Sachs Social Impact FundIn 2013, the Goldman Sachs Urban Investment Group (UIG) launched theGoldman Sachs Social Impact Fund, a first of its kind direct impact-investing vehicle, and manages the strategy on behalf of Goldman Sachs clients.  Established in 2001, the Urban Investment Group deploys capital to help transform distressed communities into sustainable and vibrant neighborhoods of choice and opportunity. UIG seeks double bottom line returns by providing flexible financing for community projects that respond to the needs of low- and moderate-income communities and support public sector priorities. Through its comprehensive platform, UIG has committed more than $3 billion of Goldman Sachs capital, catalyzing development across dozens of residential, mixed-use and commercial projects, and financing job creation and neighborhood revitalization strategies as well as social services, through the nation’s first social impact bonds.

Living Cities: Founded in 1991, Living Cities is an innovative philanthropic collaborative that harnesses the collective power of 22 of the world’s largest foundations and financial institutions to develop and scale new approaches for creating opportunities for low-income people and improving the cities where they live. Living Cities’ grants, investments, research, networks and convenings catalyze fresh thinking and combine support for innovative, local approaches with real-time sharing of our learning to accelerate adoption in more places.

Kresge Foundation: The Kresge Foundation works to expand opportunity for low-income people in America’s cities through grant making and investing in arts and culture, education, environment, health, human services and community development efforts in Detroit. Kresge’s Human Services Program seeks to strengthen multiservice human services organizations that improve the quality of life and economic security of low-income people. Its Social Investment Practice uses loans, loan guarantees and deposits in support of Kresge program goals.

Laura and John Arnold Foundation: Laura and John Arnold Foundation (LJAF) is a private foundation that currently focuses its strategic investments on criminal justice, education, public accountability, and research integrity. LJAF has offices in Houston and New York City.

The Boston Foundation: The Boston Foundation, Greater Boston’s community foundation, is one of the largest community foundations in the nation, with net assets of close to $900 million. The Foundation is a partner in philanthropy, with some 1,000 separate charitable funds established by donors either for the general benefit of the community or for special purposes.  The Boston Foundation also serves as a major civic leader, provider of information, convener and sponsor of special initiatives that address the region’s most pressing challenges.

New Profit Inc.: Founded in 1998, New Profit is a nonprofit social innovation organization and venture philanthropy fund seeking to increase social mobility by strengthening, connecting and amplifying the best ideas across the nation.  With its signature partners and a network of philanthropists, New Profit invests in a portfolio of social entrepreneurs, grows their impact, and drives systemic change in education, workforce development, public health, community development/poverty alleviation, and other levers of opportunity. Through its annual Gathering of Leaders and cross-portfolio forums, New Profit connects social entrepreneurs with cross-sector leaders and builds communities that amplify bold visions and systems-changing agendas that fuel social innovation. Through America Forward, its public policy platform, these communities drive policy agendas that forge public/private partnerships to accelerate their impact.

Sibalytics LLC: Led by Dr. Lisa Sanbonmatsu, Sibalytics is an independent evaluation firm that has been selected to run the Randomized Control Trial (RCT) for the project.  Sibalytics will take the young men referred to the project and divide them into a group to be referred to Roca for programming and a control group that is not referred to Roca.  Sibalytics will track the outcomes of the young men in both groups and report on whether those participating in Roca services are incarcerated for less time and are more likely to be employed than the group of young men not participating in Roca. 

Public Consulting Group: The Public Consulting Group (PCG) is the independent validator and will be responsible for assessing the proposed evaluation methodology and verifying whether outcome targets are met. PCG was selected by Massachusetts through a formal procurement.

Harvard Kennedy School Social Impact Bond Technical Assistance Lab (SIB Lab): The SIB Lab provides pro bono technical assistance to state and local governments implementing PFS contracts using Social Impact Bonds. The SIB Lab assisted Massachusetts in developing the procurement and designing the data analysis strategy for this project.

東北 / MIT 學生會首度合作神馬春晚 觀眾爆笑歡呼

東北大學和麻省理工學院的中國學生學者聯合會,今年首度攜手合作辦春晚,在MIT的奎斯吉禮堂,以“神馬揚波”為主題,自己策劃,演出,安排俊男美女貫穿全場,表演相聲,口技,唱歌,跳舞,演戲,彈樂器,節目豐富到讓人目不暇給,精彩到讓人情緒高昂的散場時仍流連不去。
            晚會義工之一的蘇若冰表示,晚會取名“神馬揚波”,一來點出今年農曆跨入馬年,二來藉年輕人的網絡流行語什麼“,彰顯吉祥喜慶,青春飛揚在波士頓。
            兩校學生會為了這場春晚,策劃了不下三個月。上台表演者,個個經過海選的過三關,斬五將,都不是簡單人物。八名主持人,不但個個有播音員的聲音,還都英語流利,讓人驚詫大波士頓華裔學生的人才之多。
三名春晚主席,MIT的陳航,凌佳寅,東北大學的楊征宇,一起在開場致辭時表示,這場春晚要讓所有同學有“回家過年”的感覺。
楊征宇指出,過去這三個多月來,台前、幕後共有不下130多人參與策劃,製作,節目絕對豐富,精彩。不過兩校學生會很“有情”,顧到有同學住在昆市,摩頓市等比較遠的地方, 演出絕對會在同學們能趕上最後一班地鐵前結束。他也籲請出席者掃描節目單上的二維碼,關注兩校同學會將攜手合辦的許多活動。
當晚的表演節目,幾乎個個精彩。觀眾們尖叫,歡呼,心情一直很“high
            柏克萊音樂學院畢業的劉培藝吹薩克斯風,和他組織的爵士樂五重奏樂隊,演 奏“我只在乎你”,就讓絕大多數還在大專院校就讀,或正在念研究所的年輕觀眾們,頓感於我心有戚戚焉,想起自己正在眾里尋她/他千百度,或已有幸“執子之手” 。
            也來自柏克萊音樂學院的B-Box達人,頭尖頂著 一撮紅髮的Gene Shinozaki,以口技贏來全場尖叫聲。尤其是女生們,紛紛讚歎,“這帥哥太厲害了”。
            IMIX舞團美妹們出場狂舞時,男生們可都是眼前一亮。有人眼尖,還看到一名小哥,上台“打醬油”。
            MIT的浮雲相聲社,這晚由張欣然,王弈斐穿起紅色長袍,演出他們自己編的“學小曲”,用東北口音帶出一個個笑點,讓觀眾感受到濃濃的中國味。
            全場表演中,觀眾們公認為最大亮點的是一名老外唱粵語歌。能說八種語言,曾和許多天王天后級明星一起演出的 Frankie Presta表演時先用粵語向觀眾問好,接著演唱“財神到”等的粵語串燒歌,讓全場聽眾拜倒的說,他的粵語超讚。
            歌手周杰倫和宋祖英在某一年的春晚中演唱“本草綱目”和“辣妹子”的饒舌歌橋段,也在這場春晚中由戴曉龍,陳曉陽上演了一段翻版。
            杜娟,閻程遠的短劇“今晚見老闆”,喝下 “勇氣藥水”,產生情商降低副作用,都讓觀眾看得哈哈大笑。
            柏克萊音樂學院由中國,日本,韓國,加拿大學生組成的“諾爾曼樂隊”,居然是由女生吹薩克斯風,也讓觀眾歎為觀止。
            其他令人叫好的節目,還包括Derek Hsu的“空竹(扯鈴)”,甘斯婷跳民族舞,秦天演唱“千言萬語”。一名小朋友在一群美麗小朋友伴舞中演唱“爸爸去那兒”,讓一眾男主持人全升級當爸爸了的演出,更是十分逗趣,溫馨。
            參與籌辦者之一的劉佳指出,“神馬揚波“春晚已分段製成視頻,上載到Youtube,以及youku上,供有意欣賞者下載。高清版得等校方專業小組整理後才能出爐。

全體工作,演出人員謝幕。(圖片來自東北大學中國學生學者聯合會)

      

松柏梅竹四校逾 130 校友 NH 滑雪樂

北京,南開,清華,交通等四所大學的新英格蘭地區校友會,日前攜手舉辦第二屆“松柏梅竹滑雪會“,吸引了133人趕到新罕布夏州的愛國者高峰(Pats Peak),馳騁,倘佯在一片雪白的大自然中,頓覺心胸寬闊起來。
            今年的松柏梅竹滑雪會主要由清華校友會董事會主席周福民,以及校友會幹部張潔熹,南開校友會創會會長王忠,以及幹部朱雷負責組織,聯繫,包括不需要買票的小朋友,共吸引來將近140人。其中的初次滑雪者,依照各人需求,參加初、高級的滑雪技術班,先了解滑雪裝備怎麼上身,踏進雪場後,如何踏步,持桿再說。有滑雪經驗的可就三下,兩下,衝進雪場,抓緊時間享受了。
愛國者高峰(Pats Peak)是1963年開張,離波士頓市車程90分鐘,獨立經營的滑雪場,有直落770英尺的高峰,共有26條滑雪道,11條纜車,三塊地形園區,一個汽艇圈園區,初學者有三個地方可以練習。
來自四個不同校友會的校友,親友,這天有的用雪撬滑雪(ski),有的玩滑雪板(snowoard),有的跟著小孩子們一起溜汽艇圈(tubing),各自盡情盡興,遠眺蒼松翠柏,白雪皓皓。尤其是玩溜汽艇圈的這批人,更是嘻嘻哈哈,好不開心。一眾人直玩到晚上八點,才依依不捨地啟程歸家。
滑雪歸來後,目前在塔芙茨大學修心理學博士的代睿智,還特地為這活動製作了一張照片牆,留下眾人穿載雪具的英姿。
王忠表示,台灣清華,交大素有「梅竹賽」傳統。「梅」取自清華校長梅貽琦,「竹」源於交大校長凌竹銘。加上有如“松”之譽的北大校長蔡元培,名中有「柏」 南開校長張伯苓, 就為他們這「松柏梅竹」的四校聯誼,平添更多意義。
查詢各校友會詳情,可上網,北京大學新英格蘭校友會(松)http://pkuaa-ne.org/,波士頓南開校友會(柏)https://sites.google.com/site/nankaialumniboston/,波士頓清華校友會(梅)http://www.tsinghua-boston.org/,交通大學新英格蘭校友會(竹)groups.google.com/JTUAlumniNE。

圖片說明:

            代睿智為“松柏梅竹滑雪會“製作的照片牆。(圖由王忠提供)


波士頓榮光會慶馬年新春 舊雨新知暢聚

波士頓榮光聯誼會廿五日晚,在龍鳳酒樓慶祝馬年新春,120餘人享用美酒佳餚,暢敘別後種種,唱歌,抽獎,十分溫馨。
            波士頓榮光聯誼會理事長石家孝在司儀殷尚堅請全體出席人員起立唱中美國歌後致詞,指當晚聚會有城裏,郊區的榮民,僑胞,共聚一堂,還有華埠退伍軍人會組團參加,十分難得。
            近年常居台灣,曾任大陳同鄉會會長的周仙海(原名周仙梅),今年特地趕回波士頓,和榮光會老友敘舊。年逾九十的鍾珠,邁向九十的張建勛,曾任榮光會理事長的朱自律,鄭增壽,這晚也都出席盛會,和相識多年的榮光會老友相聚,尤其難得。
            石家孝為因應在美國本地成長者的疑問,這天特地簡單解釋了一下何謂榮光會。他指出,榮光會是由來自中華民國,曾於軍,憲,警界服務的退除役人員組成。目前全世界有40多個分會,在美國有20多個。
            當晚到會的嘉賓,包括駐波士頓經濟文化辦事處處長洪慧珠,副處長陳銘俊,波士頓僑界中心主任郭大文。
            洪慧珠稱讚波士頓榮光會是海外僑團中最堅強的愛國組織,不但護旗不遺餘力,美國本地退伍軍人會有遊行,紀念活動,也總能看到波士頓榮光會員的身影,為中華民國贏得美國人的支持。
            郭大文也感謝榮光會對中華民國的支持,希望榮光會員們把僑教中心當家,儘量使用該中心場地,到該中心當義工,支持僑教中心舉辦的所有活動。他也強調,僑委會委員長謹記榮民對國家的貢獻,今年也捐贈了禮物,聊表心意。
            年僅三十餘歲,上過伊拉克戰場的司徒文信,是華埠退伍軍人會現任會長。他代表該會簡單祝賀所有出席者馬年新春快樂,希望兩會今後更密切合作後。石家孝透露,司徒文信服役時的軍種,和馬英九總統,以及近年加入了榮光會的紐英崙中華專業人員協會前任董事長王世輝一樣,都是體格必須十分強健的陸戰隊。
            致詞儀式後,上菜,用餐,唱歌,猜謎,玩遊戲。慶祝活動的最高潮,當然是獎品繁多的抽獎環節。今年有總統馬英九、外交部長林永樂、輔委會主任委員董翔龍、僑務委員會委員長陳士魁、駐美代表金溥聰等首長捐贈禮物。駐波士頓經文處各長官,也都捐贈了禮物。
            當晚出席的還有不少僑團代表,包括港澳之友社的謝中之,甫卸任中華公所英文書記的陳國華等人。

圖片說明:

            駐波士頓經濟文化辦事處處長洪慧珠(右七),副處長陳銘俊(左三),波士頓僑界中心主任郭大文(右四),波士頓榮光聯誼會理事長石家孝(右八)等人和榮光會員們合影。(菊子攝)

            華埠退伍軍人會現任會長司徒文信(左起)和波士頓榮光聯誼會理事長石家孝,駐波士頓經濟文化辦事處處長洪慧珠,榮光會前任理事長殷尚堅。(菊子攝)

        波士頓榮光會對新任紐英崙中華公所主席阮鴻燦有很深期許,理事長石家孝特地請該會書法好手張建勛(左)寫了幅“德智仁勇”書法,要送給他。(菊子攝)


星期二, 1月 28, 2014

沙龍鎮華人慶新春 已籌得五千元中文獎學金

麻州沙龍(Sharon)鎮華裔居民,廿五日晚在沙龍高中舉辦農曆新年慶祝會,頒發社區服務獎表揚 Sam Liao二,三百名華洋居民欣賞16個節目,歡渡馬年新春。
根據聯邦人口統計局的數據,麻州沙龍鎮其實相當小,只有人口17612,其中亞裔約10%,華裔4.2%,數起來只有745人。
不過華人在沙龍鎮卻很生龍活虎,十分有力。全麻州共有329所中學,只有5所辦中文項目,沙龍中學就是其中之一。
沙龍鎮春晚聯歡會籌委會的楊珉,當晚在頒發2014年社區服務獎給 Sam Liao 時指出,廖先生在1999年到2010年之間,一直擔任沙龍鎮學校委員會委員,不但是促成麻州政府撥款給沙龍學區修繕校舍的主要成員之一,還幫沙龍學區率先爭取到經費,開辦中文項目。他也促成了沙龍中學和西安中學的學生交流,親率第一批沙龍中學生到西安參訪。
楊珉還指出,沙龍鎮華人舉辦農曆新年慶祝會以後,廖先生不但積極參與,還居間聯繫的把這活動推動成為沙龍華人與沙龍公校合作的社區活動,規模更大起來。
           籌委會的王躍明在會中報告,新年慶祝會收入的節餘款,從去年開始,捐做中文教育獎學金,現已累積有五千元,暫時仍以每人兩百元的額度,每年獎勵三名學習中文成績優秀的畢業生。
            廿五日晚的沙龍鎮春晚,共安排了十六項節目,新猷之一是在楊珉,沈聰兩名成人主持外,增加了孫鐵琦,徐啟明,楊湛露,周麗麗等四名青少年主持,既培養年輕人的領導力,也增加老少咸宜樂趣。
            當晚的表演節目由馮瑤中文班學生演出的“最炫民族風”開場。廣西同鄉會會長楊文的十二歲兒子楊舟也參與演出。
            其他節目包括沙龍鎮兒童小合唱“蟲兒飛”,“You are my sunshine,沙龍高中學生小合唱“龍的傳人”,天使舞蹈學校的“傘舞”,“印度舞”,沙龍中文學校學生表演功夫,朗誦“少年中國”,“愛我,你就抱抱我”,劉志方指導的老年舞蹈對演出“梁祝”探戈舞,王躍民編曲,指揮沙龍小樂隊合奏“月亮代表我的心”,徐劍中文班小合唱“送別”,安維玲中文學校學生演唱生肖哥,詩朗誦“再別康橋”,沙龍中文學校學生表演相聲“北京鴨”,張志青指導的老年功夫隊表演“太極功夫扇”,太極健身俱樂部表演武當太極劍。
            出席這場春晚的觀眾,發現沙龍歌手不少,路崇義男聲獨唱“父親的草原,母親的河”,徐劍,楊慧人夫婦合唱“江河萬古流”,“多情的土地”,沈聰,崔雷自彈吉他,在張瑞電子琴伴奏下演唱“你怎麼捨得我難過”,“畫你”,華人合唱團演唱“你來”,“思念”等曲,都搏得讚好的熱烈掌聲。


圖片說明:

            右起,楊文,崔雷,沈聰,楊珉,王躍明,張梅等人是沙龍春晚的籌備者,義工。(菊子攝)
路崇義男聲獨唱“父親的草原,母親的河。(菊子攝)
張志青指導的老年功夫隊表演“太極功夫扇”。(菊子攝)
左起,崔雷,沈聰,張瑞合唱流行歌曲。(菊子攝)
華人合唱團演唱“你來”,“思念”等曲。(菊子攝)

            徐劍(),楊慧人夫婦合唱“多情的土地”。(菊子攝)


            楊珉(右三),沈聰等六名主持人謝幕。(菊子攝)