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Alberta government supporting youth mental wellness – CentralAlbertaOnline.com

Alberta’s government is supporting community organizations that provide innovative programming to help improve the mental health and well-being of young Albertans. Every young Albertan should be confident that help is available when they need it. Youth at risk of mental health challenges can benefit significantly from programs that focus on building resiliency, mental wellness and […]

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Alberta’s government is supporting community organizations that provide innovative programming to help improve the mental health and well-being of young Albertans.

Every young Albertan should be confident that help is available when they need it.

Youth at risk of mental health challenges can benefit significantly from programs that focus on building resiliency, mental wellness and social connection, such as those offered through the Youth Suicide Prevention Grant Program.

The Alberta government has invested an additional $1 million into Youth Suicide Prevention Grants, for a total of $4 million over 2024-26.

This means more organizations have received grant funding, increasing access to programming for youth across the province.

So far, more than 2,100 youth have been supported through programs that provide safe spaces to develop life skills and build long-term resilience.

Initiatives include after-school programs, cultural camps and events, and educational workshops.

“When someone is struggling, we want them to know there is help available. Suicide prevention is a priority for our government, which is why I am grateful for our cross-ministry approach to better mental health and well-being for Alberta children and youth,” said Dan Williams, Minister of Mental Health and Addiction.

Programs funded through the Youth Suicide Prevention Grant Program offer unique supports for diverse communities.

The government’s ongoing recognition of the importance of youth suicide prevention is encouraging—suicide prevention is long-term work.

Support from these grants contributes to education efforts led by the Canadian Mental Health Association Alberta and the Centre for Suicide Prevention, including the co-creation of the guide Community-led Life Promotion Plans for Indigenous Youth and Communities.

The Alberta government is recognizing Mental Health Week, May 5–11, and remains committed to expanding access to supports and services for young people facing mental health and addiction challenges.

This includes investments to increase access to supports in schools and in the community, support youth-focused online and telephone resources, and ensure mental health and addiction services are available through Recovery Alberta.

 

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From Spring to Fall: Howard Palmetto Covers All the Bases

The Howard Palmetto Baseball & Softball Association (HPBSA) is riding high after a dynamic Spring 2025 season, where over 800 kids showcased their talents in league play. As the spring season wraps up, the spotlight turns to All-Star Weekend on May 30th, a thrilling celebration featuring T-Ball skills competitions, home run derby parties, four-team All-Star […]

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The Howard Palmetto Baseball & Softball Association (HPBSA) is riding high after a dynamic Spring 2025 season, where over 800 kids showcased their talents in league play. As the spring season wraps up, the spotlight turns to All-Star Weekend on May 30th, a thrilling celebration featuring T-Ball skills competitions, home run derby parties, four-team All-Star tournaments for the Atom American-Atom National and Bantam divisions, and the unveiling of new ball fields at Chapman Park. With this excitement setting the stage, HPBSA, the largest recreational baseball league in Florida since 1962, is eager to launch its Fall 2025 season, inviting young athletes aged 4–14 to sharpen their baseball skills in vibrant South Florida.

HP T-Ball Stars: Building the Basics
The T-Ball Stars Program is back, designed to prepare 5-year-olds for the Atom American Coach Pitch division while welcoming spring 2025 veteran-4-year-olds back to the diamond. No tryouts are required, and preselected teams prioritize volunteers’ children and 5-year-olds. Practices begin in August on weekdays, with Saturday morning games running from September to December at parks in Pinecrest & Palmetto Bay. Gameplay emphasizes fundamentals, tracking outs alongside runs, and wraps up with an exciting end-of-season tournament. For more details, contact Sean at tball@howardpalmetto.com.

HP Fall Ball: Competitive Local Fun for Ages 6–11
HP Fall Ball offers Coach Pitch and Kid Pitch divisions, each forming 4–6 drafted teams. Games are played on weekends at Chapman Fields Park in southern Coral Gables and/or Suniland 1 park in Pinecrest from September through December, complemented by monthly single-elimination tournaments. Player evaluations are ongoing, with final makeups next week, team selections by early June, drafting by mid-June, and practices starting in August. Priority is given to returning HPBSA Spring 2025 players, while those in external fall leagues are ineligible. For more details, contact Josh at info@howardpalmetto.com
HP Sandlot: Flexible Play for Multi-Sport Athletes
For players aged 6–11 not drafted to HP Fall Ball or looking to prepare for Spring 2026, HP Sandlot offers a flexible, low-commitment option. Featuring Coach Pitch and Kid Pitch games, Sandlot operates on a weekly RSVP basis with rotating players and guest coaches. It’s perfect for multi-sport athletes or those with busy schedules. Teams play pickup-style games (complete with uniforms and umpires) against each other and the Marlins Academy from early September to mid-December at Chapman Fields Park and Suniland 1, with the added perk of joining HP Fall Ball’s monthly tournaments. A set weekly practice keeps skills sharp.  For more details, contact Carolina at info@howardpalmetto.com
HP Aces: Elite Travel for 7U–14U
The revamped HP Aces program targets competitive players aged 7U–14U, with tryouts scheduled over the next 10 days. Aces teams will compete in MYBA or PBSA leagues, with top-tier HP Fall Ball players (7U–10U) eligible to join tournament-only Aces teams for events in Dade County, the Keys, or other regional locations. Aces players in external leagues like MYBA or PBSA are ineligible for HP Fall Ball but can participate in HP Sandlot for additional playtime. As with HP Fall Ball, the non-refundable HPBSA Spring 2026 league registration is included in the fall HP Aces fee. For more details, contact Phil at aces@howardpalmetto.com
Join the Fun!

Our success is driven by you—the dedicated community of volunteers and families who make HPBSA a cornerstone of youth sports. Offering programs for every skill level—T-Ball Stars, HP Fall Ball, HP Sandlot, and the upgraded HP Aces—HPBSA ensures every player, from beginners to competitive stars, has a chance to step up to the plate. Registration for all programs opens June 1st on howardpalmetto.com. Let’s make this fall season a home run!


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Elder High School alum lives out dream as Cincinnati Bearcats catcher

CINCINNATI — Cincinnati Bearcats catcher Kory Klingenback grew up with the same goal many young ballplayers in the area have. “Cincinnati kids want to play for Cincinnati,” Klingenback said. It wasn’t an easy path, but Klingenback is living out his dream. “They didn’t really look at me out of high school. I had the opportunity […]

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CINCINNATI — Cincinnati Bearcats catcher Kory Klingenback grew up with the same goal many young ballplayers in the area have.

“Cincinnati kids want to play for Cincinnati,” Klingenback said.

It wasn’t an easy path, but Klingenback is living out his dream.

“They didn’t really look at me out of high school. I had the opportunity to come here after junior college. It was just surreal to me that it all came true… what this place means to me is quite insane,” Klingenback said.

klingenback anthem photo.jpg

University of Cincinnati Athletics

“When he comes out of that locker room every day, it doesn’t matter if he went 4-for-4 the last day; he’s going to give me a smile, he’s going to give me a ‘how you doing, coach?’ He’s going to say ‘coach, you look good today.’ I know he’s lying, but that’s OK,” Cincinnati baseball head coach Jordan Bischel said.

Inside baseball, Klingenback is what’s known as the ultimate “clubhouse guy.”

“I just want to play for the city and help these guys win as much as I can,” Klingenback said.

Last season, he only had one hit.

“I really didn’t want to play baseball anymore after last year,” Klingenback said.

“What’s awesome about Kory is when you’re a junior and get one hit at this level, you do one thing and you transfer out. You go somewhere else where you’re going to play more,” Bischel said.

“My family was here. I had all the support here. He came up to me last year in Texas, when we lost to Texas Tech, and he said, I gave him a hug and he said, ‘I want you back here.’ And that really hit me,” Klingenback said.

klingenback and bischel hug.jpg

University of Cincinnati Athletics

“You have to get his; you have to strike people out, you have to do those things to win. But you need 40 guys who believe in what they are doing and who don’t make it about themselves,” Bischel said.

Klingenback said it’s all for the Queen City.

“It’s just for this place, it’s for Cincinnati. I just love it so much. I just love everybody around it,” Klingenback said.

Because of the game that raised him, after his baseball career ends this spring, the Elder High School alum will continue to serve the city he loves by joining the Cincinnati Fire Department.

“I just want to help the guy next to me, the guy to the left, the guy to the right,” Klingenback said.

Before he trades in his catcher’s mask for a fire helmet, Klingenback has postseason baseball to worry about. The Bearcats are awaiting to find out if and where they will play in their first NCAA regional since 2019.

“The signs on the wall (that show the Bearcats’ postseason accomplishments) back there haven’t been updated in a while,” Klingenback said.

Bischel said Klingenback has helped the Bearcats “win a heck of a lot more games than most people realize.”

“I want to leave this place better than I found it when I first got here,” Klingenback said.





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Pipestone National Monument to host artists-in-residence

Jeff Reddoor demonstrates his stone etching work. He’ll be at Pipestone National Monument May 24 through May 30 as part of the Monument’s artist-in-residence program. Contributed photo Jeff Reddoor will be the first of four Indigenous artists who will share their work at Pipestone National Monument this year as part of an artists-in-residence program. Reddoor […]

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Jeff Reddoor demonstrates his stone etching work. He’ll be at Pipestone National Monument May 24 through May 30 as part of the Monument’s artist-in-residence program. Contributed photo

Jeff Reddoor will be the first of four Indigenous artists who will share their work at Pipestone National Monument this year as part of an artists-in-residence program. Reddoor will display and demonstrate his work from May 24 through May 30.

Reddoor said he comes from a family of artists and he’s been making art as long as he can remember. His art has included oils, acrylic, pen and ink, earrings, key chains, wood carving, stone etching and more.

“I’ve done all kinds of art, but what my passion has been the last several years and what I enjoy doing the most is wood carving, and I carve fish, I carve trout,” Reddoor said.

Reddoor uses primarily basswood and red cedar for his trout, which he said take hundreds of hours each. He paints some of them with great detail to make them look as authentic as possible. He also carves rocks from cedar to look like the river bottom under the fish and pinyon pine for stands to hold the fish.
“I love the look of pinyon pine,” Reddoor said. “When it’s sanded and shined, it just has this beautiful, raw look to it that really complements the fish.”
Trout are a subject he knows well as an avid fly fisherman.

“I like to go do research work, which means I like to go fishing,” he said with a laugh. “I tell my wife, ‘I’ve got to go do some research,’ and just disappear and go fly fishing all day.”

He said he also enjoys hunting and often hunts stones and wood to use in his artwork as he’s hunting animals.
Reddoor said he plans to demonstrate his stone art while he’s at Pipestone National Monument. He said he uses slate native to Utah, where he lives, that has red, gray and purple in it, and uses a scraper to etch images such as symbols, feathers and wildlife into the stone. He said that work has “more of a southwestern tone” to it.

Reddoor said he also plans to bring a family pipe made of pipestone with him during his visit. He said his family has been the pipe carrier for the Assiniboine Tribe and the pipe has been in his family for around 60 years. His father, Courtney Reddoor, made it and carried it until he died. Then his brother, Stormy Reddoor, carried it, and now he does.

“It’s absolutely beautiful,” Reddoor said. “It’s got an eagle’s head on it.”

In addition to making visual art, Reddoor is a performing artist, who plays the guitar and flute. He plans to play some Native flute music while he’s at Pipestone National Monument.

Reddoor’s family is originally from Poplar, Mont., which is on the Fort Peck Reservation. He and his family now live in Fillmore in central Utah, where his wife of 40 years, Tammy, is from. They have seven children, including two they recently adopted.

Reddoor is retired after a 40-year career with the state of Utah, which concluded with him serving as the director of the Utah State Building Board. He said he now spends most of his time making artwork and music, and hunting and fishing.

Other Indigenous artists who will share their work during week-long residencies at Pipestone National Monument over the summer include Holly Young from June 21 to 27, John Knife Sterner from July 25 to 31 and Marlena Myles from August 23 to 29. For more information, call 507-825-5464 ext. 214 or visit the park website at www.nps.gov/pipe. Event details and program schedules will also be posted on the park’s Facebook page at www.facebook.com/PipestoneNPS.

This is a sample of the stone etching done by Jeff Reddoor, who will be sharing and demonstrating his art work at Pipestone National Monument from May 24 to May 30. Reddoor is from Utah and is the first of four Indigenous artists to be featured this year during Pipestone National Monument’s artist-in-residence program. Contributed photo

This is one of the trout carved and painted by Jeff Reddoor, who will be the first of four Indigenous artists featured at Pipestone National Monument this summer. In addition to wood carving, he does stone etching, bead work and more. Contributed photo

These are some of the earrings made by Jeff Reddoor, who will be the first of four Indigenous artists at Pipestone National Monument this summer as part of the Monument’s artist-in-residence program. He’ll be demonstrating his work there May 24 through May 30. Contributed photo



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Arkansas natives competing in NBA’s Western Conference Finals

Jaylin Williams and Isaiah Joe lead Oklahoma City towards NBA Finals and inspire their hometown with high-character play. OKLAHOMA CITY — If you’re a fan of high school basketball in Arkansas and happened to turn on the NBA’s Western Conference Finals, you may have seen a pair of familiar faces. “I see those guys out […]

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Jaylin Williams and Isaiah Joe lead Oklahoma City towards NBA Finals and inspire their hometown with high-character play.

OKLAHOMA CITY — If you’re a fan of high school basketball in Arkansas and happened to turn on the NBA’s Western Conference Finals, you may have seen a pair of familiar faces.

“I see those guys out on the floor playing extremely well. You know, it just makes me feel good for them because of all the hard work they put in,” Eric Burnett, former head coach of the Northside Grizzlies said.

Jaylin Williams and Isaiah Joe are both doing their best to help the Oklahoma City Thunder get past the Minnesota Timberwolves and into the NBA Finals for the second time in franchise history.

“It’s awesome to see kids succeed, I mean, in everything, in every aspect of life, it’s great to see it. But when you have two guys that have had the success they have, and now lead a team into, hopefully, the NBA Finals,” Chris Reeder, Director of Operations at the Boys and Girls Club of Fort Smith said.

However, this is far from the start of their story together. Jaylin and Isaiah have played together since youth basketball at the Boys and Girls Club of Fort Smith, in high school at Northside, in college at the University of Arkansas, and now at the highest level in Oklahoma City. That long history gives plenty of people a reason to tune in.

“To have the opportunity to play for an NBA team and it’s the team closest to us means that everybody who’s watched them grow up gets to see them now. It brings a lot of excitement. There are a lot of people who aren’t huge NBA fans, but they’re seeing them on the court now and saying, ‘those are our kids. Those are our Fort Smith kids,’” Reeder said.

And they’re making sure to represent their city proudly, not just on the court, but off it as well.

For Burnett, he’s more impressed by their character than their skills on the court.

“When the NBA coaches called me, the first thing I would talk about is they’re high-character guys. You never have to worry about them. You ask them to do something, and they’re going to do it. They’re not going to question anything. They’re always going to do it with a great attitude.”

Even if that request means doing something tough — like going toe-to-toe with one of the best players in the world, Nikola Jokic.

“Oh, Jaylin — whenever he was checking into the game and coming down the court, he would always hit him with his chest. And I don’t think the Joker really liked that, but I think Jaylin got in his head. Every time the ball was shot, he was boxing him out so he wouldn’t get to the board when he was trying to post him,” Burnett added.

As for Reeder, he knows Jaylin and Isaiah’s success will inspire the next generation.

“Every kid that walks through these doors can be something in their life. If they dream it, they can do it. And they’re both examples of that — whether it’s playing in the NBA or Major League Baseball or being a doctor or an attorney — they know they can set goals and go get them, just like Jaylin and Isaiah did.”



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Summer camp previously held on Buster Posey-owned ranch moves to Sonoma

Kids Outdoor Sports Camp offers youth ages nine and up hands-on experience and education in hunting, angling, and shooting sports. A year after San Francisco Giants’ legend Buster Posey purchased a famed hunting ranch straddling the border of Mendocino and Lake counties, an outdoor hunting camp for kids that operated there has been forced to […]

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Kids Outdoor Sports Camp offers youth ages nine and up hands-on experience and education in hunting, angling, and shooting sports.

A year after San Francisco Giants’ legend Buster Posey purchased a famed hunting ranch straddling the border of Mendocino and Lake counties, an outdoor hunting camp for kids that operated there has been forced to exit the property and is making its new home in Sonoma.

Founded in 1998, Kids Outdoor Sports Camp had spent the past five summers offering youth ages nine and up hands-on experience and education in hunting, angling, and shooting sports at the 4,129-acre Six Points Ranch in Potter Valley.

Now, the camp is moving to Wing & Barrel Ranch in Sonoma following Posey’s purchase of the Six Points Ranch last July for $10.4 million, SFGate reported.

“The property where we previously held our camps (Six Point Ranch) was sold and we moved,” camp director Glennon Gingo told The Press Democrat in an email this week.

Gingo declined to elaborate, saying he had “a busy Summer ahead with camp preparations,” though camp founder and Executive Director Judy Oswald told SFGate that the camp’s move was due to Posey’s disinterest in having camps on his property.

Since returning to the Bay Area in 2023 with his wife, Kristen, and their four children following a brief post-retirement stint in his native Georgia, Posey has loomed large in the Bay Area sports world, becoming the San Francisco Giants’ president of baseball operations in September in addition to his role as a minority owner with the team.

Posey, an outdoor enthusiast who previously owned the 106-acre Springer Lodge in Butte County, also owns a $8.3 million six-bedroom home in the East Bay city of Lafayette.

An email to the Giants requesting a comment from Posey did not get a response.

A previous real estate listing for Six Point Ranch highlighted the property’s thousands of acres of scenic wilderness including four lakes and numerous natural springs. The property’s abundance of wildlife — including tule elk, blacktail deer, wild boar, and turkey — had previously made it a destination for world-class hunting, according to property development and management firm Black Mountain Properties LLC, which lists the ranch among its portfolio of properties.

On its website and in a Wednesday Instagram post, Wing & Barrel Ranch said it was excited to welcome Kids Outdoor Sports Camp, which kicks off its weeklong overnight camps on June 15. The private hunting club added that campers would be staying on-site in new camp cabins on the property.

The ranch did not reply to an email request for comment.





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Boston student-athletes on how NDUR app helped them succeed – NBC Boston

May is Mental Health Awareness Month and we’re highlighting a new tool that student athletes are trying out to help maintain their physical and mental toughness in competition. For Boston English High School basketball player Nisaiah Nieves, the sport is an escape. “Once you get in the gym, nothing else matters,” he said. For Nieves […]

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May is Mental Health Awareness Month and we’re highlighting a new tool that student athletes are trying out to help maintain their physical and mental toughness in competition.

For Boston English High School basketball player Nisaiah Nieves, the sport is an escape.

“Once you get in the gym, nothing else matters,” he said.

For Nieves and his teammate Janeuey Brea, playing the sport is more than just a way to stay in shape. It’s an opportunity to achieve goals, make connections and develop leadership skills.

“We tried to talk to each other as much as we can, stay connected. Because at the end of the day, we all had the same goal, the same end goal. We always wanted to win,” Brea said.

And they did — advancing well into the playoffs despite having a brand-new team with players who didn’t speak the same language. They credit a bit of their success this year to a focus on their mental game.

“The mental is like 90% of the game. It’s like 10% physical,” Nieves said.

This past fall, through a partnership with Let’s Play Boston, they met with former NBA Rookie of the Year Michael Carter-Williams, a Massachusetts native, to learn about a new startup, NDUR. Pronounced “endure,” its app provides a unique platform for student athletes to chat with each other on issues and pressures they face.

Carter-Williams has been vocal about his mental health struggles in the league and is a co-founder of NDUR.

The first game for the season was called off when a bus never showed up to take the East Boston High School boys’ basketball team to Fall River.

“Just by, you know, speaking to them about my own issues, it kind of had let them open up about their own issues and it really was impactful,” he said.

NDUR’s president, Darren Orr, has worked with hockey players as an agent most of his career. His father is the legendary Boston Bruin Bobby Orr.

“He had some amazing skills,” said Orr of his father, “and he had a supportive family and all those things that are really important. But he had no one to turn to … to talk about that mental barrier he was running into.”

Orr said NDUR aims to be a free starting point for athletes, meeting them where they’re already at — their phones.

“You can’t always fix every single issue that’s out there. But what we try to do is tamp down those embers before they become a forest fire,” he said.

Through his Marked as Winners foundation, Baltimore Ravens safety Marcus Williams is empowering young people to overcome challenges and achieve their full potential through education and mental wellness.

The young players tell us they’ve taken strategies learned on the app, from others’ first-hand experience, to the court and the classroom.

“Other people like sharing their point of views on their mental state. Like, for example, like an injury, they’re sharing how that affected them. And you can, like, build off of that and either help the person or you can use that information to help yourself as well,” Nieves said.

“Breathing was a big part of, like, processing everything that was going on during the season because there was a lot of stuff we went through and breathing really helped,” Brea said.

NDUR founders plan to incorporate more advice from pro- and collegiate-level athletes on the app to keep the conversation going. The city of Boston is on board hoping this partnership will change the game around mental health.

“The more that we normalize it, the more that people can ask for help and get the help that they need,” said Tyrik Wilson, Boston’s Youth Sports Initiative manager.

“If you make a bad play or you have a bad practice, like, it’s not the end of the world,” explained Brea. “We got each other because this is like a family. It’s brotherhood. So we all hold each other down.”



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