Rec Sports
How do athletes stand out in a ‘broken’ college recruiting system?
Getting recruited: This is Part 2 of a series that looks behind the curtain of college recruiting. USA TODAY Sports was granted behind-the-scenes access by the football staff at the University of Pennsylvania, a Division I program that offers a high academic profile but no Name, Image and Likeness (NIL) money or scholarships. This week: Negotiating the constant change of college sports.
Read Part I: How college recruiting can be like the dating game
PHILADELPHIA — When Jon Dupont was just starting out as a football coach, he had to fend off flying mammals as he ascended the stairs to his attic domicile.
“I’d have a tennis racket over my head so that the bats didn’t fly down and buzz me,” he says.
Dupont remembers making $2,500 a year at Worcester (Massachusetts) Polytechnic Institute, but the housing was free (critters included).
It got better when he moved to Trinity College in Hartford, (Connecticut). The school paid for his master’s degree in economics, and he got free housing and meals.
“Some people aspire to be a college football coach someday,” says Dupont, who has been on Penn’s football staff since 2006. “I thought at first I was gonna be an engineer and then I was gonna work in finance. I’m like, ‘I’ll try that out for a couple years while I try to figure out what I want to be.’
“My goal was to get my master’s degree because I knew that having an advanced degree was gonna be important. And I knew how volatile being a football coach is.”

Dupont spoke Nov. 19 from his office at Franklin Field. Less than a week later, he and his nine full-time colleague faced an unknown future in their field after head coach Ray Priore stepped down after 38 years on the staff.
Priore’s replacement will have the opportunity to evaluate and retain the staff, but they understand new coaches tend to bring in their own guys.
“I don’t know what I would do when I grow up,” Dupont said that day with a smile.
The thrill of playing and coaching sports can be intoxicating. But what we experience away from the field can sometimes make us feel helpless.
There are politics involved from youth to professional sports, and there are unknowns. Who truly knows who you are and what you can do? How can you get your name in front of people who can enhance your experiences and sports career?
USA TODAY Sports offers advice about how young athletes can best present themselves in this world of inevitable uncertainty and change.
YOUTH SPORTS SURVIVAL GUIDE: Pre-order Coach Steve’s upcoming book for young athletes and their parents
Make sure your offer, or opportunity to play at a college or university, is firm
Recruiting is about building relationships. There are recruits in Penn’s expected freshman class next fall whom the current coaches worked to admit.
Other recruits are in midstream, and the coaches, before their fate at the school is determined, will try and keep them in play.
If you are an incoming recruit and the coach who recruited you leaves the school, have a conversation with the athletic department, admissions office and/or new coaching staff. See if you can get something in writing that you will be part of the team when you enroll.
At some point in any recruiting process, where things can change on a dime, you might have to look elsewhere.
“The problem we have is everyone’s gonna say yes to you until it filters out,” Bob Benson, Penn’s associate head coach, told me less than two weeks ago, ahead of Penn’s final game. “And you can’t really afford to say no. You gotta be very diligent.”
Priore, Penn’s outgoing head coach, said schools initially offer based on talent, but it’s your job to know the difference between offers and committable offers.
He has seen recruits post on social media in the spring of their junior years they have offers from Ivy League schools. He knows, though, that there are rigorous academic hurdles Ivy League recruits must clear and a complicated financial aid eligibility form that prolong the process.
“What we say is you’d be someone we’d love to have,” Priore said before he stepped down. “We can offer you a spot if you get into school but from a talent standpoint, you’re really talented but there are all these different stages.
“Everybody can offer anybody. But what are you offering? It’s our evaluation and based upon everything going right, then it could be all great for you. But it’s just the first thing.”
A ‘broken’ system; do you need to pay for a recruiting service?
Under Priore, Penn worked from a list of thousands of kids per high school class, which it eventually whittled down to 20 to 40 on a flow chart.
How do we even get noticed?
Every year, according to Brian Cruver, there’s roughly 4.5 million athletes self-identifying as wanting play their sport in college.
Cruver was a parent wondering that question. He didn’t have an extensive sports background and his son, Carson, wanted to pursue playing football in college.
Cruver is a tech startup executive who help found billion dollar businesses, including a germ-killing robot company called Xenex. His latest venture is called Scorability. He started it with his friend, Brett Andrew, whose daughter, Gella, plays beach volleyball for Florida State. Cruver’s son, Carson, ended up at Florida Atlantic.
Scorability is a centralized database that coaches access that includes athletes’ transcripts, athletic numbers and videos as well as coach and even parent evaluations.
It has initially dipped its feet into football recruiting and plans to expand to women’s volleyball, men’s and women’s soccer, men’s and women’s basketball, baseball and softball in early 2026.
“I’m good at building great software product teams that can take those products to market,” Cruver tells USA TODAY Sports. “All the lessons I learned along the way with these tech startups, I want to apply to this big, broken thing, which is college sports recruiting.
“There’s a lot of adjectives. Let’s start with inefficient: Extremely inefficient for everybody involved. No one really likes how it works. They just kind of accept it as how it is. Most parents and athletes don’t know what the process is until it’s over.
“It was chaos and it was confusing and we never really knew what was going on. And it worked out for (my son). It doesn’t work out for everybody. We were frustrated, but at the same time, we were very involved parents with resources, and I was looking around at these other athletes whose parents are maybe not as involved, and maybe don’t have as many resources and feeling like, ‘OK, we didn’t like this experience, imagine what it’s like for everybody else.’ “
Expensive is another adjective. There are websites and/or advisors that charge hundreds, if not thousands of dollars to help get your kid onto a college team. Scorability is free to athletes.
“Don’t pay for recruiting services,” says Dupont, Penn’s recruiting coordinator. “The recruiting services that parents pay for, these recruiting gurus, when I get messages from them, I want to turn them off. I don’t even know them. I’m talking about individual recruiting advisors. Tons of those people out there are getting paid good money from families to do exactly what they’re doing. But their interest is not the kids’ interest. It’s their own interest to continue to get paid. So they’ll go out there and they’ll sell anybody they can possibly sell.
“And then they know better than you. And I’ve had that before, too, guys getting offended with our evaluation. I would rather the high school coach reach out to me. I trust him. And I have a relationship with him and I go visit him.”
Penn’s staff has used Scorability, which has, among other clients, TCU, Miami (Fla.), Oklahoma State, SMU as well as a junior colleges and Division II and III schools.
The better student you are, the better chance you have of playing college sports. But coaches separate you based on your athletic numbers, also known as your metrics: Not only your height and weight, but also your speed, strength and jumping ability. If you’re a baseball player, it’s velocity as a pitcher and exit velocity as hitter; a volleyball player, it’s how high you touch.
“I think all parents exaggerate,” says Benson, also Penn’s defensive coordinator who has been a head or assistant college coach for four decades. “That’s why you have to get back to metrics.”
Make sure you’re realistic about your chances at a school and have the metrics to qualify
Scan the online rosters of schools for which you’re interested in playing and look at heights and weights of their players. Many coaches will want to see you in person at the camps they run for high school prospects. Find out the specific metric numbers they’re looking for you to hit.
Coaches also want your numbers to be verified. If your son is a baseball player, for example, and plays in Perfect Game or Prep Baseball Report tournaments, his metrics will be recorded and stored on profile pages through those organizations.
One of Scorability’s benefits is it collects and compiles your metrics from college camps you attend. Coaches who subscribe to Scorability can see data from thousands of camps (and showcases) for their sport. These are athletes who want to be recruited and are choosing to share the data with college programs.
Scorability has recently acquired Ryzer, which puts on showcase camps for a number of sports, meaning all of your information from Ryzer camps (and other camp partners) will be stored in Scorability.
“A lot of kids are magically two inches taller than they really are,” says Cruver, Scorability’s CEO. “Think about how much traveling all these coaches are doing around the country, only to find out that a 6-4 kid is really 6-2.
“We do a good job of getting verified measurables, visual content, photos and videos. So in the case of football, it’s not just their 40 (-yard dash) time, it’s a verified 40 time with a video of the 40 being run, with a mentality assessment and a coach evaluation on that kid. So you get to know, he runs a 4.3, great. But what’s he going to be like in the locker room?”

How do you present yourself to a school in the best possible way?
Penn has paid for Scorability and other services like Catapult, Verified Athletics and The UCReport. Penn’s coaches receive numerous emails per day from such services with names of potential players.
It’s the job of coaches at schools like Penn without recruiting departments to scour the data.
As a recruit, you need ways to jump off the page apart from your numbers as coaches sort you by, say, class, region of the country, GPA or SAT score.
“We really value when parents are honest about (how) these are the strengths of my son, these are the weaknesses, these are the areas that I’d like to see him grow, this is the type of program that I think he would thrive in and why,” says Jerheme Urban, a former NFL wide receiver and the head football coach at Division III Trinity University, which uses Scorability. “The more information that we can gather on the front end of things outside of just the metrics really allows us to be more intentional.
“I’m not gonna a disqualify kid from our recruitment process if the parents talk about the areas of growth that their kid needs. I think that’s self-aware. We’ve seen some really good parent evals come in as well in terms of how they’ve helped him grow in certain areas.”
Cruver says one of the goals of Scorability is to help kids stand out for their human qualities as much as their metrics.
“These coaches will watch thousands of hours of highlights and video,” he says. “And they get a good sense of athleticism from that. But they may narrow it down to 20 kids who athletically are about the same. And then what every coach tells us in every sport, whether it’s softball or golf or football, what it really comes down to is who do they want in their locker room? Who do they want in their weight room? Who’s gonna be loyal to the team? Who’s gonna be coachable? Who’s gonna be a good teammate? We had a golf coach the other day tell us, ‘When I recruit, I’m thinking about who do I want to ride in a van with for six hours?’ “
Playing a collegiate sport can be like a full-time job. Coaches want to know if you are willing to wake up at 5:30 every morning for a practice or a workout. Do you want to hit the weight room six times a week? Can you squeeze in studying and sleep, too?
I was a collegiate rower for three years. I decided to stop so I could stay up late to study, socialize with friends and have more time to pursue a career path my senior year. In other words, to have a typical college experience.
Dupont, Penn’s recruiting coordinator, played Division III baseball and football at St. Lawrence University in Canton, New York. It led him to coaching.
He wasn’t making full-time money with benefits until he was 30 and, yet, he said in nearly the same breath, he can’t imagine doing anything else.
“You’re just constantly locked into something, whether it’s the football season, recruiting, offseason workout programs with your players,” he said. “But I love it.”
Part III (final installment) coming next weekend:Using sports to find a life path for success.
Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.
Got a question for Coach Steve you want answered in a column? Email him at sborelli@usatoday.com
Rec Sports
Park Point 5-Miler and 2-Mile Walk 2026

The 55th annual Park Point 5-Miler starts near the Park Point Pavilion. Participants run down Minnesota Avenue before finishing back near the pavilion. They have the choice of a 5-mile run or a 2-mile walk.
This is the last of three races in the annual KP Challenge, in which participants commit to three races throughout the spring and summer. The others are the Saint Fennessy 4K and Fitger’s 5K. The aim of the challenge is to help participants keep on a regular training schedule and consistently complete longer distance races. Net proceeds benefit the Young Athletes Foundation, a Grandma’s Marathon program focused on the promotion and development of youth athletics.
In celebration of its 50th year, Grandma’s Marathon is offering free entries for those ages 18 and under to each of the five Young Athletes Foundation races in 2026.
Adult Entry Fee Scale
Jan. 1 to May 15 – $20
May 16 to June 30 – $30
July 1 to race day – $40
Register at raceroster.com.
Rec Sports
Girard welcomes new faces to council, board of education | News, Sports, Jobs
GIRARD — New faces will be working for the community as new members of city council and the board of education were sworn into office this week.
Girard Municipal Court Judge Jeff Adler swore in new and reelected council members and new members to the board of education.
Starting terms on council this month are Tod Latell and Wes Steiner as councilmen-at-Large and James Clark as 3rd Ward councilman.
On the board of education, new members are Zak Steiner and Scott Strain and elected to a new term after being appointed previously to fill an opening on the board is Tammy King.
TOD LATELL
Latell, who was elected to two terms as Trumbull County recorder from January 2017 to December 2024, said he will work with city officials and council to promote growth.
“I have been attending council meetings since the beginning of last year, and I believe we have some great opportunities to improve our downtown area and other locations across the city,” he said.
He said council members need to have a clear understanding of the budget.
“Our auditor and city officials have done well as the city appears to be in good financial standing. Transparency on the budget is paramount, as taxpayer money and available funds in general should be handled with care,” Latell said.
He said as county recorder, he ran a tight budget and left the recorder’s office in great shape.
“I believe when we have a strong school system, provide great police / fire and safety services in general, and residents feel city leadership is engaged and working for the benefit of all, success will happen,” Latell said.
WES STEINER
Wes Steiner was a first-time candidate for public office. He said as a surveyor with knowledge in zoning, he plans to bring a valuable skill set to city council to help improve the community.
He said zoning is essential to make sure that growth is well planned and remains sustainable for the future.
Steiner said there is a need for better signage in the downtown, with residents and visitors becoming more aware of the available parking space behind Chase Bank, as well as behind and across the street from the U.S. Post Office.
“Better signage will help improve accessibility and convenience for everyone,” he said.
He said he will work with Lake to River Economic Development to help bring businesses to the area, which will help generate additional tax revenue for the city.
Steiner said as Girard continues to evolve into a more transient community, he believes it is important to focus on mentoring and youth engagement. He has served in many positions working with youth sports and activities.
Steiner said he is committed to advocating for programs and policies that empower young people in the community.
JAMES CLARK
Clark said he comes from a family of civil servants, with his mother serving as city treasurer in East Liverpool and his grandmother serving as a councilwoman in East Palestine.
Clark said accountability in leadership will be a top priority. He said recent events in Girard, especially the problems with the school district’s finances, have shown how costly a lack of oversight can be.
“My top priority is to make sure those in leadership positions are accountable for their decisions and for how public money is handled,” Clark said.
He said as a casino executive, he often had to stand his ground, protect the best interests of the business and still convince high-level clients to choose them over the competition.
“I will bring that same approach to city council to protect residents and ensure their voices and tax dollars are safeguarded,” Clark said.
He said he will bring improvements into Girard by securing outside funding.
Clark said he will look at completing community improvement projects, and will seek grant programs and connect the right people to get projects done. He said he will see that Girard competes for funding dollars and for resources that can make a real difference in the community.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
King said after she was named to fill the board vacancy when longtime board member Diane Alejars stepped down she decided to run in the November election for a new four-year term.
King was selected from seven applicants who sought to fill the seat. King is a retired professor from Youngstown State University and holds a doctoral degree from Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
She said previously she will use her experience in education and higher education to focus on the future of the Girard Local School District and ensure that the staff has the resources they need to educate the students.
Zak Steiner and Strain are both new to public office.
Steiner said he wants to start a “Listen and Learn” tour across the district, meeting directly with administrators, teachers, staff and students, and listening to what they need to be more successful.
He said he would also like to expand recognition and engagement at board meetings, and in addition to recognizing students each month, also recognize staff, alumni and school groups.
Steiner said he will stay in contact with and work with the Ohio House on any upcoming or proposed changes to property tax and school funding to ensure the district’s needs are represented.
Strain said he will focus on the safety and success of the students, and develop positive relationships with the teachers, administration and staff to foster growth and trust while maintaining transparency.
He said as a former Girard school resource officer and juvenile investigator for six years allowed for developing trusting relationships with students and staff.
Also sworn in for new terms were Reynald Paolone as Girard council president, Henry Sforza as treasurer, Lily Martuccio for council-at-large, and Keith Schubert, John Moliterno and Thomas Grumley as council ward members.
Rec Sports
Fuel the Drive Expands Youth Sports Access, Sets 2026 Growth Target
“Participation in golf and tennis programs contributes to the development of transferable life skills, including self-discipline, teamwork and problem-solving.”
DENVER, CO, January 02, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ — Fuel the Drive—the non-profit organization that expands access to golf and tennis for children from low-income families—seeks to substantially increase the number of kids it assists in the year ahead.
“We’ve made some ambitious New Year’s resolutions for our foundation,” states founder and president Terry Aikin. “Fuel the Drive has been able to help a lot of kids accelerate their personal growth and expand their opportunities, but we’re far from satisfied.
“This year,” Aikin continues, “we want to impact at least five times as many young people as we did in 2025.”
Giving kids access to more promising futures
Founded to remove financial barriers to youth sports participation, Fuel the Drive sponsors children’s introduction to golf and tennis by covering essential program costs.
Eligible participants receive funding for registration in local PGA Junior League and U.S. Tennis Association programs, along with training guidance and equipment.
“The kids’ involvement in these sports fuels their personal growth and helps them develop confidence, self-discipline and leadership,” says Aikin. “It’s so rewarding to watch these kids build their own personal strength and find out what it takes to succeed.
“As the kids develop their golf or tennis games and compete with other kids their age,” he adds, “they learn to lead, to believe in themselves and to create pathways to more successful futures.”
Equipping kids with the tools to succeed on and off the course and court
“Time and again,” notes Aikin, “we see that participation in golf and tennis programs contributes to the development of transferable life skills, including self-discipline, teamwork and problem-solving.
“Let me share just one of our many success stories,” he continues. “With Fuel the Drive’s assistance, Mavarro has played in the PGA Junior League program for the past three years. His father tells us that playing golf has helped Mavarro develop patience and confidence, and he’s earned an award for perseverance.
“What’s more,” adds Aikin, “Mavarro’s love for golf has translated into increased analytical skills that are helping him tackle challenges he faces in school and in life.”
Ambitious growth target aims to serve many more children
Fuel the Drive has introduced golf to more than 100 children during each of the past three years and has provided access to tennis programs for more than 500 children.
Building on this impact, the organization has set a goal to expand its golf programming to serve more than 500 young athletes in 2026.
“Cost remains one of the most significant barriers to participation in organized youth sports,” states Aikin. “By removing that obstacle, we enable children to engage in structured environments that promote self-confidence, perseverance and personal growth.”
Increasing outreach to enlist more donors
“Our donor base has been very generous, and their contributions have made our impact possible,” reports Aikin. “But we’re seeking to significantly grow that base in order to achieve our objectives for 2026. So we’ve just launched a new website and we’re expanding our digital outreach to engage partners and community stakeholders and bring more new donors into the fold.
“With the generous support of new and existing donors,” Aikin adds, “we can fuel the drive in a lot more kids so they can achieve a lot more.”
About Fuel the Drive
Fuel the Drive, headquartered in Denver, CO, was founded by Terry and Michelle Aikin as a way of paying forward the tremendous support and inspiration they received as they were growing up. The organization provides access to golf and tennis programs to children from underserved communities, using sport as a platform to build self-confidence, leadership and skills that support lifelong success. To learn more, visit Fuel the Drive.
# # #
Rec Sports
The internet is killing sports
Happy New Year! 2026 is finally here!
I have to say that on many levels, the year in politics felt like a nightmarish fever dream. Donald Trump deciding to illegally rename the Kennedy Center after himself is not the worst thing that any president has ever done — it’s not even close — but on a level of sheer batshit insanity, it’s off the charts.
In a halfway functioning political system, I don’t even know what would happen if a president did that — because it just wouldn’t happen! Members of the president’s party would not put up with pure Mad King behavior. It’s not consequential, of course, in the way that cutting tons of people off from Medicaid is consequential. But then he also started a little war with Venezuela and launched some kind of Christmas bombing campaign in Nigeria, while also being so committed to world peace that he’s decided to just take Vladimir Putin’s word for it on Russian war aims. Also, FIFA believes that the president is seven years old, so they made up a fake peace prize to bestow on him, and he proudly accepted it.
Something I worry about a lot is that as Trump wears his ridiculousness and egomania on his sleeve, he invites people to believe that he is shallow and easily manipulated when he’s actually been ruthlessly successful across multiple fields of endeavor.
JD Vance seems a lot more put-together in a lot of ways, but he was also placed on the ticket specifically because Trump was disappointed that Mike Pence wouldn’t violate the constitution to help him steal an election, and Trump apparently feels that Vance is more reliable in this regard.
I try to maintain an action-oriented posture rather than indulging in dooming and stress and anxiety. But we succeeded in getting non-politics questions this week, so I just wanted to open by assuring everyone that I actually feel pretty stressed about the political situation and will continue to feel stressed as long as Republicans remain odds-on favorites to hold the Senate.
Now, your questions.
John E: If you could take any older show and update it with AI to make it look better (graphics/CGI/etc.), but keep everything else the same, what would it be?
My initial thought was Babylon 5 or something like that, but curious if you have any ideas that jump out at you?
The original Star Trek. It’s not even so much that the visual effects look bad (I believe they actually made a version with upgraded CGI that was released on Blu-ray), it’s that the makeup and costume stuff for the aliens is so crude and absurd. The Klingons as guys with Trump’s spray tan and weird beards is hard to watch. The Gorn as depicted in “The Arena” is absurd.
Andy: I’ll repeat my question about what changes you’d make to the NFL in terms of structure, rules, etc.
If football isn’t your thing, then as an alternative, expand the question to your thoughts about the general state of pro sports, whether you think pro sports are in a good or bad place, and what changes you might make if you were Ultimate Overlord of pro sports.
The NFL seems like they’re doing great, objectively, and don’t really need my advice. The main question facing the league is how aggressively to expand and whether to try really ambitious strategies like setting up a four-team division in Europe. From my personal standpoint, it was really exciting to watch the Commanders on their run last year and really disheartening to see things turn to shit this year — and it’s especially disheartening because the trajectory matches the RGIII boom and bust so closely.
Beyond football, though, my main observation about sports is that they are all being buffeted by the internet and the ubiquity of content in interesting ways.
When I first moved to DC, I made a clear choice to adopt the Wizards as my favorite basketball team. The Knicks were bad at the time and the Wizards, while not great, were decent and fun in the Gilbert Arenas Era. But beyond that, I just really liked basketball. A very large share of the games that were available to watch on television were Wizards games, so I watched a lot of Wizards games, and it’s more fun to watch a game if you have a rooting interest in it, so it’s fun to adopt your hometown team. Now, if we’d somehow had a Wizards-Knicks Eastern Conference Finals, would my loyalties have reverted? Maybe, but it didn’t come up.
Flash forward to 2025 and the Wizards are awful, the Knicks are good, and it’s also incredibly easy to watch Knicks games on streaming. So I’m following the Knicks very closely, which is great. And my son is also watching some Knicks games with me these past two seasons, which is delightful and a ton of fun. But this is a pattern that I see repeating in a lot of local families — dads maintaining their hometown sports allegiances and passing them on to their sons because it’s so easy to watch out of town games.
And this delocalization seems like a bit of a threat to the long-term model of sports.
Rec Sports
Wheeling Elks Announce 2025-26 Scholarship Winners | News, Sports, Jobs

WHEELING — Grace Tamburin and Owen Dobrzynski Hines, both seniors at Wheeling Park High School, have won the Wheeling Elks Scholarships for 2025-26.
Each will receive $1,000 from Wheeling Lodge No. 28, according to Elks Youth Activities Chairman Joe Marchlenski. Both are eligible for further state and national Elks’ scholarships.
“We believe it is important to recognize outstanding leadership and scholarship qualities in the youth of our area,” said Elks Exalted Ruler Ruby Haynes. “We are proud that more than $4 million in scholarships is awarded nationally by the Elks each year.”
Tamburin currently carries a GPA of 4.32. She is the captain and four-year member of both the girls’ volleyball and softball teams, and was recently named to the OVAC All-Star Volleyball team for West Virginia.
She is a member of both the National Honor Society and the National Spanish Honor Society. In her spare time, she volunteers with A Night to Shine, assisting adults with special needs. She plans to attend Shepherd University in Shepherdstown.
Dobrzynski Hines currently carries a GPA of 4.1. He is a captain and four-year member of both the football and track and field teams.
He volunteers dozens of hours each year with multiple Ohio Valley agencies, and describes his most influential community service project as volunteering with the flood relief efforts following the devastating flooding that occurred in this area in June.
He is a member of the Drug Free Club of America, the Freshmen Mentor Program, and the National Honor Society. He plans to attend Saint Vincent College in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, and major in social work and social services.
Rec Sports
Third annual Dignity Drive | News, Sports, Jobs
News file photo Representatives from area schools and the Foster Closet are seen picking up hygiene items for youth that were collected during the 2nd Annual Dignity Drive in 2025.
Laurel Nowak invites the community to participate in the third annual Dignity Drive from Monday to March 6.
Donations can be dropped off at Star Staffing located in Alpena from Monday to Friday from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The Dignity Drive asks community members to donate personal hygiene products for the youth in Northeast Michigan. Nowak said last year, the drive collected $10,000 worth of hygiene products which were provided to the School Success Program at Thunder Bay Jr. High School and Alpena High School. Products were also donated to the Foster Care Closet of Northern Michigan.
Nowak said that all partners were “grateful for the commitment of our community to children in need.”
“We were also able to provide a box to all of the area elementary schools,” she added.
“Personal hygiene is a basic human need,” Nowak said. “Many homeless and low-income children do not have the hygiene products they need for self-care. This causes many problems such as social rejection, illnesses and missed days of school.”
Items for both boys and girls are accepted, though Nowak asks community members to avoid donations of razors.
Below are a list of accepted donations:
— Feminine hygiene products
— Deodorant
— Body spray
— String bags or ditty bags
— Body or hand lotion
— Lip balm
— Soap
— Shampoo and conditioner
— Toothpaste
— Toothbrushes
If you are looking for additional information you can contact Nowak at 989-464-5968.
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