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2025-09-LETTER-HOUGHTLIN | Letters To Editor

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To the editor: Youth sports are supposed to be about fairness, development and opportunity.

They are meant to teach teamwork, discipline and resilience — lessons that carry children far beyond the playing field. But recent decisions by the Berkshire County Youth Football League (BCYFL) raise troubling questions about whether those values are being upheld in our community.

A local player was recently stripped of his waiver to play at the junior level, and the reasoning behind this decision has shifted multiple times. At first, the explanation was that another child had been injured. Now, the justification is that this athlete is “too good.” Since when is excelling in youth sports something to punish?

This player had already been restricted to the line after previously playing quarterback — a completely new and challenging position for him. He has been learning and adapting, not dominating unfairly. Yet his waiver was revoked, while inconsistent rule enforcement continues elsewhere. In fact, we were told that a 12-year-old player on another team would be restricted. But once again, just this past Sunday, she played unrestricted and carried the ball. Meanwhile, the aforementioned child has been penalized. Requests to review the game footage that supposedly led to his revocation have gone unanswered, raising real concerns about transparency and accountability.

Is this what we want youth sports to become: a place where children are punished for excelling while rules are bent for others? While some families might technically have the option to move their child to another team, that is not realistic for many — especially those with multiple children enrolled. Parents should not be asked to split themselves between towns or choose which child’s game to attend simply because one was deemed “too good.”

Football in Berkshire County is already struggling to survive. Decisions like this don’t just hurt one child; they discourage families, undermine trust and push people away from a sport that should be building community.

The BCYFL must do better. Rules should be applied consistently. Transparency must be a priority. No child should ever be penalized for talent, effort or commitment.

Parents, coaches and community members: speak up. Attend league meetings, ask questions and demand accountability. If we remain silent, we risk losing not just players but the very future of football in our community.

Preston Houghtlin, North Adams





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Northwest boys basketball off to fast start

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GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (KSNB) – The Northwest Vikings boys basketball team is off to 3-1 start to the season, their lone loss at state qualifier Gretna East.

After only winning eight games in 2024, the Vikings jumped that number to 18 in 2025, moving the program in the right direction.

This season, they’re led by two young players averaging double digit points, sophomore forward Blake Wissing and junior guard Jaden Brandt.

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On 50th Anniversary, Lay Park Playground Faces Possible Changes — Grady Newsource

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City officials and residents are split over a redevelopment plan of 295 E. Dougherty Street, where supporters expressed excitement for new parking, student housing and urbanization while others warned the project may disrupt community services, limit access to Lay Park Community Center and overlook housing needs.

Lay Park Community Center has given the downtown Athens community a place to learn and play, since opening in 1975. Today, the center supports children through programs including summer camp, youth sports and holiday events. 

Stephanie Johnson, District 6 Commissioner, expressed her concerns about the transparency and effectiveness of the new development in a Mayor and Commission meeting held on Nov. 4, 2025.

Johnson questioned the transparency of the development process by asking whether the developers ever met with the mayor and or county staff after submitting their initial plan to discuss expanding the project. Athens-Clarke County Mayor Kelly Girtz said they did not. 

Following the response, she then referenced an alleged conversation with a developer who said his group had been invited into an Athens-Clarke County official office to present plans, raising further questions about whether some discussions occurred outside public view.

Johnson also criticized the county’s progress on affordable housing and where its priorities should lie.

“And when it comes to housing, affordable housing, we don’t have anything appreciable to show for it,” Johnson said. “So yes, we need housing, but there are poor people that live in Athens too,” she added.

Officials Acknowledge Benefits Despite Challenges

The surrounding area of Lay Park Community Center is set for redevelopment if approved by the mayor and commission of Athens in the coming weeks. According to the plans, the development will provide new housing for 1,400 university students, with the addition of a parking deck built to ease downtown parking overflow. 

According to the development agreement, Core must “relocate or replace the playground on the ACC Property to a location approved by the Unified Government at Core’s expense.” As of today, Core will provide $275,000 to ACCGov, which will not fully cover Leisure Services’ plans to integrate an upgraded playground. The current estimated cost of the new playground will cost “at least twice the provided $275,000,” according to the development agreement. 

The development agreement would remove the existing playground, with the private contractor, CS Acquisitions Vehicle, LLC, aka Core, supplementing in a smaller playground in its development. 

Athens-Clarke County Mayor Kelly Girtz said that even with potential negatives of the project, the positives would outweigh them.

“Certainly it’s true that when people have gotten accustomed to a certain aesthetic views and something is going to be different … That’s just difficult for members of the public at times,” Girtz said. 

Alex Bond, assistant director of Athens-Clarke County government, spoke about how the effects of construction will impact the community center and its visitors.

“Construction will be impactful for sure,” Bond said.

Bond said during the year and a half of construction, they plan to rebuild the park and parking for the center. However, during that period of time the park will be less accessible as it currently is for guests. He included that the greatest impact will be the ability for guests to to play at the park, pull up to the front of the center for carpool and park across the street.

He said the 1,400 new residents will have an impact on how many visitors come to use the facilities, including the pickleball and basketball courts.

A benefit of the redevelopment will be the new location of the park.

“The playground will be more nested into Lay Park,” Bond said. “Moving the playground will benefit the users of the park.”

Temporary Playground Loss and Traffic Changes at Lay Park

Cars park outside of the Lay Park Community Center, where patrons play on the playground and use the community facilities on Nov. 13, 2025. The lot is home to 54 free parking spots for park-goers and leisure services’ staff. (Photo/Ziggy Moon)

For Kelly Thomas, the facility supervisor at Lay Park Community Center, the redevelopment raises practical concerns about daily operations and access for families who rely on the center’s programs. 

Thomas said losing the current playground will limit daily activities and the center will be without a playground for an unknown amount of time. He also said parking access will shrink, adding that the plan guarantees roughly 50 spots in the new parking structure, which is less than the current parking situation.

Resident raises concerns about loss of community space

Normaltown resident Jordan Croy said the redevelopment threatens one of the neighborhood’s few accessible gathering spaces. He said the Lay Park playground plays an important social role for families, including his 6-month-old daughter.

He said his daughter already benefits from the park due to her constantly meeting new kids on the playground. 

“I don’t know, close by, there’s a few areas near Normaltown, but it’s, you know, it’s kind of fun to meet people from different walks of life because different people show up to different parks,” Croy said when discussing the park’s diversity.

“So, spaces like this are super valuable,” Croy said. “If you don’t have enough of them close by, you can feel really isolated.”

He added that the park carries racial relevance. 

“The families that I’ve seen here tend to be Black,” Croy said. “And I don’t know, it’s hard to ignore the like, sort of the racial component of the story.”

The redevelopment has not yet been approved by Athens-Clarke County officials, and it remains unclear when the project will move forward.

Ziggy Moon, Laney Spevacek and Skylar Smith are journalism majors in the Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication at the University of Georgia.

 





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Utah tribe’s resort plan with developer draws criticism over transparency

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Ivins • Whenever Lawrence Snow rounds a bend on eastbound Highway 91 and the Red Mountains and the reservation that has been his lifelong home come into view, he knows he is on sacred ground, and has a duty to protect it.

“It feels spiritual and does something to one’s soul to see all those red colors and that magnificent Red Mountain,” Snow said. “When I was young, everyone on the reservation was taught you don’t go to the base of Red Mountain without permission because it is a spiritual place and that’s where the spirits go.”

Snow, who is land resource manager for the Shivwits Band of Paiutes Reservation, and others are now seeing red over a planned joint venture between the band and Black Desert Resort to build a massive sports, tourism and retail complex on 1,250 acres of tribal land west of St. George.

As announced in an October news release, Shivwits and resort officials will manage the enterprise that will include golf courses, a youth sports complex, a cultural museum, shopping, dining and a hotel and create 135 jobs. But tribal leaders have been reticent about revealing specifics about what the resort will include and the financial arrangement between the two groups.

Angered by what they say is a lack of transparency and the prospect of hordes of tourists descending on the Red Mountain land and desecrating graves and other sacred sites, Snow and some other Shivwits have banded together to try and inform the public — and if possible, kill the deal.

Among other allegations, members of the group accuse Shivwits elected officials of acting too hastily, keeping band members in the dark about the resort and the partnership and neglecting their responsibility to be wise stewards of the land.

“I think members of the [Shivwits] Band Council are not very business-savvy, and Black Desert is a big corporation with all these lawyers and is taking advantage of them,” Snow told The Tribune.

Growing opposition

(Robert Bolar) A drone shot of the area on the Shivwits Band of Paiutes Reservation west of St. George where a 1,250-acre resort is proposed.

Mary Snow, Lawrence’s daughter, said most Shivwits are opposed to what she called a “back-door deal,” adding that the band is now divided because tribal leaders are putting out a false narrative about group members and trying to sully their reputation.

“They stopped giving us services, answering the phone and are putting out to people that we oppose the resort because we don’t like them,” Mary Snow said.

Tina Gonzales, chair of the Shivwits Band Council, disputed the allegations, saying the joint venture came after a thorough 18-month review process that involved “community meetings, open dialogue with members and a band-wide survey outlining the proposed concept.”

“This was not a rushed decision,” Gonzales said in a statement to The Tribune. “It was a thoughtful process grounded in governance, transparency, and community consensus. This collaboration supports our goal of creating long-term ventures and is built on mutual respect and a shared vision. We are excited to be a co-steward in this project, ensuring that our heritage and values are woven into every aspect of the development.”

While the partners are not providing specific details about the resort, an internal document that was placed on the band’s website earlier this year said the resort could include as many as four golf courses, and an airfield in addition to the museum. All told, according to the document, the venture could provide the 322 members of the federally recognized tribe up to $149 million, much of which would come from leasing land and water rights to Black Desert for the resort.

The Snows said some of those details were in a power point presentation Black Desert shared with tribal members last April at the reservation’s community center, a meeting they said was adjourned early when it became clear that most band members present were opposed to a resort. Much has changed since that meeting, they noted.

Even now, the Snows said, band members still don’t know if a contract has been signed, what the financial terms are if one exists, or what projects have been agreed to.

“Every time we have asked what’s in the contract, they say, ‘We are not done yet’ and ‘changes are being made,’” Mary Snow said, adding most of what they learn they hear second hand from workers who live in St. George and have been hired to do projects on the reservation.

Lawrence Snow said he is worried that the band’s plan to lease the land and water for the resort for an extended period —potentially over 90 years, he said — is equivalent to selling out future generations.

Cultural concerns

(Chris Caldwell | Special to The Tribune) Joel Bushhead speaks to The Salt Lake Tribune in Santa Clara, Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025. Members of the Shivwits band of Paiutes near St. George discuss the impact proposed golf course developments would have on their tribal lands.

Gonzales argues otherwise, saying the partnership will strengthen the band’s ability to control development on the land and help support current and future generations.

“This land had been previously designated by the band for economic development projects, long before the current partnership discussions began,” she said in the statement. “The council’s decision reflects a balance of cultural stewardship and future community opportunity.”

Black Desert managing partner Patrick Manning also defended the partnership.

“We are committed to preserving and celebrating their rich heritage, and this entire project will stand as a model of responsible development,” he said in a statement. “We’re building a shared future that provides lasting economic and cultural benefits to the entire community. That includes job creation, workforce development, increased revenue for community services, and opportunities to reinvest in education, healthcare, housing, and cultural preservation.”

Joel Bushhead said he sees little evidence of that from the workers he sees riding around in the ATVs and putting in survey stakes. He said he has had to rebury pottery and a body part unearthed by the workers.

“They are desecrating the graves of the dead people who are buried there,” Bushhead said. “I can’t really do nothing because I’m an old man, and they won’t listen to me.”

Sabrina Redfoot, another member of the tribe, said Paiute artifacts in the ground belong where they are, not in the proposed museum. She and other resort opponents say they want to rally public opposition and ensure members of the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah’s five bands — Cedar, Indian Peaks, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Shivwits — know about the resort.

“We’ll continue to grow Red Mountain resistance and get out there with picket signs and protest this,” Mary Snow said. “Even if it is too late, we want our voices to be heard.”

Gonzales and Manning pledge to continue engaging with band members and plan to conduct a detailed and rigorous environmental review and cultural study of the site, according to a joint statement.



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Shenandoah District girls basketball youth movement in 2025-26 season

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Updated Dec. 17, 2025, 7:39 a.m. ET

SWOOPE — When Buffalo Gap played Riverheads in girls basketball Dec. 12, there was one senior on both teams combined. They were the youngest (Gap) and third youngest (Riverheads) teams in the Shenandoah District, but youth is more the rule, not the exception, in girls basketball this year.

More than half of the players in the district are sophomores or freshmen.



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Bob Asmussen | Full speed ahead for youth wheelchair-basketball program | Columns

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12152025   rolling heat 2

Canaan Shaffer tries to shoot over defender Kylie Ritz during practice Monday for the Rolling Heat, the Stephens Family YMCA wheelchair basketball program for children ages 6-13, in the gym at the facility in southwest Champaign.




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CHAMPAIGN — Kylie Ritz was new to wheelchair basketball in 2024 when she participated in her first game.

Her Rolling Heat team was playing at a tournament in Madison, Wis.

“The ball was tossed in the air for the tip off,” Kylie said. “We got it, we dribbled down the court and I made my first basket. I was just so excited.”

Kylie, who has played softball and standup basketball in the past, had found her sport … and long-term goal: to someday compete on the U.S. Paralympic team. After, of course, playing for the University of Illinois wheelchair team.

A 12-year-old sixth-grader at Jefferson Middle School, Kylie is a star player for the Rolling Heat, the team started in 2022 by Larkin’s Place Director Alyssa Anderson — who also serves as team director.







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Assistant Coach Stefan Ritz, standing, talks to the team during practice for the Rolling Heat, the Stephens Family YMCA wheelchair basketball program for ages 6-13. At the YMCA in Champaign on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025.




From humble beginnings of three players in its first year, the Stephens Family YMCA program has expanded to its current 20. And they’re looking for more.

“We’re all over,” Anderson said. “We have kids driving in from Peoria, Argenta, Sullivan, Wapella, all within an hour and a half of here.”

Practices are held on Mondays at the Stephens Family Y.

What does Kylie remember about her first practice?

“I was kind of nervous, kind of excited,” she said. “I wasn’t sure if I was going to like it.”

She did. And does.

The team just returned from a tournament in the Madison area, where it went 2-2.

If you go to a game, you will notice Kylie — for both her skill and on-court personality.

“I am very aggressive, very talkative, very loud,” she said.

Her teammates look to Kylie for leadership.

Ask Kylie about her strength as a player, and the answer isn’t shooting or passing.

“The most important qualities of a basketball player are being coachable and being a team player,” Kylie said. “Without your team, you can’t play. And if you’re not coachable, you’re never going to learn anything new.”

Kylie’s parents, Stefan and Monica, are all for her time with the Rolling Heat.

“She has found something she is extremely passionate about,” Stefan said. “She has put a ton of work into this.”

This year, Stefan is helping coach the team. Kylie’s sister Rosie, 7, is also in the program. Sisters Ella, 8, and Evie, 5, were on the trip to Madison.

The Ritz family is sold on the program.

“I think it’s a great opportunity for a lot of these athletes to go out there and get all the good things that sports offers,” said Stefan, who is a teacher at Rantoul Township High School. “A lot of our athletes don’t have a ton of options like this. There is a need for more good, adaptive sports. I think this is a great opportunity for all of them to get the same benefits that any other young athlete can get from playing a sport.”







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Coach Kaitlyn Eaton gives instruction during practice for the Rolling Heat, the Stephens Family YMCA’s wheelchair-basketball program for youths ages 6-13.




The right leader

When Anderson got the go-ahead to start the program, one of the first orders of business was finding a coach.

She turned to former UI wheelchair standout Kaitlyn Eaton, a two-time Paralympian.

The Houston native played on the UI wheelchair team from 2012-17. After graduation, she remained in C-U and was an assistant on the UI team from 2017-20.

She played in Paralympic Games at Tokyo in 2020 and Paris in 2024, winning bronze and silver medals.

How did she react when asked to coach the Rolling Heat?

“Obviously, I was excited,” Eaton said. “The Champaign-Urbana community has done so much for people with disabilities. The UI has done a lot for people with disabilities.

“I think all of the athletes that have come through here and played for the UI have known this community needed something like this.”







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Dexter Campbell smiles after successfully passing to Rowan Smith. A gallery from Monday’s Rolling Heat practice is available at news-gazette.com.




The Rolling Heat created an opportunity that doesn’t exist in the rest of downstate Illinois.

“I was excited they were willing to start up a program.” Eaton said. “They had great backing with the YMCA, so that’s awesome.”

Eaton said she wasn’t sure “how good of a coach I would be with young kids.”

“It was something new for me,” she said. “I didn’t know really what to do or what to expect.”

Three years in, it’s going well.

“It’s been fun,” Eaton said. “I’ve learned a lot as a coach and I’ve learned how to talk to the kids and teach them in the best way I know how.”

The difference in the team’s skill level now compared to the beginning is “night and day,” she said.

“I think it’s cool. We’ve seen a lot of growth with the kids,” Eaton said. “They are starting to understand concepts now.”

A year ago at the same tournament, one of the players, Carter, froze every time he got the ball.

Afterward, Eaton sat in the hallway with him and taught him how to dribble and push at the same time.

“Now, Carter is one of our top scorers,” Kaitlyn said.

There are many other stories of players showing improvement.

“It’s one of those things in wheelchair basketball it is waiting for the light bulb to go off,” Eaton said. “We’re seeing the light bulbs go off pretty consistently right now.

“They get so excited. The smiles on their face when they win a tough game or when one of their teammates does something incredible is awesome.”

Winning is fun. But it’s not the driving force.

“At the end of the day, the best part about wheelchair basketball is the community it provides,” Eaton said. “They get to make friends and be with other kids that have disabilities too.”

The players are big fans of Eaton.

“She is very helpful,” Kylie said. “She’s taught us a lot of defensive strategies.”

Eaton challenges the players — in a good way.

“We’re fortunate that we have really good kids on our team,” she said. “They’re really kind, they’re really incredible about accepting new people. They make it a really welcoming environment.”







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Zeke Arnold, right, and Victor Rafferty take a break during practice for the Rolling Heat, the Stephens Family YMCA wheelchair basketball program for ages 6-13. At the YMCA in Champaign on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025. Zele’s father said they had just returned from a weekend of playing sled hockey in Chicago.




Making it work

There had been other attempts in the past to start a wheelchair program in C-U. None took, until now.

“We’re building something incredible here in Champaign,” Eaton said. “The YMCA really did take a gamble. There wasn’t a lot to show that this would work. A lot of credit to them and a lot of credit to our director Alyssa. She has put a lot on the back end to make this happen by getting sponsorships and finding kids, finding parents, really persuading them to show up.”

When she started at Larkin’s Place, Anderson identified a need for adaptive sports opportunities for kids with physical disabilities.

She went to her bosses at the Y, Jeff Scott and Jeff Dobrik, and asked to start a youth wheelchair-basketball team.

“They said, ‘Great,’” Anderson said.

She suggested it might take a while to get it going. They said, “Let’s start now.”

She turned to the UI Division of Rehabilitation Services, which put her in touch with Eaton.

At first, none of the players had ever been in a sports chair.

In order to grow, Anderson knew the Rolling Heat needed sponsorships. A sports chair costs about $5,000.

“This was a huge investment, and not something we necessarily had in the budget,” Anderson said.

She contacted the C-U Elks, which administers a trust. The organization provided $35,000 — enough to buy six sports chairs, a trailer and jerseys.

The Rolling Heat registered with the National Wheelchair Basketball Association as a prep team. There are 65 teams across the country.







12152025   rolling heat 5

Paralympic athlete Daniel Romanchuk, 2-time World Champion/World Record Holder and 4-time Paralympic Medallist, left, chats with Aria Panika during practice for the Rolling Heat, the Stephens Family YMCA wheelchair basketball program for ages 6-13. At the YMCA in Champaign on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025.




Playing at the prep level (middle school and younger), the team competed in four tournaments last season, none of them in Illinois. The Rolling Heat have six tournaments this season, which extends into March.

“This wouldn’t be here without the kids,” Anderson said. “They are such an amazing group of kids. It is such a cool experience for this community to be together,”

There are four teams in Illinois, with the closest in New Lenox, near Joliet.

Tournaments this season are scheduled in Wisconsin, Missouri, Illinois and Indiana.

“Some of these parents are committing to eight-hour round trips,” Anderson said.

She was motivated in part by her daughter Millie, almost 5, who has spina bifida. Millie is planning to play for the Rolling Heat.







12152025   rolling heat 3

Head Coach Kaitlyn Eaton, center in Illinois shirt, and Assistant Coach Stefan Ritz, standing, talk to the team during practice for the Rolling Heat, the Stephens Family YMCA wheelchair basketball program for ages 6-13. At the YMCA in Champaign on Monday, Dec. 8, 2025.




Going all in

Emma Six, 11, is one of the original five players for the Rolling Heat. Her family travels to practices from their home in Decatur.

Emma is in her fourth year as a player.

“We were looking for something for her to try that was adaptive,” said her mom, Courtney. “They were very, very new. It was nice to go in and everyone was at the same level.”

Emma’s interest in the game was immediate.

“She looked forward to waking up on those days of practice,” Courtney said.

She can’t wait to play.

“I get excited,” Emma said.

One of her strengths is shooting. She made three baskets during one of the weekend games. The scores are generally in the upper 20s.

Like Kylie, Emma wants to play for Team USA — like their coach.

Emma said she has made many friends, both on her own team and among her opponents.







12152025   rolling heat 6

ABOVE: Victor Rafferty, left, and Rowan Smith go for the ball on the floor during practice for the Rolling Heat. BELOW: Four-time Paralympic medalist Daniel Romanchuk chats with Rolling Heat participant Aria Panika during practice.




“We joke that we have to drive three to five hours to hang out with some of our friends,” Courtney said. “I like the camaraderie of it all. All of us walking different paths in life and these kids have a wide range of different disabilities. It’s really cool to see them find their place on the team.”

Emma’s dad, Cody, was equally enthusiastic.

“I think it’s neat because of the wide age gap of the kids, seeing them develop at different speeds and grow together,” he said.

The families have to pay for their own travel and will spend $4,000 to $5,000 in expenses.

“It’s a big commitment for these families,” said Courtney, who is a paraprofessional aid for Argenta-Oreana Elementary. Cody is a shift supervisor at Primient in Decatur.

Emma is a sixth-grader at Argenta.





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Fire department budgets have a private equity problem

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Private equity money has flowed into so many parts of this economy — skilled trades like plumbing, restaurant chains, even youth sports. And now, companies backed by private equity are making acquisitions in software used by fire departments, according to New York Times investigative correspondent Mike Baker.

In Norfolk, Connecticut, the volunteer fire department has a budget of $132,000 a year, Baker said. They were paying $795 a year for their software until it was bought up by a private equity-backed company, which planned to shut it down and offered another software for $5,000.

“They go looking around for an alternative,” Baker said. “And then that same company backed by private equity comes along and buys up that second software provider. They really feel kind of trapped and have eventually now found a solution that wasn’t up to $5,000 a year but was still a lot more than they were paying before.”

Baker spoke with “Marketplace” host Kai Ryssdal about his reporting. Use the audio player above to hear their conversation.

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