Rec Sports
Youth minister who helped save lives during Minneapolis shooting: “I just wish I could have done more”
A youth minister was inside the pews during Mass at Annunciation Church in Minneapolis on Wednesday morning when a shooter opened fire.
“I just wish I could have done more. No innocent life should have been taken in the house of God,” said Ellie Mertens, youth minister at Annunciation Catholic Church and School.
Mertens was among the teachers, faculty and students who helped save lives.
“Our staff person who lays down her life every day for kids had to literally do it, holding kids’ hands, praying, ‘Jesus, Jesus, Jesus,’ just keep them safe,” said Darby Voeks.
Mertens quickly called Voeks, her supervisor at Crosstown Young Life.
“Sped over here from just a few blocks away, and we rushed into the gym where we were trying to help parents and kids reunite,” said Voeks.
For Voeks, the shooting is deeply personal.
“In addition to doing youth ministry here, I went here K through eight,” she said. “And my parents had a really hard divorce, and my dad left my life, and this community was like a small town that just surrounded us in love.”
Voeks and Mertens are providing the same type of love to the youth and their families at Annunciation, while grieving and coping with Wednesday’s events, as others look out for them as well.
“Their arms wide open in support and people welcoming each other into homes, providing meals, holding each other. It’s going to be a long journey and we need each other,” Mertens said.
Rec Sports
Zorts Sports Partners With GAME Network to Connect Tournament Infrastructure With Media Distribution
Key Takeaways
- Zorts Sports, a tournament management platform, partnered with GAME Network to integrate operations with livestreaming and content distribution
- The collaboration connects Zorts’ registration, scheduling, and scoring tools with GAME Network’s broadcast capabilities
- GAME Network has produced content featuring athletes including Tetairoa McMillan, Elic Ayomanor, and Mason Graham
- Partnership enables tournament directors to access expanded media coverage for Zorts-powered events
- The deal aims to create a pipeline from team registration through post-game highlights and athlete features
Linking Operations to Broadcast Capabilities
Zorts Sports announced a partnership with GAME Network that connects tournament management tools with media distribution infrastructure. Zorts provides end-to-end solutions including online registration, scheduling, live scoring, eligibility checks, and age verification for youth and amateur tournaments.
GAME Network operates a sports streaming platform focused on athlete-driven content across football, basketball, baseball, track, and cheer. The network has worked with high school programs including Mater Dei, St. John Bosco, Bishop Gorman, and St. Frances Academy, along with collegiate programs at Arizona, USC, Oklahoma, Alabama, Miami, and LSU.
The partnership allows events powered by Zorts to access GAME Network’s livestreaming platform and digital content distribution system.
Addressing the Operations-to-Media Gap
Tournament operators using Zorts can now connect their events with GAME Network’s broadcast ecosystem. The integration is designed to move athletes and families from registration through game coverage and highlight distribution within a single connected system.
The partnership enables featured livestreams of select Zorts-powered events, coverage of elite tournaments, athlete spotlight segments, and promotional support for participating organizations. Tournament directors gain media options without requiring separate broadcast arrangements.
Expanding Visibility for Youth and Amateur Athletes
GAME Network has produced content featuring rising football prospects and works across multiple sports categories. The platform focuses on following athletes from youth sports through collegiate and professional levels.
Through the Zorts partnership, youth, high school, and collegiate athletes competing in Zorts-powered tournaments gain access to potential livestream coverage, athlete features, and digital media distribution. The scope of coverage will depend on event selection and production capacity.
Looking Ahead
The Zorts and GAME Network partnership reflects ongoing efforts to connect tournament operations with media distribution in youth and amateur sports. Tournament directors using Zorts gain access to broadcast capabilities, while GAME Network expands its content pipeline through established tournament infrastructure.
The integration creates a pathway for athlete exposure tied directly to competitive events, reducing friction between operations and media coverage for youth sports organizations.
YSBR provides this content on an “as is” basis without any warranties, express or implied. We do not assume responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, legality, reliability, or use of the information, including any images, videos, or licenses associated with this article. For any concerns, including copyright issues or complaints, please contact YSBR directly.
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Are you a brand looking to tap into the world’s most passionate fanbase… youth sports?
Introducing Play Up Partners, a leading youth sports marketing agency connecting brands with the power of youth sports. We specialize in youth sports sponsorships, partnerships, and activations that drive measurable results.
About Play Up Partners
Play Up Partners is a leading youth sports marketing agency connecting brands with the power of youth sports. We specialize in youth sports sponsorships, partnerships, and activations that drive measurable results.
Why Sponsor Youth Sports?
Youth sports represents one of the most engaged and passionate audiences in sports marketing. With over 70 million young athletes and their families participating annually, the youth sports industry offers brands unparalleled access to motivated communities with strong purchasing power and loyalty.
What Does Play Up Partners Do?
We’ve done the heavy lifting to untangle the complex youth sports landscape so our brand partners can engage with clarity, confidence, and impact. Our vetted network of accredited youth sports organizations (from local leagues to national tournaments and operators) allows us to create flexible, scalable programs that evolve with the market.
Our Approach
Every partnership we build is rooted in authenticity and value creation. We don’t just broker deals. We craft youth sports marketing strategies that:
- Deliver measurable ROI for brand partners
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Our Vision
We’re positioning youth sports as the most desirable and effective platform in sports marketing. Our mission is simple: MAKE YOUTH SPORTS BETTER for athletes, families, organizations, and brand partners.
Common Questions About Youth Sports Marketing
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We have answers. Reach out to info@playuppartners.com to learn how Play Up Partners can help your brand navigate the youth sports landscape.
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How This Alumna Built the Nonprofit Good Sports
In 2003, Christy Keswick (B’97) drove a U-Haul from western Massachusetts to Boston. In the back of the box truck were 500 Spalding basketballs.
A week prior, Keswick had trekked to Spalding’s then headquarters armed with just a PowerPoint presentation. She left with her first donation pledge. The only thing left was to pick up and store a truckload of basketballs, all within a week.
Keswick is the co-founder and president of Good Sports. The nonprofit organization collects and donates new sports equipment for underprivileged youth around the U.S.
More than two decades since that cross-state drive, Good Sports has donated to more than 10 million children across the country.
“Good Sports is trying to break down barriers to access for kids to play youth sports and to get involved in physical activity,” Keswick said. “We know that sports have an impact on social, emotional, physical, mental and academic [well-being]. We can’t start saying certain kids have access to something like that while certain kids don’t. That is what drives us as an organization.”
The Roots of Good Sports
Keswick grew up in a small town in Connecticut and loved sports from an early age. When she was a little girl, she joined her town’s new youth soccer league. She was the only girl on her team and felt out of place, but her father kept encouraging her.

“Soccer ended up being a sport that I gravitated toward. It was always a safe place to be,” she said. “Sports was something I did every day, spent a lot of time on courts and fields. I learned a ton from sports in terms of teamwork and just life skills.”
She took her love for sports with her to the Hilltop.
Keswick cheered on her friends playing for Georgetown’s basketball, soccer and football teams. She also coached a Little League team with her best friend and stayed active by running around the hilly streets of the Georgetown neighborhood.
In the classroom, Keswick valued her liberal arts education. She took to heart the Jesuit value of cura personalis and the importance of developing every part of herself.
“It’s not one thing that makes you successful. It’s many things and experiences over time that make you successful,” she said.
Keswick studied finance and marketing in the McDonough School of Business, where she developed the business acumen she would later use as a nonprofit founder. During her junior year, she interned with Ernst & Young and its Entrepreneur of the Year program. She learned about what it takes to build a start-up company, lessons she would use several years later as the co-founder of Good Sports.
Launching a Nonprofit Start-Up
After graduating from Georgetown, Keswick worked in management consulting in Boston. On her first day of work, Keswick met her colleague Melissa Harper, who would become a good friend and the co-founder and CEO of Good Sports.

Keswick loved to research, create strategies and solve problems for her clients. But she also wanted to implement the strategies she was creating and build something herself, not hop between projects every few months. She wanted to do something more meaningful, she said.
During a scuba diving trip with Harper in Key West, Florida, the two friends dreamed about building a business together. It was the first play in what would eventually become a game plan for Good Sports.
Keswick and Harper wanted to channel their love for sports into a business in the Boston area. Through research, they recognized that participation in youth sports had been declining, and many children were being priced out of sports.
The two also realized that Massachusetts was a hub for sports equipment companies and manufacturing, including firms such as New Balance, Reebok, Puma and, at the time, Spalding.
“If we could build a model where these companies could provide their excess equipment they weren’t selling, maybe we could redistribute it to organizations that need it and help solve this problem,” Keswick.
In 2003, Keswick and Harper founded Good Sports and put their business model to the test. Back then, entrepreneurship was not as common a path as it is today, Keswick said. Quitting their consulting jobs was a huge risk.
“You can’t build a business on the side, but you quickly learn that no one wants to give you any money to do it until you prove the business model,” Keswick said. “As scary as it was, it felt so energizing to be able to think about building something on your own.
“If you’re going to build a nonprofit, you’ve got to be passionate about the mission. We just felt really good about what we might be able to build together if we could get this right. That kept us going.”
Making Sports Available for All Kids
Today, Good Sports has donated almost $130 million worth of sports equipment to high-need communities in the U.S.
When Good Sports received its first donation, Keswick and Harper had no idea where to store 500 basketballs. They stuffed their cars, apartments, friends’ homes, anywhere they could find until they could identify communities that need sports equipment.
Now, the nonprofit operates a 45,000-square-foot warehouse to sort donations. The organization has also grown to 30 full-time employees.
As president, Keswick leads the organization’s strategy, business development and marketing. Over the last two decades, Keswick has formed partnerships with prominent brands like Gatorade, Under Armour and Dick’s Sporting Goods. Good Sports also regularly collaborates with professional athletes such as Steph Curry and Paige Bueckers.
In November, the Georgetown Entrepreneurship Alliance awarded Keswick with the 2025 GEA Entrepreneurial Excellence Award for Best of Social Impact. Keswick said she was proud to be awarded by her alma mater and to see Georgetown recognizing social impact entrepreneurship.

“I think recognizing that there are people who are doing this for a different kind of return and a different kind of impact, that made me proud as a Georgetown alum that they’re thinking in that way,” she said. “It was a pretty incredible experience.”
In looking ahead, Keswick is focused on positioning Good Sports to thrive well into the future, beyond her leadership.
“We have built the foundation of a company that is going to thrive beyond the founders. That is something that we care deeply about and that we are focused on as an organization,” she said. “There’s more to do here, and the work we are doing is critically important.”
For Hoyas looking to get into entrepreneurship, Keswick recommends leaning on others, especially Georgetown alumni, and having patience while building a strong business foundation.
“There has to be some unmet demand, some unmet need that makes this make sense. Or, you need to figure out how to be a disruptor around something you can do better,” she said. “If you can identify that, then you can be creative about how to approach it. Just know that you’re never going to be able to do this alone. Building a business is definitely a team sport.”
Rec Sports
Basketball Hall of Fame hosts ‘World Basketball Day’ youth clinic
SPRINGFIELD, Mass. (WGGB/WSHM) — In honor of “World Basketball Day’ on Sunday, the Basketball Hall of Fame held a special youth basketball clinic in collaboration with the YMCA of Greater Springfield.
The event welcomed local students to participate in training drills and learn the fundamentals of basketball.
The Marketing and PR Manager of the Hall of Fame, Kiana Lowe, says, “The clinic is mostly sponsored by the NBA. So, we are focusing on young kids from sixth grade and under…Just learning the fundamentals of basketball. What basketball is about. What it takes to be a basketball player…The commitment, determination, and also the camaraderie that comes with basketball… Basketball is a team sport for a reason. And we really wanted to highlight that today.”
The event also had an appearance from special guest former NBA Rookie of the Year, Michael Carter-Williams who had some words of advice for kids who dream of a future in basketball.
Carter-Williams says, “Yeah, I mean, just, you know, work hard. Be a good person, right? Try to be the healthiest person you could possibly be… And just chase your dreams, right? Never let anyone deter that… If you want to do something, you know, practice it every day and don’t let anyone tell you differently.”
This year’s World Basketball Day celebration also coincided with the 175th anniversary of the YMCA, the organization where the game of basketball was originally introduced in 1891.
Copyright 2025. Western Mass News (WGGB/WSHM). All rights reserved.
Rec Sports
Monday Morning Maui Sports: Oregon State’s Maui Classic is about more than basketball : Maui Now
In a game with youngsters at Kalama Intermediate School before the games at the Maui Classic women’s basketball tournament, University of Hawai‘i junior guard Jovi Lefotu couldn’t stop her competitive side from coming out.

Lefotu, the only player from Hawai‘i on the Rainbow Wahine roster, was thrilled to play in the Maui Classic on Friday and Saturday at the Erdman Athletic Center on the Seabury Hall campus, but she might have been more excited to interact with Maui youngsters.
UH beat Liberty 67-58 on Friday when Lefotu scored 9 points and dished out 3 assists, but the Rainbow Wahine lost on Saturday to Montana State 72-56 when Lefotu was limited to 2 points, 1 assist and committed 5 turnovers.
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Lefotu, an ‘Iolani School graduate from Kaneohe, O‘ahu, played a game called “land, sea, air” with Kalama students and teammates that involves jumping from spot to spot or into the air at the right time. Lefotu beat UH teammate Bailey Flavell in the championship match of the friendly competition.
“They’re so cute,” Lefotu said of the students that the Rainbow Wahine interacted with Friday morning, playing games, holding a question and answer “talk story” session and doing about 30 minutes of basketball drills and interaction. “They had a lot of energy and we played games. We talked with them and it made our day just to be with them and spend time with them and get to know them — they asked us a lot of questions.”
Lefotu added, “I hope we impacted them as much as they impacted us.”

Oregon State University started the tournament, involving four teams, in 2016 and it has been played every year since with the exception of 2020 when it was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Oregon State improved to 15-3 in the event with a 53-51 win over Montana State on Friday and a 64-57 win over Liberty on Saturday. The Beavers go home to Corvallis, Ore., with an 8-5 record, while UH is now 6-6.
Hawai‘i beat Chaminade 73-31 in an exhibition game last season at Ka‘ulaheanuiokamoku Gym at Kamehameha Schools Maui, but the games this weekend were the first games that counted that the Rainbow Wahine have ever played on Maui.
“Anytime we can come to a Neighbor Island, it’s fabulous,” Hawai‘i coach Laura Beeman said. “I wish we could play several times a year on every Neighbor Island, not just O‘ahu. Unfortunately, our schedule doesn’t allow it and we sometimes need that home court advantage. But I’m so appreciative of the fans that came out tonight that supported us. We felt the aloha, which was great. … We absolutely love coming to Maui. It’s just, it’s such a special place.”

Beeman said the trip to Maui can be a recruiting tool.
“Anytime that you can come here, not only for us to watch kids, but for kids to watch us and say, ‘hey, I want to be a part of that coaching staff, that program, that culture, that ‘ohana,’ ” Beeman said. “We want local kids to want to play for us.”
Oregon State head coach Scott Rueck and Ben Prangnell, the founder of nonprofit organization Vertical Sports Maui, the tournament organizer, met 15 years ago when they were both part of a youth basketball clinic on Maui. Rueck became the head coach at OSU soon after and he stayed in touch with Prangnell and the Maui Classic developed from an idea to reality in 2016.
The Maui Classic started being played at War Memorial Gym in Wailuku and has also been played at the Lahaina Civic Center and South Maui Gym, but has now been held for the last three years at the Erdman Athletic Center on the Seabury Hall campus.

It has become a center point of the Beavers’ annual schedule.
“This trip is so meaningful for so many reasons,” Rueck said. “A, to look forward to. It’s always nice to have something like that. Certainly recruiting, it helps. But the real payoff is once we’re here, and not only to attempt to impact, but to feel the impact that we’re having on the community.”
Rueck added, “And then it’s also amazing to feel the reward for showing up and being supported and loved so well by a place that really has become our second home over the years. And so, this is a beautiful event. We’re so grateful for Vertical Sports, the people in Maui for supporting us so well. And it’s certainly a highlight of the year.”
“This trip was a blessing for us,” Oregon State junior guard Kennedie Shuler said after scoring 9 points, grabbing 5 rebounds and dishing out 7 assists on Friday. “This is my third year here, so I’m so glad for all my new teammates that this is their first time just to come see Maui.”

Shuler added that the team was able to put in some community service time with Seabury Hall.
“It’s a beautiful place to play basketball, but even better than that, it’s an amazing time for us to give back to the community,” Shuler said.
The Hawai‘i team lined up for a post-game group photo with the Maui High School girls team. The Sabers are the defending Maui Interscholastic League champions.
“I’m glad to see high school girls from Maui watch us come out and play,” Lefotu said. “Just being an inspiration for Hawai‘i girls and to show them if you’re from Hawai‘i, you still can make it big. You just gotta work hard. … It’s always fun to play in front of your home state.”
Maui High’s Naiara Bal, the only senior on the Maui High team, said: “It was such a good experience and fun to watch. It’s very cool to see (UH) come here, finally, so we can watch. I love the way they play.”

Montana State went home to Bozeman, Mont., with a 7-4 record after going 1-1 here. The Bobcats visited Lokelani Intermediate School in Kīhei on Wednesday. It is the third time Montana State has been part of the Maui Classic.
“Well, it’s a great trip, number one,” MSU coach Tricia Binford said. “Oregon State does a great job of investing in the community here, so it’s a win in a beautiful area to get two really great games. All four teams here won their conferences last year, but more importantly, we get to give a little bit back to this great community. So, I love that we get to serve some people while we’re here and show some great role models.”

Liberty traveled 16 hours to get here Tuesday from their campus in Lynchburg, Va. The Flames (6-5) visited Kīhei Charter School for their interaction with Maui students, as is the tradition for every team that plays on the Maui Classic.

“It’s amazing. I mean, this event is bigger than basketball,” Liberty coach Alexis Sherard said. “Just to have an opportunity to go into the community, to give back to the community, just for our team to have the experience of going to the middle school and pour into those middle school kids’ hearts and give them hope and let them know, ‘hey, you can be a champion.’ … All of our players, they were in middle school as well, and look where they are now.“
Sherard concluded, “I think they really enjoyed our team. Our team enjoyed them. So hopefully we were able to touch at least one student’s heart.”

“Monday Morning Maui Sports” columns appear weekly on Monday mornings with updates on local sports in the Maui Interscholastic League and elsewhere around Maui County. Please send column ideas — anything having to do with sports in Maui County — as well as results and photos to rob@hjinow.org.
Rec Sports
West Fargo United beat Mandan Braves – The Rink Live
West Fargo United won its game at Starion Sports Complex Cadillac Rink against the Mandan Braves on Saturday, Dec. 20, 2025, ending 5-2.
The Braves took the lead early in the first period, with a goal from Brenna Bauman. Emline Brincks and Hannah Berreth assisted.
The second period ended with a 3-2 lead for the Packers.
The Packers increased the lead to 4-2 early in the third period when Emma Hassler netted one again, assisted by Payton Stocker and Kaylee Augdahl.
Emma Hassler made it 5-2 with a goal late in the third, assisted by Ava Josephsen and Stella Gimberline.
The teams play each other again on January 30th.
Coming up:
The Braves will go up against the Devils Lake Firebirds at Burdick Arena on Friday, Jan. 02, 2026, while the Packers will battle Fargo Davies on Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2025.
Read more prep coverage
north dakota girls hockey
Scoring:
North Dakota, Starion Sports Complex Cadillac Rink
6th December 2025
West Fargo United at Mandan Braves
2-5
1st period:
Mandan Braves, 0–1 (6:41) Brenna Bauman
2nd period:
1–1 (24:59) Kaylee Augdahl, 1–2 (27:10) Afton Leingang, 2–2 (30:12) Stella Gimberline, 3–2 (36:17) Emma Hassler
3rd period:
4–2 (43:59) Emma Hassler, 5–2 (54:06) Emma Hassler
Automated articles produced by United Robots on behalf of The Rink Live.
Rec Sports
Colorado juvenile detention centers facing severe staff shortage
Carissa Wallace started working at the Lookout Mountain Youth Services Center in Golden two years ago because she felt strongly about helping rehabilitate young people convicted of crimes.
She loved the teens and loved the work.
But staffing shortages began to take a toll. Management routinely mandated employees pull 16-hour shifts multiple days a week because they were so short-staffed. Fewer workers meant there was nobody to respond to crises or adequately monitor the young people in their care, she said. Safety concerns mounted.
Wallace said she came home every day and cried. She went to the doctor for medication to help deal with all the anxiety the job brought.
“After two years, I was mentally broken from that place,” she said in an interview. “When I had to think about my safety every second of the day, I could no longer make a difference. I could no longer help the kids.”
Colorado’s youth detention centers are facing a staffing crisis, leading to serious safety concerns for employees and youth and low worker morale, current and former staffers told The Denver Post. The Division of Youth Services, which oversees the state’s 12 detention and commitment facilities, employs more than 1,000 employees, according to state data. Nearly 500 additional jobs remain vacant.
Some facilities, such as the Mount View Youth Services Center in Lakewood, reported a 57% staff vacancy rate, according to June figures compiled by the state. At the Spring Creek Youth Services Center in Colorado Springs, nearly 10% of its staff at one point in November were out due to injuries sustained on the job.
Current and former staff say leadership deserves a large chunk of the blame. Employees say they don’t feel management supports them or listens to their concerns. Higher-ups aren’t on the floor dealing with riots, they say, or leading programs. When situations do get out of control, staff say the brass simply looks for someone to blame.
“The administration says they care,” said Kim Espinoza, a former Lookout Mountain staffer, “but their actions say otherwise.”
Alex Stojsavljevic, the Division of Youth Services’ new director, acknowledged in an interview that working in youth detention is difficult. Retaining staff is a big priority with ample opportunities for improvement, he said. The division plans to be intentional about the people it hires into these roles, making sure that candidates know what they’re signing up for.
He hopes to sell a vision that one can make youth corrections a long, fulfilling career.
“Change is afoot in our department,” said Stojsavljevic, who took the mantle in October. “Just because we’ve done something for 20 or 30 years doesn’t mean we have to continue to do it that way.”
Critical staffing levels
Staffing shortages at Colorado prisons and youth centers have remained a persistent problem in recent years, though vacancy rates at the DYS facilities far outpace those at the state’s adult prisons.
A lack of adequate employees means adult inmates can’t access essential services like medical, dental and mental health care, according to a 2024 report from the Colorado Criminal Justice Reform Coalition. Education, employment and treatment programs lag.
“Simply put, because of the staff shortage, the (Department of Corrections) is not able to fulfill its organizational mission, responsibilities and constitutional mandates,” the report’s authors wrote.
Studies point to a litany of physical and mental health issues facing corrections workers.
Custody staff have a post-traumatic stress disorder rate of 34%, 10 times higher than the national average, according to One Voice United, a national organization of corrections officers. The average life expectancy for a corrections worker is 60, compared to 75 for the general population. Divorce and substance abuse rates are higher than in any other public safety profession, the organization noted, while suicide rates are double that of police officers.
The Colorado Department of Corrections has a 12.6% overall department vacancy rate, according to state figures. Correctional officer vacancies sit at 11%, while clinical and medical staff openings are nearly 20%.
Meanwhile, nearly one in three DYS positions is vacant.
The most common open positions are for the lowest level correctional workers, called youth services specialists. The Betty. K. Marler Youth Services Center in Lakewood currently has 23 vacant positions for this classification of employee out of 63 total slots. The facility is also short 10 teachers. Platte Valley Youth Services Center in Greeley has 21 open positions for the lowest-tier youth services specialist role out of 71 total jobs.
The same candidates who might work at DYS are also being recruited by adult corrections, public safety departments and behavioral health employers, Stojsavljevic said, leading to fierce competition for these applicants.
Current and former DYS workers say the staffing issues serve as a vicious cycle: The fewer employees there are, the more mandated overtime and extra shifts that the current staff are forced to take on. Those people, then, quickly burn out from the long hours and dangerous working conditions, they say.
Wallace, the former Lookout Mountain worker, said almost every day for the past year, leadership mandated staff stay late or work double shifts. This routinely meant working 16-hour days.
“It got to the point where people weren’t answering their phones,” she said. “People were calling out sick because they were overworked and exhausted.”
Wallace estimated that 80% of the time, the facility operated at critical staffing levels or below. State law requires juvenile detention facilities to have one staff member for every eight teens, but workers say that wasn’t always the case.
Many days, staffers said, there weren’t enough employees to respond to emergencies. In some cases, that meant the young men themselves assisted staff in breaking up fights with their peers.
One night, some of the teens set off the fire alarm at Lookout Mountain, which unlocked the doors and allowed the young people to run around campus, climb on buildings and break windows, workers said. Without enough staff to rein in the chaos, employees wanted to call 911.
But they said they were told they would be fired if they did. Leadership, they learned, didn’t want it covered by the press.
“Our jobs, our lives were threatened because they didn’t want media coverage,” Espinoza said.
Stojsavljevic said the department is “acutely aware” of the mandated work problem, though he admitted that in 24-hour facilities, staff will occasionally be told to work certain shifts.
The division has implemented a volunteer sign-up list, where staff can earn additional incentives for working these extra shifts.
Since he’s been in the job, the state’s juvenile facilities have never dropped below minimum staffing standards, Stojsavljevic said.
Routine violence in DYS facilities
Staff say violence is an almost daily occurrence inside DYS facilities, which contributes to poor staff retention.
The division, since Jan. 1, recorded 35 fights and 94 assaults at the Lookout Mountain complex, The Post reported in September. Since March 1, police officers have responded 77 times to the Golden campus for a variety of calls, including assaults on youth and staff, sexual assault, riots, criminal mischief and contraband, Golden Police Department records show.
Twenty of these cases concerned assaults on staff by youth in their care.
Multiple employees suffered concussions after being punched repeatedly in the head, the reports detailed. Others were spit on, bitten, placed in headlocks and verbally threatened with violence.
Chaz Chapman, a former Lookout Mountain worker, previously told The Post that he reported three or four assaults to police during his tenure, adding, “I was expecting to get jumped every day.”
“We were basically never able to handle situations physically, and the kids knew that; they were stronger than 90% of their staff,” Chapman told The Post in September. “The ones who stood in their way would get assaulted, such as myself.”
Staff said leadership still expected them to show up to work, even while injured.
Espinoza said she injured her knee during a restraint, requiring crutches. DYS continued to put her on the schedule, she said. So the staffer hobbled around the large Golden campus through the snow and ice.
One supervisor had his head cracked open at work this year, Espinoza said. He went to the hospital and returned to Lookout. Wallace said she’s been to the doctor 20 times since she started the job due to injuries sustained at work. She said she still has long-lasting shoulder pain.
“If they’re gonna keep hiring women who can’t restrain teenage boys, people are going to get hurt,” she said. “That was an everyday thing.”
In November, 28 DYS employees were out of work on injury leave, according to data provided by the state. Spring Creek Youth Services Center in Colorado Springs had nine workers injured out of 91 total staff. The state did not divulge how these people were hurt.
Stojsavljevic said safety is the division’s No. 1 focus area. If staff are injured on the job, he said, it’s important that they’re supported.
“Staff have to be both physically healthy and emotionally healthy to do this work,” the director said.
Division policies allow injured employees to take leave if they need it. Depending on the level of injury, some staff can return to work without having youth contact, Stojsavljevic said.
‘That place takes your soul’
But workers interviewed by The Post overwhelmingly blamed management for the division’s poor staffing levels.
As staff worked 16-hour days and were mandated to come in on their days off, they said administrators wouldn’t pitch in.
“A lot of people felt it’s unfair,” Wallace said. “The people making a good amount of money weren’t truly being leaders. They were forcing us to pick up the slack, but they didn’t want to deal with youth. They wanted to sit at a desk, collect their check, and go home for the day.”
New recruits were thrown into the deep end with barely any training or support, employees said. Those new staffers quickly saw the grueling hours and how tired their coworkers were all the time. Many left within weeks of starting the gig.
“I could see their souls were literally gone,” Wallace said. “That place takes your soul.”
After safety, Stojsavljevic said the department is prioritizing quality and innovation. Leadership wants to make sure that programs and policies are actually getting better results.
The director, meanwhile, said he wants to hear directly from staff for new ideas.
“We’re more than willing to try things out,” he said. “We can’t just continue operations the way they have been just because that’s the way we’ve always done it.”
Wallace said her experience at Lookout Mountain traumatized her. The job prompted her to go to therapy and to start taking medication for anxiety.
When state officials emptied Lookout Mountain due to deteriorating safety conditions in August, Wallace was sent to work at Platte Valley. Leadership promised to retrain staff so they could eventually reopen the Golden campus.
But when Wallace showed up on her first day of work at Platte Valley, security never checked her for contraband, she said. Staff were being mandated to work overtime shifts. Within 20 minutes of starting, she was put alone with a young person she didn’t know.
The following day, Wallace called her boss. She couldn’t work for DYS anymore.
At the end of the day, Wallace said, it’s the young people who suffer.
“I hope they make some changes because these boys deserve so much better than what they’re getting,” she said.
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