After more than 60 years, Berkeley Youth Gymnastics is closing its doors. The recreational classes, currently attended by about 700 participants according to campus officials, will no longer be offered by the end of this year. The competitive gymnastics program, which currently has 70-80 participants, will end in May 2026 after the current season ends.
The program offers classes for youth who are anywhere from 14 months to 18 years old. According to parents, the competitive team is historically successful, and in 2024 it won the state championship and placed ninth in the nation.
“Year after year after year, Berkeley Youth Gymnastics had gymnasts who qualified for the state team and went on to regionals and won awards and were very successful,” said Peggy Lynch, whose daughter is entering her third competitive season with Berkeley Youth Gymnastics. “The team in general would win team awards, and the coaches were nominated for Best Program. The choreographers for the floor routines would receive awards from the local gymnastics association for Best Choreography. I mean, this is not just this little rinky dink unknown team.”
Executive Director of Recreation & Wellbeing, or RecWell, Stephen Furman informed the children and their parents of these closures in a Nov. 19 email, two days after parents of competitive gymnasts paid their second installment of fees for this season, totaling about $2,240.
Furman’s email attributes the gymnastics programs’ end to a failure of the longtime facility space on 25 Sports Ln. to meet “operational, safety, and compliance standards.” He said RecWell spent a year searching, unsuccessfully, for a new permanent gymnasium and stated additional financial and logistical struggles “make it impossible to continue the program.”
“You just feel like a commodity. You’re handing thousands and thousands of dollars over to them, and (RecWell administration) doesn’t care,” Lynch said. “They don’t care about the gymnasts, the parents or the coaches.”
According to Lynch and Betsey Noth, a campus employee whose daughter began recreational classes at 18 months old and is now starting her seventh competitive season with Berkeley Youth Gymnastics, the program temporarily moved into UC Berkeley’s Recreational Sports Facility Field House for the past two summers. At first, this was because of pending upgrades to the 25 Sports Ln. gym and then due to RecWell’s search for a permanent space.
Lynch said youth gymnasts were forced to use portable toilets outside the Recreational Sports Facility in summer 2024 because the indoor bathrooms were in an adult environment. After parents complained, this restriction was reversed in summer 2025.
Lynch then emailed Furman, in vain, attempting to asertain the location of the program for the fall. She alleged that when they spoke on the phone, they had a “contentious conversation” that ended with Furman hanging up the call and saying, “‘I’m no longer talking to you.’”
“From the parent side, it has been a story of a consistent disengagement by the university from the time we started until they’ve ended the program,” Noth said. “They’ve taken steps over the last number of years to lower the support, both internally for the coaches and the program itself, and also in discussing with parents and allowing parent involvement.”
For the rest of this season, Berkeley Youth Gymnastics competitive practices will take place at I Flip Gymnastics in Richmond. Lynch said carpooling to Richmond for the new midday Saturday practice time will take up the majority of the day and Noth suspected that parents’ increased fees, which she claimed are new as of this year, is covering the cost of this gym rental.
Lynch said she worries that the coaching staff will leave before the end of the season while Noth expressed confusion surrounding the simultaneous end of the recreational classes, which she remembers fondly as a community institution for campus employees.
“Everybody’s kid went through the rec program at some point, took one class or two classes,” Noth said. “That was really an integrated piece of the community.”

Jewel Annette Devall Rodgers was born on September 29,1954 to Harman and Marcy Devall in Beeville, Tx. She entered Heaven’s gates on December 26, 2025, with her mother, sisters, and children by her side. She was 71 years old.







