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Child care funding methods ‘unsustainable’ for YSS | News, Sports, Jobs

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WHEELING — Officials with Youth Services System Inc. say changes in how the agency receives subsidies for the before and afterschool care the program provides to young students has significantly reduced available funding, and that continuing the programs under the new subsidy system is “unsustainable.”

“We’re no longer under a financial strain,” said Chris Sengewalt, CFO of YSS. “We have a financial crisis.”

Sengewalt and Sarah Gamble, supervisor of community based services for YSS, spoke before Ohio County Board of Education members Monday night and asked for their support and assistance in continuing the program.

They explained YSS is no longer being reimbursed based on the number of students enrolled in their programs, but instead on each student’s actual attendance. Children enrolled don’t always attend the program on a daily basis or may only attend part of the day.

Gamble noted that they had been before the board in September 2024, telling them a financial strain was coming down the pike.

“There were discussions statewide then suggesting that some of the funding sources currently being utilized were going to be depleted in the coming months,” she said.

Fortunately, the YSS programs were sustained through both 2024 and 2025, she continued.

But last fall, the West Virginia Department of Health informed YSS that beginning Sept. 1 they could no longer bill for subsidies based on overall enrollment. They would instead need to base the billing on actual attendance.

YSS serves students attending Bethlehem, Elm Grove and Middle Creek elementary schools. In these schools, 52% of the students attending the before- and after-school programs are eligible for the subsidies, according to Gamble.

“We have to keep a spot for them full-time if we are full capacity,” she explained.

There are 49 students actively enrolled in the before and afterschool programs at YSS and another 16 on the waitlist.

There are 22 billing days in the month and a student may only attend two days, Gamble explained.

“Previously, we could bill for the 22 days. Now we can only bill for the two days they actually attended,” she said.

YSS receives an average daily subsidy of $14.50 per student who attends the program. Billing is also now being broken down into two-hour increments for billing purposes, Gamble said.

“We’re presenting this information to you in hopes that as a board you might actually support this program,” she said. “At the end of the day, the last thing we want to see is preschools closed. Parents depend on these programs to make it to work every day.”

Board president David Croft asked her if the funding for the current school year already had dried up, and she told him it had.

“Wow. That’s a shame. It really is,” board member Andy Garber said.

Gamble explained that for the month of September the amount of supplement would have been $7,377 under prior billing practices, but YSS was only able to bill for $1,091.

“So it is fair to say the current configuration is not sustainable?” Croft asked.

Gamble answered yes and Croft inquired what options they might propose to the board.

Gamble said Marshall County Schools provides YSS with “scholarship funding” and the school district is invoiced every month which helps to cover some of YSS’s cost.

“That allows us to keep the billing at a minimum for our families,’ she said. “The last thing we want to have to do is raise the rate for our families — which we already did last year.”

Croft asked if the board needed to make a choice and if it would help more to fund before- or after-school care.

“If we can’t sustain the program the way it is, my recommendation would be to offer before care,” she said. “Then we can support two-hour delay days.”

Sengewalt said YSS is seeking funding to help them finish out the current fiscal year while they seek a collaborative solution in the future.

Superintendent Kim Miller suggested the school district put together a task force consisting of Gamble and Raquel McLeod, student services director for Ohio County Schools, and others to review what other counties are doing and what is working elsewhere.

The matter will be reviewed by board members and placed on the agenda for their next meeting at 6 p.m. Jan. 12 at the board office, 2203 National Road, Wheeling.



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Daniel S. Kippert | Obituaries

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Daniel S Kippert, age 63, born on April 24,1962 to parents Jack and Patricia (Sweeney) passed away on Aug 26, 2025. Dan attended Madison West High School and graduated with an Economics degree from the University of Wisconsin in 1991.

Dan worked many jobs over the years, primarily in retail. Enjoyed his time refereeing youth basketball, umpiring softball games, watching Wisconsin Badgers and Green Bay Packers.

A man who valued his privacy, Dan faced significant health challenges throughout his life, including a long battle with Ulcerative colitis and the complications of alcoholism.

While these struggles were a part of his journey, they did not define the totality of who he was as a son, brother and a friend. He is now at peace, free from the physical and mental burdens he carried for so long.

Dan is survived by his mother Patrica, brothers Mike, Dave (Jo Ann) and sister Kathy (Dan) Schmudlach, Including several cousins, nieces, nephews, their families and his beloved cat Sammy.

In keeping with Dan’s wishes, a private family memorial will be held at a later date.

He is preceded in death by his father, Jack and brother, John.

Dan’s family would like to thank all the care givers who assisted Dan throughout his healthcare journey, Sun Prairie Emergency personnel including Social Services, St. Mary’s Hospital, Dean clinic and Agrace.

​COPYRIGHT 2025 BY CHANNEL 3000. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MATERIAL MAY NOT BE PUBLISHED, BROADCAST, REWRITTEN OR REDISTRIBUTED.



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2026 National Girls & Women in Sports Day Youth Clinic

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Duke Athletics is proud to host the National Girls and Women in Sports Day Clinic, presented by Blue Cross and Blue Shield of North Carolina at historic Cameron Indoor Stadium! 

As a proud partner of Duke Athletics, Blue Cross NC has enhanced its commitment to women’s athletics by being the presenting sponsor of National Girls & Women in Sports Day. Building on its commitment to support youth mental health, connectivity and resiliency, Blue Cross NC encourages participation in sports and an active lifestyle that supports physical and mental wellbeing. By partnering with youth, parents and community leaders like Duke Athletics, Blue Cross NC believes there is opportunity to help reduce stigmas associated with mental health for young people in sports.

This year’s clinic is scheduled for Saturday, February 7, 2026 from 9-10:30 a.m., in Cameron Indoor Stadium. Each participating women’s varsity sport will have a designated section in the stadium to teach a sport-related skill or technique. 

The clinic is FREE of charge and open to girls and boys in Grades 1-8.  Registration is not required but strongly encouraged. A Parent or Guardian must be present at all times.

Additionally, this season, registered participants will receive a complimentary ticket to the Duke Women’s Basketball game on Sunday, February 8th against SMU.

Please fill out the below form to register. Do not forget to download, complete, and bring the participation agreement with you to the clinic!

Participation Agreement



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2025 in Review: Seven Questions for Assemblymember Mia Bonta, an Outspoken Advocate for Maternal Health and Working Families 

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Assemblymember Mia Bonta (D-Oakland). File photo. Credit: California Black Media Credit: California Black Media

By Edward Henderson, California Black Media 

Assemblymember Mia Bonta (D-Oakland) serves California’s 18th Assembly District (East Bay). She was first elected in a special election on Aug.31, 2021. 

Bonta, who says she is guided by a long-standing commitment to educational equity, community safety, and expanding opportunities for working families, has built a legislative record focused on addressing systemic inequities through prevention-focused, community-driven solutions. 

Raised in a Puerto Rican family that valued public service, she has spent her career advocating for resources that strengthen schools, expand access to childcare and healthcare, and remove bureaucratic barriers that disproportionately harm Black, Indigenous, immigrant, and low-income communities.

Her work, she says, reflects a deep belief in uplifting historically underserved neighborhoods, ensuring families can afford to live and thrive in the East Bay, and protecting the social safety nets that help vulnerable residents meet basic needs. 

Throughout 2025, Bonta’s efforts emphasized dignity, access, and fairness across issues ranging from maternal health and immigration to youth justice reform. While celebrating hard-won policy victories shaped by community advocates and impacted families, she has also been candid about the persistence of deeply rooted challenges –particularly for young people navigating systems that too often prioritize punishment over support. 

California Black Media (CBM) spoke with Bonta about her successes and disappointments in 2025 and her outlook for the new year. 

What stands out to you as your most important achievement last year and why?  

I was proud to lead AB 1261, expanding access to legal counsel for immigrant youth. I came into the Legislature to fight for our children, and with the federal administration openly targeting young people for deportation, this bill was a labor of love. No child should be forced to stand alone in a courtroom, navigating a legal process they don’t understand, often in a language they don’t speak. That is not who we are as Californians. I’m grateful my colleagues and our governor agreed.

How did your leadership last year contribute to improving the lives of Black Californians?   

I led AB 1376 to reform our youth probation system, which for too long has kept young people trapped in cycles of law enforcement contact and contributed to the school-to-prison pipeline. Of the more than 10,000 young Californians navigating probation, 86% are youth of color. Under prior law, non-custodial wardship probation often came with as many as 50 separate requirements, each one a potential technical violation that could extend supervision and derail healthy adolescent development. Research shows that this instability leads to school disengagement, employment barriers, and repeated involvement with the system.

AB 1376 limits the length of probation and requires that conditions be individualized, developmentally appropriate, proportional, and not excessive, to provide real, immediate relief for youth across the state.

What frustrated you the most last year?  

It has been frustrating to operate under yet another Trump administration rather than one that could have been led by a daughter of Oakland. With deep cuts to health care, violent immigration raids, and rising costs, the challenges facing California families have only grown. But these pressures also make the work we’re doing more urgent.

What inspired you the most last year? 

I am constantly inspired by the people of AD-18 – Oakland, Alameda, and Emeryville. They never give up, never back away from a righteous fight, and continue to push forward even when the odds are stacked high. Their resilience fuels my own, especially in the hardest moments.

What is one lesson you learned in 2025 that will inform your decision-making in 2026? 

We are strongest when we fight together. Last year, I was especially proud of the broad coalition we built to secure funding for the RIGHT Grant, which allows community-based organizations to provide critical in-person rehabilitation services inside our state prisons. Even in a tough budget year, we were able to elevate this as a priority because we demonstrated how wide and deep the support was.

In one word, what is the biggest challenge Black Californians are facing currently? 

Trump.

What is the goal you want to achieve most in 2026? 

In 2026, I look forward to fighting to protect health care access, advancing smart and effective public safety policies, and continuing to invest in communities that have been overlooked for far too long.



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Jr. Ams Girls Youth Hockey Taking Off | SWX Tri-Cities/Yakima

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PASCO, WA – Girl’s hockey is gaining momentum, and the Junior Americans are creating opportunities for girls of all ages to engage with the sport. The organization has experienced steady growth in recent months, highlighted by their latest hockey event.

Executive Hockey Director Garrett Stephenson shared that they hosted a “Try Hockey for Free” event in October, which saw 42 girls participate. “This is the most this program has seen for a Try Hockey for Free event before,” said Stephenson.

With professional women’s hockey gaining popularity, girls now have role models to look up to and opportunities to pursue the sport. The girls’ club is continuing its efforts with tournaments scheduled for March.



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How ex-MLB player Travis Snider, from WA, is trying to change youth sports | Seattle Times Sports

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Travis Snider wants to change youth sports for the better.

As a former Major League Baseball player with the Blue Jays, Pirates and Orioles, Snider experienced the game at its highest level. But he also got to see firsthand the emotional costs that came with it.

Snider was bound for baseball stardom. He was the top Little Leaguer in the state while playing for Mill Creek Little League back in the late 1990s/early 2000s, and was one of the top-ranked high school players in the nation in 2006, when his Jackson High team won the Class 4A state title and Snider was picked No. 14 overall by the Blue Jays in the MLB draft.

But with all that success came a tremendous amount of pressure, which affected him in such profound ways that Snider was later diagnosed with complex post-traumatic stress disorder.

Now, Snider is trying to keep other kids from going through that same experience.

Alongside author, speaker and life coach Seth Taylor, Snider created a company called 3A Athletics, which seeks to help fix the culture of youth sports. The Seattle-based company offers resources to educate parents and coaches about how the intense and overbearing ways they interact with young athletes can negatively impact their mental and emotional health, and even hurt their success on the field.

Snider sees youth sports as a system that sets up kids for failure. When the only priority is success and intense training to play at a high level, it can lead to burnout or kids quitting before reaching their full potential.

Moments like the car ride home after a game or the reaction to an on-field mistake are crucial times in determining whether a child develops a love for the game or has a negative experience.

Through their resources, which include PDFs, workshops, guidebooks and videos on its website, 3A Athletics hopes to help parents, athletes and coaches learn how to approach sports in a more mentally healthy way.

“We really wanted to come alongside parents and help them start to understand how we’re really driving the industry, but also doing a lot of damage,” Snider said. “… It really starts with us as the parents, being willing to look in the mirror and become aware of these things that are happening on a daily basis in our interactions with our kids, with the organizations and teams, and coaches and umpires, and how that really impacts the overall experience and culture.”

An example of 3A Athletic’s teachings comes in a PDF on their website called, The car ride home and why it’s such a big deal.” Snider and Taylor emphasize turning these moments from an experience filled with critiques about a child’s performance into what they term a “sanctuary of love.”

“[Parents] can choose words and actions that prioritize their child’s well-being over their desire to coach or critique. Simple conversations can clarify that children often do not want postgame analysis and instead crave emotional support,” the PDF states.

Another says that young athletes “need coaches and parents who value effort over outcome and who understand that failure is part of growth — not something to be feared or avoided.”

• • •

Snider remembers how crushing the expectations could feel when he was young.

He was an All-Star for Mill Creek when he was 9, won two Little League state championships and pitched a no-hitter while hitting two homers in a state semifinal. His travel ball team won three national championships before winning the state title his senior year.

While the success was fun, the stress to keep winning was continuing to build and expectations for the team were sky-high.

“The general love for practicing and playing baseball was really cultivated and supported in that environment,” Snider said. “As we started to achieve more of these things, none of the parents or coaches had really experienced that kind of success and really understand, kind of, the nuances to how the identity formation is taking place in these 8-, 9-, 10-, 11-, 12-year-old years.”

In one big game when he was 11, Snider had an on-field panic attack when he was unable to throw a strike, one of two he’d have that weekend. In hindsight, he realizes that it was due to the pressure he felt to succeed, even at such a young age.

“It was really the first time I had experienced failure at that level, where you got thousands of people in the stands and the game just sped up,” Snider said. “My nervous system was not able to process it in that moment.”

While he never experienced that type of panic attack while playing again, he continued to battle many of the same emotional and identity issues during his 15-year professional career, in which his on-field successes didn’t live up to the hype that came with being a high first-round draft pick.

Snider spent eight seasons in the major leagues between 2008-15 and finished his career with a .244 average, 54 career homers and 212 RBI.

When he retired in 2022 after several years back in the minors, he underwent an identity crisis and has discussed going through therapy to work through the problems he faced since childhood.

“Our identity, what we’re known as, is the baseball player,” Snider said. “We get introduced in social circles and get into rooms that most people won’t get into because of what we do. So it becomes a very blurry line in terms of what makes me valuable.

“These are the kind of core points we’re hitting on with parents in those developmental years is, kids are looking for the things that say, ‘I’m safe and I’m loved and I’m valuable.’”

The A’s in 3A are Awareness, Activation and Achievement, the three pillar concepts of Snider’s mission. Awareness of the issues facing youth sports, activation of an athlete’s potential through supportive coaching and parenting practices, followed by achievement in their chosen field.

Some of 3A’s content is free, while the “premium content,” such as access to books and video workshops, requires a monthly subscription. The resources are limited to baseball, softball and soccer, but they plan to expand to other sports.

Through the resources that 3A has for parents and coaches, Snider hopes to teach those around youth sports that it’s OK to simply let the kids play for fun, without subjecting them to endless criticism and undue pressure.

3A Athletics has also partnered with local organizations like Driveline Academy to help spread their message through athlete training sessions and journaling.

Deven Morgan, Driveline’s director of youth baseball, has seen many parents act problematically during his time at the company and admits he was too intense about his teenage son’s on-field performance in the past.

He remembers one moment of intensity that caused him to reevaluate his approach.

“Something’s got to change, because I can’t be the reason that this kid doesn’t want to continue playing in this sport,” Morgan recalls thinking. “So I started to get my head screwed on straight.”

In Morgan’s mind, teaching athletes and their parents healthy coping skills and how to grow from their failures, rather than get angry about them, goes beyond just helping them figure out how to succeed in sports.

“I think that’s one of the ways where we can help all these kids get value out of the experience, in a way that informs the rest of the way that they approach their lives, right?” Morgan said. If you can provide context to failure, and you can actually get better from it and you can make adjustments to it, then that’s just like a life skill, that’s not a sports skill.”

With three kids of his own, Snider knows that all parents want their child to succeed.

But he stresses that parents placing too much importance on athletic accomplishments and trying to live their dreams through their child can be harmful.

“Ultimately we want the experience to be the kid’s experience,” Snider said. “Not the parents’ experience and not the coach’s experience, but the actual people who are on the field playing these sports. To really have a chance to experience and find out what they like, what they don’t like, and decide, ‘Is this what I want to pursue?’ and be able to help them build a healthy relationship with success and failure.”

© 2026 The Seattle Times. Visit www.seattletimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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Annual Bundle Up Fest & Sports Fair Returning To Pybus Market

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The Wenatchee Parks, Recreation & Cultural Services Department will host its annual Bundle Up Fest – Youth Sports & Activities Fair at Pybus Public Market later this month.

Once again the event will feature a wide array of activities for people of all ages, including hay rides; a petting zoo, kids carnival; and arts-and-crafts.

This year’s event will also feature 22 local sports and activities organizations offering more information about their services.

NewsRadio 560 KPQ logo

“We’ll have information on everything from dance to soccer to flag football, lacrosse, and baseball,” says Parks & Rec spokesperson, Caryl Andre. “Pretty much anything that your kids might want to participate in, come to the Fair and you can find out more about it and maybe even get signed up.”

Andre adds that event-goers can also sign up to participate in a family-friendly 5k fun run, and says there’ll be a variety of vendors and even a bonfire where folks can gather to stay warm with a hot cup of cocoa and a s’more.

The event will be held on Saturday, Jan. 17 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

For more information, you can see the Wenatchee Parks & Rec Department Facebook page or call 509-888-3284.

5 of the Best Places To Hike During the Winter in Washington State

Here are 5 places to hike during the winter with truly gorgeous views in Washington State.

Gallery Credit: Rik Mikals





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