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Women’s basketball announces summer clinic dates

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SLIPPERY ROCK, Pa. – The Slippery Rock University women’s basketball program has announced plans to host four camps and clinics over the summer, head coach Ryenn Micaletti announced Monday.
 
The Rock’s summer circuit begins with its annual Team Shootout (June 20-21) followed by an Elite Skills Camp (June 28) for high schoolers before finishing with a pair of youth-focused events with a Youth Camp (June 30 – July 2) and the program’s Little Rockers Youth Clinic (July 28-30).
 
All four events will provide attendees with high-level instruction and competition focused on skill development from college coaches.
 
A full breakdown of all four clinics can be found below. Please contact head coach Ryenn Micaletti via e-mail at ryenn.micaletti@sru.edu.
 
ROCK WOMEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM SHOOTOUT
Registration: Link
Date: June 20-21
Time: 8 a.m. – 9 p.m.
Location: Morrow Field House
For Ages: Girls High School Teams (Grades 9-12)
Description: Our annual high school team shootout will take place June 20-21. Each registered team will be guaranteed a minimum of four games. There will be two games on Friday and two games on Saturday. All games will be played between 8 a.m. and 9 p.m. in Morrow Field House.
Cost: minimum – $315 (4 games). Varsity and JV teams from same high school – $600 (4 games per team).
Contact: Head Coach Ryenn Micaletti (ryenn.micaletti@sru.edu)
 
ROCK WOMEN’S BASKETBALL ELITE CAMP
Registration: Link
Date: June 28
Time: 9 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
Location: Morrow Field House
For Ages: High school girls entering grades 9-12.
Description: The Rock Elite Camp is designed to give players exposure to college coaches, practices and overall environment. You will be put through college caliber workouts, instructed by Head Coach Ryenn Micaletti, staff and Rock women’s basketball players.
Cost: $80
Contact: Head Coach Ryenn Micaletti (ryenn.micaletti@sru.edu)
 
ROCK WOMEN’S BASKETBALL YOUTH CAMP
Registration: Link
Date: June 30 – July 2
Location: Morrow Field House
For Ages: Girls entering grades 4-8
Description: This exciting camp is designed to give young girls the opportunity to learn the fundamental skills of basketball while interacting with SRU women’s basketball players and coaching staff. We are thrilled to offer a fun and engaging experience where campers will develop their skills through scrimmages, competitions and drills. We are excited to offer an overnight option for campers!
What to Expect: Skill development in key areas such as shooting, passing, ball handling, defense and teamwork. Fun competitions and scrimmages to apply learned skills in a game setting. Opportunities to bond with SRU players and staff, gaining insights into the collegiate basketball experience. Recreational activities like swimming to balance skill-building with fun. We look forward to seeing our campers grow as basketball players while having an unforgettable experience. Don’t miss this opportunity to learn from the best while making new friends and having fun!
Cost: Resident – $200 Includes camp instruction, access to facilities, overnight accommodations, all meals and a camp t-shirt. Commuter – $175 Includes camp instruction, access to facilities, breakfast, lunch, dinner and a camp t-shirt
Limit: Enrollment for the camp is capped at 60 participants.
Contact: Head Coach Ryenn Micaletti (ryenn.micaletti@sru.edu)
 
LITTLE ROCKERS YOUTH CLINIC
Registration: Link (coming soon)
Date: July 28-30
Time: 9 a.m. – 11 a.m.
Location: Morrow Field House
For Ages: Girls and boys ages 5-8
Description: We will be introducing and working on the basic fundamentals of basketball such as shooting, passing, dribbling and defense. We will spend the first 45 minutes working on skill work before playing games. The kids will be instructed by Rock women’s basketball staff and players.
Cost: $75
Contact: Head Coach Ryenn Micaletti (ryenn.micaletti@sru.edu)
 

To stay up to date with all that happens at The Rock, follow our official athletic communication accounts on ‘X’ (formerly Twitter,@Rock_Athletics), Facebook (RockAthletics) and Instagram (RockAthletics).

 





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Letter: Kids’ sports too serious for the wrong reasons

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EP 14U softball, MHR football power youth sports in area | Sports

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As club teams continue to grow in popularity across youth sports in recent years, house leagues at the community level for baseball and softball are working as hard as ever to remain relevant.

So, when a neighborhood rallies around a huge storyline at the community level, it can’t help but turn heads.



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Wisconsin should have more Winter Olympians. How can we make it happen?

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Dec. 30, 2025, 5:24 a.m. CT



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Toxic Legacy: How Lead in Schools Is Silently Harming Black Kids

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By Quintessa Williams

Dionna Brown was two weeks shy of her 15th birthday when her world turned upside-down. An outstanding public high school student in Flint, Michigan, with a report card most of her peers would envy, she suddenly began to struggle in the classroom for no obvious reason. 

“I was in AP and honors classes — straight-A student,” she recalls. “Then all of a sudden, I couldn’t remember things. I couldn’t concentrate.” 

Rushed to the hospital, doctors pinpointed the problem: tests revealed elevated levels of lead, a potent neurotoxin, in Brown’s blood. In high enough concentrations, lead can cause permanent brain damage, lower IQ, learning disabilities — and even death. 

Without knowing it, Brown became one of the many young victims of the Flint water crisis. But her story is being repeated in cities across the country.

For generations, America’s crumbling infrastructure has quietly poisoned its most vulnerable populations. From peeling paint in public housing to unsafe water pipes beneath city streets, lead has lingered long before and after its federal ban in 1978. 

But while the government has taken action against lead exposure in homes, experts say its impact in our schools remains overlooked.

In January, the issue made headlines again when a child attending a Milwaukee public school tested positive for elevated lead blood levels. The discovery triggered emergency inspections and forced at least four other schools in the district to close temporarily. 

Subsequent data found that children in cities like Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Chicago also face disproportionately high levels of lead exposure in schools. Cleveland topped the list, with nearly 9% of children under the age of six showing signs of elevated lead levels in their blood. 

“Once a child is exposed to lead, the impacts are irreversible,” says Dr. Denae King, Associate Director of the Bullard Center for Environmental and Climate Justice at Texas Southern University. “There’s not a lot you can do to undo that damage — and it’s still happening.”

These cities share more than aging infrastructure: they also serve large Black K-12 student populations, often in racially segregated neighborhoods. And even Flint, whose water crisis made national news, still hasn’t fully established safe drinking water for its children.

While Milwaukee’s crisis may feel like the beginning for some, the poisoning of Black communities by lead — especially in schools — began long before 2025.

Today, Brown, now the National Youth Director of Young, Gifted, & Green, a non-profit organization, has spent years fighting for environmental justice. But what still haunts her the most is how little has changed.

“That was over a decade ago,” she says. “And we’re still here. Kids are still being poisoned in our schools and communities.”

Schools Built to Fail?

Nationwide, more than 38% of public K-12 schools were built before 1970, well before the government banned the use of lead-based paint. Many of the schools were built to serve Black students in underfunded, segregated neighborhoods, and these aging buildings often contain lead service lines, contaminating the water that flows into cafeteria faucets and hallway water fountains. 

According to a 2022 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Black children face higher levels of early lead exposure. The report found that exposure was linked to significantly lower standardized test scores in fourth-grade reading and math compared to their white peers.

“Most of the Black kids we’re talking about attend schools built before the ban,” King says. “That means many of them are still walking into buildings that are not only failing structurally, but failing them academically, too.”

The Educational Cost 

King explains that the root of the lead crisis in schools often begins underground, with lead service lines — city-owned pipes that deliver water from municipal systems to homes, businesses, and schools. 

“Most cities still have lead service lines,” she says. “So it’s no surprise students are being exposed. She adds that even if a school updates its internal plumbing, “students remain at risk” if city pipes aren’t upgraded. 

Once a child is exposed to lead, the impacts are irreversible,” says Dr. Denae King, Associate Director of the Bullard Center for Environmental and Climate Justice at Texas Southern University.

Dr. Denae king, associate director of the Bullard Center for Environmental and Climate Justice

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, even low levels of lead exposure in children can cause irreversible damage, including reduced IQ, learning disabilities, developmental delays, and behavioral problems. 

“The data is very consistent when we think about learning and cognitive ability with lead exposure in children ages zero to six,” King adds. “By the time you get to first or third grade, you start to see the results of that early exposure.”

Just as striking as the exposure itself is the uneven response. 

In wealthier districts, King says, active parent-teacher organizations (PTOs), can quickly raise money for water filtration systems. Unfortunately, that’s not the case in predominantly Black or low-income communities, where PTOs and other resources are underfunded or absent altogether. 

Who Should Be Held Accountable?

Cleveland, Ohio, currently leads the nation in childhood lead exposure, with more than 8% of children younger than age 6 testing positive for elevated blood lead levels. The Cleveland Metropolitan School District (CMSD) serves a student population that is 64% Black.

When asked about lead in students’ blood, CMSD told Word In Black they’re “concerned” about the health hazard and will “continue to strongly support the work done by the City of Cleveland and the Lead Safe Coalition to identify and remediate lead in our neighborhoods.”

While the school district did not directly address the problem, Dr. David Margolius, the city’s director of public health, says school systems aren’t entirely to blame.

“This is the fault of the generations of disinvestment in housing and public infrastructure in poor communities — which leads to exposure in the first place,” he says. 

We need reparations — full stop. We need healing, investment, and policy change that will center our survival.

Dionna Brown, National Youth Director of Young, Gifted, & Green

However, both King and Brown say the problem is nuanced.  

“There are different levels of accountability that include the municipality and homeowners,” King says. “But on the school side, they are responsible for ensuring their campuses are safe. You send your child to school expecting they’ll be protected, not poisoned.”

She also adds that parents are often left in the dark.

“Many parents have shared that they are concerned that their children are not learning at the same level as other students in their classes,” she says. “And I am surprised that schools don’t do a better job of educating parents about the risk of lead exposure and that they don’t provide wraparound services once a child has been exposed.”

Brown agrees: “Schools still have a responsibility. Kids spend 8-plus hours in school buildings every day.”

Moreover, federal programs intended to address the crisis have faltered. While the Biden administration’s Infrastructure and Jobs Act was designed to fund the replacement of lead service lines, access to the resources remains inconsistent across cities, often leaving underfunded and de facto segregated school districts behind.

“There’s no agency that owns the problem,” Margolius adds. “There’s no one taking ownership for how to fix this at the federal level. That’s the real issue.”

Making matters worse, the CDC recently laid off its entire childhood lead poisoning prevention staff, shifting responsibility to the newly formed Administration for a Healthy America under Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Experts are concerned about whether the federal government is prepared to meet a crisis of this scale. 

Communities as First Responders

Houston offers a glimpse of what’s possible. There, the Bullard Center and community groups are training parents and neighborhood leaders to identify lead hazards and demand answers from school officials.

King also encouraged students to write letters to the district. She said systems have begun to respond.

Community groups “did all the education themselves,” she says. “We trained them on what lead looks like, how it’s affecting their children, and then they got out there and educated others. The community stepped up where the system failed.”

Back in Cleveland, Margolius hopes to see a similar momentum, but on a national level. 

“Keeping these stories alive in the media and community discussions is essential. Without sustained attention, the crisis will quietly continue.”



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SCVNews.com | New Year, New You: Why Not Volunteer?

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As 2025 ends, you may be considering all sorts of new activities that you hope will invigorate and fulfill you in 2026. Why not consider being a local volunteer?

New Year, New You: Why Not Volunteer?

The California Department of Motor Vehicles has announced several new laws signed by Governor Gavin Newsom this year will take effect on Jan. 1, 2026.

DMV Highlights New Laws in 2026

The Santa Clarita Valley Sheriff’s Station is now accepting applications for its Deputy Explorer Program, a career development and educational opportunity for young adults ages 14 to 20 who maintain a minimum 2.0 GPA.

Through Jan. 22: SCV Sheriff’s Station Accepting Applications for Deputy Explorer Program

1964 – United Air Lines Convair 340 forced down in Saugus when both engines fail; 47 aboard, none injured [story]

emergency landing

SoCalGas reports that the most likely cause of the natural gas pipeline rupture in Castaic near Ridge Route Road and Pine Crest Place was land movement at the site of the break.

SoCalGas Update: Land Movement Likely Cause of Castaic Gas Line Rupture

The Santa Clarita Valley Food Pantry has announced its newly elected Executive Board for 2026.

Santa Clarita Valley Food Pantry 2026 Executive Board Announced

The end of the year points out that time speeds up as you get older, or get bored, or think to much.

Happy New Year and Becoming Father Time

Boys & Girls Club of Santa Clarita Valley hosted its annual Holiday Luncheon, bringing together volunteers, board members, employees and community partners to celebrate a year of impact and recognize those who help advance great futures for local youth.

SCV Boys & Girls Club Holiday Luncheon Honoring Community Leaders, Club Impact

The California Highway Patrol is ringing in 2026 by launching a New Year’s Holiday Enforcement Period from 6 p.m. Wednesday, Dec. 31, to 11:59 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 1.

CHP Rings in the New Year With Holiday Enforcement Period

In 2025, 6,096 individuals completed the Community Readiness Champions Gold Medal Training by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health at community events and government staff trainings.

LADPH: 2026 Community Readiness Champions Gold Medal Training

Caltrans has announced extended weekend lane reductions along Interstate 405 (I-405) through the Sepulveda Pass from Friday, Jan. 9 through Monday, Jan. 12.

Jan. 9-12: I-405 Reduced to Three Lanes in Each Direction Through the Sepulveda Pass

A Better World Running will host its Happy New Year 5k, 10k, 15k, Half Marathon 8:30-11:30 a.m. Thursday, Jan 1 at West Creek Park 24247 Village Circle Drive, Valencia, CA 91354.

Jan. 1: Happy New Year 5k, 10k, 15k, Half Marathon

Santa Clarita residents are encouraged to drop off Christmas trees and wreaths at convenient locations for recycling. However, they can still recycle these items at home, curbside.

Through Jan. 10: Recycle Live Christmas Trees Two Ways

The Small Business Development Center hosted by College of the Canyons will offer a free webinar, “California’s New 2026 Laws Every Small Business Owner Should Know” on Thursday, Jan. 8 from noon to 1 p.m.

Jan. 8: SBDC Webinar on Business Laws for 2026

All games of the Cougar Holiday Classic basketball tournament (Dec. 29-30) can be watched live on the Cougars Sports Network.

Dec. 29-30: Cougar Holiday Classic, Watch Live

Caltrans has announced lane closures at various locations in both directions of Interstate 5 (I-5) near Castaic for pavement rehabilitation on Monday, Dec. 29 and Tuesday, Dec. 30.

Dec. 29-30: Lane Closures Scheduled on I-5 in Castaic Area

1907 – Mark T. Gates Sr., founder of Eternal Valley Cemetery, born in Nebraska [story]

Mark Gates Sr.

2011 – John Ford’s 1924 “The Iron Horse,” filmed in SCV, added to Library of Congress’ National Film Registry [story]

title card

The California Highway Patrol has announced that all lanes of the Interstate 5 freeway in the Castaic area have been shut down in both directions to a possible ruptured gas line.

UPDATE: All Lanes of I-5 Now Open in Castaic, Gas Leak Stopped

At this time last year, we had no idea what changes and challenges 2025 would have in store. What I did know, and what this year reaffirmed, is that whatever 2025 brought our way, we’d get through it together.

Kathryn Barger | 2025 Year in Review

The National Weather Service reports that the Santa Clarita Valley was drenched with nearly nine inches of rain from the atmospheric river that brought a soggy Christmas week to most of California.

Sunny Weather for SCV, Cool Temps, Roads Reopen

The city of Santa Clarita is seeking five artists to create artwork on five 60-inches by 60-inches canvases that will be featured above the Valencia Library Branch’s children’s area for two years, May 18, 2026 through May 23, 2028.

City Seeks ‘Under the Sea’ Artwork for Valencia Library

During the 2025 Christmas Holiday Enforcement Period, California Highway Patrol officers were on duty across the state, responding not only to enforcement needs but also to significant winter weather impacts, including snow, flooding and mudslides.

CHP Christmas Holiday Enforcement Period Results

Bring passport applications and all required documents to the Passport Community Fair, 1-5:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 9 at the Old Town Newhall Library.

Jan. 9: Passport Community Fair at Newhall Library





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A simple gift, a powerful message: Bringing hope to youth this Christmas

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Sometimes, a bag of Takis or a Chicago sports t-shirt is all it takes to remind a child that they matter.

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (Chambana Today) – As the holiday season drew near, staff members were reviewing the Christmas wish lists of the youth they serve, and a few simple yet meaningful requests stood out. Joey asked for a bag of Takis. Kaleb wished for shirts from any Chicago sports team. These weren’t extravagant gifts, but they reflected the kind of things many kids desire: fun, comfort, and personal connection.

For the youth served by local programs, Christmas isn’t about lavish gifts—it’s about the reassurance that someone is listening, someone cares, and someone remembers what they love. When these wishes are fulfilled, it sends a powerful message: You matter. You are not forgotten.

The magic happens when those gifts are opened. Smiles widen. Shoulders relax. And hope sneaks in. In those moments, the real magic of Christmas becomes clear, not in the price tag of a gift, but in the love, attention, and sense of belonging it represents. A simple box of Takis or a Chicago sports t-shirt can light up a room with joy, reminding kids that they are seen and cared for.

As 2025 comes to a close, the need for support is more important than ever. Donations can help create these special moments, ensuring that the youth served not only feel valued during the holidays but year-round. To make a difference and receive recognition in the current tax year, donations must be made by 11:59 p.m. on December 31, 2025.

For those seeking a meaningful way to end the year, this is an opportunity to offer hope, love, and the message that someone cares. Visit to learn more and donate today.



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