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Flag football continues to grow among young athletes
Flag football continues to grow among young athletes | The Gazette […]

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Recreation Specialist I | Jobs
WATAUGA COUNTY POSITION OPENING Recreation Specialist I Watauga County Parks and Recreation is accepting applications for the full-time position of Recreation Specialist I. Work hours vary according to recreational program schedules and will include some night, weekend and holiday hours. Duties include organizing senior games, youth athletics, and youth sports camps, and other duties as […]

WATAUGA COUNTY POSITION OPENING
Recreation Specialist I
Watauga County Parks and Recreation is accepting applications for the full-time position of Recreation Specialist I.
Work hours vary according to recreational program schedules and will include some night, weekend and holiday hours.
Duties include organizing senior games, youth athletics, and youth sports camps, and other duties as assigned.
Position is responsible for hiring, training and supervising part-time seasonal employees, officials, field supervisors and volunteers in a variety of programs.
Position also assists in preparing and managing a budget for youth athletics, and is responsible for securing projected revenues from program sponsors and participants.
A bachelor’s degree in Recreation Management, Physical Education or a related field with 1 to 3 years of experience in recreation work or any equivalent combination of training and experience which provides the required skills and knowledge is required.
Certified Parks and Recreation Professional preferred. Possession of a valid Driver’s License and a good driving record is also required.
County benefit package includes health insurance, retirement, paid holidays, vacation and sick leave.
Salary Grade 8: $54,034.00
Apply at NC Works Career Center, 130 Poplar Grove Connector, Boone, NC 28607, (828) 278-6460.
Applications may also be obtained at www.wataugacounty.org (Employment Link) and submitted by mail, email WataugaCounty@ncworks.gov, or fax (828) 278-6468.
An active NCWorks account is required, please visit ncworks.gov to create an account or to retrieve username.
Application deadline is Thursday, June 12, 2025
Watauga County is an EEOE.
Rec Sports
Authenticity in Action: NBA celebrates AANHPI Heritage Month with APEX Symposium & Youth Tournament
Members from the sports industry community gather on May 7 for the AANHPI Sports Symposium in New York. (Photo courtesy of NBA APEX.) The NBA celebrated Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander (AANHPI) Heritage Month with a series of internal and external programs throughout the month of May. The NBA collaborated with other major […]


Members from the sports industry community gather on May 7 for the AANHPI Sports Symposium in New York. (Photo courtesy of NBA APEX.)
The NBA celebrated Asian American, Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander (AANHPI) Heritage Month with a series of internal and external programs throughout the month of May.
The NBA collaborated with other major sports organizations, such as the MLB, NHL, NFL, MLS and USOPC, to organize an AANHPI Sports Symposium on May 7 in New York City.
The Symposium, which the NBA’s Asian Professional Exchange (APEX) group has helped to organize since its inaugural event in 2019, brought members of the AANHPI community together to share experiences around the theme of showing authenticity in action.
Catherine Chao, a Co-Chair of APEX, said the main goals of the Symposium are for AANHPI members to feel more connected to and informed about the industry as well as pride in being a part of the AANHPI community. The importance of bringing in cultural elements like food and supporting local AANHPI businesses was also represented.
Hrishi Karthikeyan, an Executive Champion of APEX, said the Symposium is a great way to build an AANHPI network and community beyond the walls of the NBA. One goal of groups like APEX is to showcase the breadth and diversity of AANHPI people and culture within the sports industry.
“The AANHPI community itself is internally diverse,” Karthikeyan said. “By coming together, under one umbrella, we have an opportunity to learn and share those experiences with each other and also find new areas of growth and connection.”

Panelists Jenny Nguyen and Ben Musselman chat at the Symposium on May 7. (Photo courtesy of APEX.)
When the overarching theme Power Forward: Authenticity in Action was introduced in meetings, it was critical that this was reflected not only through the panelists’ contributions, but also in the creation of the event itself. Having athletes from different generations and panelists with diverse backgrounds reflected the expanding opportunities for the AANHPI community across the industry.
“Our intention was not to go with stories that you’ve already heard,” Chao said.
The panelists included Jenny Nguyen, Founder and Owner of The Sports Bra, Bonnie Wan, bestselling author of The Life Brief and athletes Jen Lee and Ben Musselman from the U.S. Paralympic Sled Hockey National Team.
“People were proudly emphasizing how their identity and culture affect the way they show up in competition or in their work,” Karthikeyan said.
For the programming of the Symposium, it was just as important for the audience to see a reflection of important figures in leagues and also the sport itself.
“You can’t be what you can’t see,” Chao said. “It can be helpful to have people who look similar to you share their experiences. There’s a mindset shift that we’re trying to encourage.”
The AANHPI identity is complex, but showing authenticity daily is critical.
“Showing up as your unique, authentic self is an asset, not a liability, for your team,” Karthikeyan said.

Members and panelists gather in Times Square ahead of the AANHPI Sports Symposium on May 7. (Photo courtesy of APEX)
The planning for the Symposium came down to intentional details.
Each of the panelists was seen through a different lens in the sports industry, and the event showcased each panelist’s journey of powering forward through adversity.
The Symposium’s various panels included voices from various levels of sports organizations. Executives spoke about their journeys to get to where they are and the challenges they fought along the way.
This was a great opportunity to showcase how AANHPI identities are not just incidental to their experiences, but how they are central to the community’s experience within these leagues and sports in general.
Being able to show up in authentic ways not only benefits AANHPI employees themselves, but it also allows their colleagues to understand how they bring perspectives, background and experiences to their work.
“[The Symposium] really connected our culture to sport in a way that sets a new bar,” Karthikeyan said. “You see our cultures being integrated into our telecasts, marketing, and on the court, and it’s only going to continue to grow from here.”

Apex for Youth group hosted a Youth Tournament in Flushing, N.Y. to encourage youth participation in sports. (Photo courtesy of APEX.)
Externally, for the third consecutive year, APEX also supported a youth tournament in Flushing, New York to celebrate and encourage youth participation in sports with Apex for Youth.
Volunteers from the NBA community assisted with coaching the elementary-aged youth basketball clinic, distributing NBA Cares t-shirts/tournament jerseys and sponsoring tournament trophies for all three divisions of play. Corporate partners such as Nike provided players with sneakers and gifts.
The importance of having serious conversations and translating that into a team environment through sports is critical for the youth and their involvement in the industry going forward.
“Many of our APEX members say this is their favorite event of the year and being able to support an organization like Apex for Youth is incredible,” Chao said. APEX is a longstanding Apex for Youth partner dating back to 2022.
Apex for Youth empowers Asian American youth from low-income and immigrant backgrounds to unlock their potential today and a world of possibility tomorrow. Through partnerships like this, Apex for Youth’s athletics programs help our youth build confidence, develop skills and find belonging through mentorship both on and off the court.
Through other tentpole events such as All-Star Weekend, APEX and the NBA look to continue to support AANHPI initiatives beyond the month of May.
“We are constantly looking for ways to bring the community together and connect our stories,” Chao said.
Rec Sports
Summer Youth Programs at Fairfield University
Is your child interested in discovering new interests, advancing academic goals, or developing athletic skills this summer? On Fairfield’s campus, a wide range of sports, arts, technology, and academic programs await students from elementary school through college. Fairfield University’s scenic campus welcomes students of all ages this summer with an exciting array of youth camps […]

Is your child interested in discovering new interests, advancing academic goals, or developing athletic skills this summer? On Fairfield’s campus, a wide range of sports, arts, technology, and academic programs await students from elementary school through college.
Fairfield University’s scenic campus welcomes students of all ages this summer with an exciting array of youth camps and academic programs designed to spark curiosity and inspire creativity. From STEM workshops to athletic camps and acting classes, the University’s summer offerings provide a dynamic blend of education and fun in a vibrant collegiate setting.
With access to Fairfield’s award-winning athletics facilities and innovative academic spaces, participants will learn from acclaimed coaches, educators, and artists in a supportive, engaging environment. These programs help students build confidence, sharpen skills, and explore interests through competitive sports, immersive academic experiences, the arts, and leadership development.
Athletic Camps
Young athletes will train with some of the region’s top coaches in a variety of sports.
- Coach Carly Girls Basketball Camp: Skill-building, team development, and high-energy games will be led by Fairfield Women’s Basketball Head Coach Carly Thibault-DuDonis.
- Nike Baseball Camp: Baseball players of all abilities, ages 6–12, will train in a collegiate setting with the Fairfield University Baseball coaching staff.
- Nike Softball Camp: Instruction from elite coaches for players ages 10-18 will inspire a love for softball while helping young players build skills and refine technique.
- Adidas Tennis Camp: A top-rated tennis experience will emphasize fun, skill development, and lifelong love of the sport.
- GameBreaker Girls Lacrosse Camp: Expert coaching will be shared in a positive environment by professional player, college coach, and club lacrosse director Rachel Vallarelli.
- GameBreaker Boys Lacrosse Camp: Intense stick skills and scrimmages will take place in Rafferty Stadium with Fairfield’s Head Coach Andrew Baxter and his coaching staff.
- Invasion Field Hockey Camp : This camp is deal for local athletes looking for high-impact play without an overnight stay. Beginners welcome!
- Nike Boys and Girls Soccer Camps : Position-specific training and skill-building competition will be offered for young athletes ages 6–14.
Arts & Theatre Camps
Creative programs will offer young artists the chance to develop their talents in a supportive environment.
Technology & Academic Camps
These camps will challenge students who are ready to dive deeper into tech and academics.
- Emagination STEM Computer Camp: Enroll in an immersive, two-week computer coding camp or a one- or two-week tech camp for courses in game design, engineering, digital art, and coding.
- iD Tech Coding and STEM Camps: Students ages 7-17 will code, design video games, and learn about video production, robotics, AI, building laptops, and more!
- National Computer Camps: This multi-week high-tech computer camp for students ages 7-18 (traditional and virtual programs) offers optional sports add-ons.
- Connecticut Writing Project: Award-winning workshops will help students in grades 3–12 develop their voice and become confident writers.
- Summer Discovery: Institute for the Gifted: Three-week programs for gifted youth ages 4–12 will feature dynamic classes and cultural activities.
Pre-College & College Prep Programs
These programs are for older students preparing for college.
Summer & Intersession College Courses
In addition to youth programming, Fairfield University is pleased to offer intersession courses and summer academic sessions for college students looking to stay on track, accelerate progress toward their degrees, or explore new areas of interest. Online and on-campus course options include disciplines such as business, humanities, science, and social justice. Flexible scheduling allows students to balance summer jobs, internships, or travel while earning academic credit.
Fairfield University’s 2025 summer programs promise a season of learning and exploration. Whether on the field, in the classroom, or on the stage, participants will experience Fairfield Stag spirit in every session.
To learn more and register for summer offerings, visit fairfield.edu/summer.
Rec Sports
A Day With #WeRideTogether | Psychology Today
Recently, I had the privilege of spending a day with the remarkable team behind #WeRideTogether, a movement working to end sexual misconduct in sport. #WeRideTogether is more than a nonprofit; it’s a call to action. Born to confront the pervasive issue of sexual abuse in youth and amateur sports, the organization is reshaping what safety, […]

Recently, I had the privilege of spending a day with the remarkable team behind #WeRideTogether, a movement working to end sexual misconduct in sport.
#WeRideTogether is more than a nonprofit; it’s a call to action. Born to confront the pervasive issue of sexual abuse in youth and amateur sports, the organization is reshaping what safety, accountability, and healing can look like in athletic spaces. Their mission is clear: Every athlete deserves to train, compete, and thrive in an environment free from abuse. Through survivor-centered storytelling, education, and stigma-smashing advocacy, they’re creating the cultural shift our sports systems so desperately need.
What unfolded that day was not just a conversation; it was a reckoning. A reclamation. And, most importantly, a reminder that change isn’t just possible: It’s already in motion.
Harrowing Statistics
More than half of all athletes experience some form of abuse during their lifetime, most often at the hands of someone they know, such as a coach, trainer, or teammate (Hartill et al., 2021). Rates of sexual violence in sport alone have been estimated as high as 14 percent (Lang et al., 2023).
And yet, we still lack a widespread, coordinated investment in preventing sexual misconduct in sport. These numbers are not just statistics, they’re a call to action. They underscore the urgent need to continue confronting abuse in athletic spaces with honesty, accountability, and sustained commitment to cultural change.
A Survivor’s Narrative
Olympic swimmer Margaret Hoelzer courageously shared her story of early childhood sexual abuse and how its impact echoed throughout her athletic career. She spoke of the armor she built: an unrelenting drive to be strong, flawless, and victorious. But no podium finish could replace the parts of her that were taken too soon. “I could cry into my goggles,” she once said, “and no one would notice.”
Today, strength means something different. For Margaret, it’s about transforming pain into purpose. It’s about speaking the unspeakable so that others feel less alone, and so the silence that shields abuse begins to crack.
Intersectionality and Power Imbalances
Dr. Tyler Miles, early in her career as a clinical and sport psychologist, spoke with a clarity and conviction that many never reach, even after decades in the field. She tackled the issue of emotional abuse and child exploitation in sport through a powerful lens of intersectionality, reminding us that certain identities are more vulnerable to harm and less likely to be believed if they come forward. She explained how power imbalances are woven into the very fabric of sport culture. Passion like hers doesn’t just inspire, it catalyzes change.
Trauma-Informed Sport Environments
I spoke about how abuse can echo across a lifetime, often in ways survivors don’t fully recognize or have language for until much later. There is no “perfect” victim; trauma takes many forms. It can surface as behavioral challenges, emotional dysregulation, or nonadherence to rules, frequently misread or dismissed.
In sport, the very qualities we celebrate—intense emotional bonds, high access to authority figures, and close physical proximity—can become dangerous when safeguards are absent. Young athletes are regularly placed in situations we’d flag as inappropriate in any other setting: one-on-one time with unfamiliar adults, unsupervised overnight trips, fast-tracked intimacy without earned trust.
Success should never come at the cost of safety.
The Team That Made It Happen
Carrie Kehring, president of #WeRideTogether, spoke with the raw power of lived experience. Her daughter’s story of sexual abuse—and the systemic failures that followed—fuel Carrie’s fight for justice. She knows all too well the betrayals survivors endure: from sport governing bodies to law enforcement to the communities that should have protected them. Injustices that would break most people. But not her. “And that’s why I’m going to change it,” she said. To that, I say: You already have.
Our host, Caroline Culbertson, held the space with grace, strength, and compassion, facilitating a conversation that was anything but easy. The women of #WeRideTogether—Michaela Callie, Kathryn McClain, Madison Smith, and Annelise Ware—brought fierce intellect, radical gentleness, and a shared commitment to truth-telling. Together, they created an atmosphere where even the hardest truths could be named without shame.
Emily Sheehan, an award-winning filmmaker and the day’s producer, and Caleb Hanson, the director who offered much-needed humor and groundedness, are sure to shape this into a story that demands to be seen and heard.
The #WeRideTogether Victim Experience series is set to launch in the coming months. Follow their work. Support their mission. This is how change takes root.
Real Change
So, what does real change look like?
- It looks like naming the truth: Perpetrators are solely responsible for sexual violence, regardless of their title, accolades, or reputation.
- It looks like sport communities rising to the challenge of creating trauma-informed environments, where everyone understands consent, can recognize grooming behaviors, and knows how to intervene and report safely.
- It looks like believing survivors first. Always. The investigations, the evidence, the procedures—they matter. But before any of that, we believe. Because the cost of disbelief can haunt a survivor for a lifetime.
- And to every survivor reading this: It’s never too late to speak your truth. It’s never too late to reclaim your story.
Rec Sports
Promoting a Diverse Tourism Portfolio
New Explore Evansville President and CEO Tom White is approaching the agency’s top job with one keyword — growth — in mind for strengthening the city’s portfolio of tourism-related event offerings. White’s most recent career stop was with Visit Mobile, Alabama’s northernmost Gulf inlet. Drawing connections to the boost in meetings, conventions, and sports tourism […]

New Explore Evansville President and CEO Tom White is approaching the agency’s top job with one keyword — growth — in mind for strengthening the city’s portfolio of tourism-related event offerings.
White’s most recent career stop was with Visit Mobile, Alabama’s northernmost Gulf inlet. Drawing connections to the boost in meetings, conventions, and sports tourism that the Southern city of 201,367 has seen, White says Evansville is capable of the same.
“I do feel like we can have some immediate success here but also sustain that growth over the next five, 10 years in Evansville,” says White, who spent two years as Visit Mobile’s vice president of leisure and convention sales.
As reported in December 2024/January 2025 Evansville Business, youth sports tourism in Evansville has boomed in recent years thanks to aggressive marketing and tournament-ready venues such as Deaconess Sports Park, Goebel Soccer Complex, and Deaconess Aquatic Center. White vows to maintain that focus and up the ante in supporting the Evansville Regional Sports Commission’s mission to attract high-profile sports events.
“The largest market segment for us is sports tourism,” White says, who adds that he wants to learn “where we are and we’re going to grow with our current assets. And we’re going to add assets in the future, which is going to keep us at the top, competing on a national level.”
The city also has room to increase its convention and meeting business, White says. “We have a quality convention center with the Old National Events Plaza, and our Ford Center is incredible,” he says. “Plus, we have meeting spaces throughout the community, and some of them are historic, unique spots. Meetings, small meetings, and then some mid-size conventions are something that we can continue to grow.”
How to accomplish that? White explains that it comes down to connecting with event planners, asking what they’re looking for, and selling what Evansville provides.
“It is very competitive when you talk about other destinations where they’re all going after those meetings and conventions,” he says. “… (Larger communities) bring a lot to the table. But what they also bring are some things that people push back on: higher prices to the room rates, a higher cost of getting in there, they charge for parking. And when you start adding up all the little things, all of a sudden, the overall cost of that convention is higher.”
In a market Evansville’s size, “your dollar goes farther,” White says. “Convention attendees would spend a lot less money in our community.”
Connections are important in the tourism industry, White says, and he brings plenty of those to the River City. Before taking his position at Visit Mobile, White spent more than 20 years in Huntsville, Alabama. Most of that time, he served as director of sales and outreach with the U.S. Space & Rocket Center, and he also was the marketing director for Yedla Management Company, a Huntsville-based manager of hotels.
Yedla’s properties fan across Alabama and in markets such as Orlando, Florida, Charlotte, North Carolina, and Brentwood, Tennessee. “It was spread out, and my connections on a national level helped those properties,” White says. (As it happens, Evansville-area residents have convenient access to all three cities. Evansville Regional Airport travelers destined for Orlando can reach it through twice-weekly direct air service from Allegiant Air and Breeze Airways. Passengers bound for Charlotte can get there via daily direct flights offered by American Airlines. Road trippers have to put rubber to road for only 151 miles to reach the Tennessee capital.)
Earlier in White’s career, he worked as a general sales manager for Shoe Carnival, which was founded in Evansville. He was born in Nuremberg, Germany, while his father was stationed there with the U.S. Army. He considers the Savannah, Georgia, area his home.
White says he was drawn to Explore Evansville by the area’s potential. He succeeded Alexis Berggren, who left in December to become general manager of the Charlotte (North Carolina) Convention Center.
“Alexis and the team have done a tremendous job of really paving the foundation of what we’re doing,” White says. “I think I can bring a lot of experience and connections within the sale of tourism and marketing, and we can start a sustained, steady growth over the next several years, in all categories. It’s not like sports is going to lead us, or meetings and conventions. I think each category is going to grow gradually on its own.”
Rec Sports
Juvenile Hall remodel to include gym, garden, greenhouse – The Pajaronian
Santa Cruz County Probation Director at Juvenile Hall Sara Berman, Superior Court Judge Jerry Vinluan, Fernando Giraldo, Supervisor Monica Martinez, Assistant County Executive Officer Nicole Coburn and project manager Nicole Steel participate in a ceremonial groundbreaking to launch a massive project at Juvenile hall in Felton. (Todd Guild/The Pajaronian) A long-unused, aging outdoor courtyard makes […]



A long-unused, aging outdoor courtyard makes up the eastern portion of Santa Cruz County’s Juvenile Hall, showing its age with a weedy yard and cracked blacktop.
But a group of probation officials and youth advocates who gathered there Wednesday have big plans for the space.
These include a new 6,850-square-foot gymnasium, a greenhouse and a farm-to-table garden that will supply the renovated kitchen, which itself will serve as a teaching culinary classroom.
The Juvenile Hall facility at 3650 Graham Hill Road officially broke ground on the $23 million project, which will be the most substantial improvement project in the building’s 57-year history, said county spokesman Jason Hoppin.
The renovation also includes renovation and upgrades throughout the building, including two classrooms, air conditioning, restrooms, training and program rooms, storage and equipment spaces, new cell doors, laundry, day rooms and a new central control space.
The work is funded through two rounds of Senate Bill 81 funding from the Board of State and Community Corrections.
The county has had the funding for 18 years, as well as the plans for the work. But the project has been delayed by ever-evolving rules from the state fire marshal, Santa Cruz County Probation Chief Fernando Giraldo said.
“It seems like every two years there was a new fire marshal,” he said.
And every one would bring a list of updated rules, he said.
“That was one of the biggest hurdles,” Giraldo said. “I think this would have been done in half the time.”
On an average day, nine young people who are tangled in the legal system, and who have been determined to be ineligible for community supervision are housed at Juvenile Hall. But for those kids—some of whom graduate from high school while incarcerated—the new facility will be their de facto home and school.
“This facility will be more than just bricks and mortar,” said Probation Chief Fernando Giraldo. “It will be a space for healing, learning, growth and wellness. Because no matter what someone’s past may hold, every young person deserves dignity, opportunity and people who support their success.”
Construction is expected to be completed in late 2026. The facility will remain operational throughout the duration of the project.
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