BY KARISSA MILLER
Iredell-Statesville Schools officials, Iredell County officials and representatives of various youth athletics organizations gathered Thursday afternoon for the first meeting of a youth sports task force.
I-SS Superintendent Jeff James welcomed around 20 people for the meeting at the Career Academy and Technical School in Troutman.
“We have grown so big. What worked 10 years ago doesn’t work now. The county has doubled in size,” James explained. “There’s a lot of youth playing, which is great, but we don’t have a good clean process.”
The superintendent said that there are five or six youth sports organizations that work independently of each other throughout the county.
“The goal is to have a sort of umbrella of set of rules, financial regulations, so that we are held to the same standard and don’t have issues between clubs,” he said.
“We need some guidelines that everyone in the county can go by. When things happen, we need to hold individuals accountable so that it doesn’t impact our kids,” he added.
One of the main issues is that the sports associations, nonprofits and clubs in Iredell County are managed independently. The county and school system have little say in the operations of these entities – and no oversight.
County and school district involvement in these matters only comes into play when the associations use facilities owned by I-SS or the county.
The I-SS Board of Education voted this summer to form the task force after one of the local leagues voted to disband and form a new league — and exclude N.B. Mills Elementary from participating. After an N.B. Mills coach complained, the school board voted to require youth sports leagues to pay standard rates to use district facilities unless all students were included. County commissioners then sent out a news release explaining that the county would withhold the funding it provides the school district to cover expenses related to facilities use by youth sports leagues.
The focus of Thursday’s meetings was getting an understanding of the current state of youth sports and establishing priorities for the task force.
In small discussion groups, participants were asked to share what it will look like for kids if the task force is successful. They answers included the following:
♦ Every child can have an opportunity to play;
♦ All kids and spectators are able to watch in a safe environment; and
♦ Every kid has the opportunity to have fun.
I-SS facilitators Jonathan Ribbeck and Sherrard Martin asked the participants to work in small groups and capture the input from each team member about what’s working and what’s not working, and what suggestions that they have for improvement.
The answers for what’s working included: soccer program in Statesville, Babe Ruth Baseball, the I-SS facilities-use program, smaller leagues, and other organizational highlights.
The groups’ responses for what’s not working included accountability, code of ethics, enforcement of rules, leadership at the association level, safety issues, no governing body to deal with disruptive parents, lack of transparency in finances and other related issues with who is in charge.
The suggestions for what can be done to improve the situation included adding paid staff to resolve issues, improved accountability, creating districts within the county, get municipalities involved and more oversight.
Ribbeck and Martin asked the group to think about overall common themes, topics or action steps. The following topics emerged:
♦ Oversight for organizations;
♦ Consistency across the board; and
♦ Look at what’s working locally and across the state
The following individuals volunteered to serve on committees:
• Daniel Lewis, City of Statesville,
• Greg Harrison, Cloverleaf Elementary,
• Deree Martin, Central Elementary,
• Tracy Sain, ARS Youth Athletics Association,
• Ricky Driver, Harmony Elementary,
• Bobby Deal, I-SS; and
• Mike Tsitouris
“My hope is that among this collective group of people we all work as a team. Our goal is to come up with some structure … that works,” James said.
Excellent start ….. keep going
Let’s discuss the reason for leaving N.B. Mills out of the league. Maybe we will get some answers then.
I don’t understand why someone from ARS is a part of an ISS sport committee. I also am very disappointed that Daniel Lewis volunteered to be part of this when the City of Statesville has enough of their own issues that seem to never get resolved…
The committee is not just for I-SS kids but for every child across the county. I’m sure you agree all kids need an opportunity to play sports, right? The City of Statesville offers many great programs and youth sports opportunities to the kids of Iredell County. Perhaps if people would actually educate themselves to what’s really going on in the community they wouldn’t be so quick to throw stones.
When it comes to NB Mills, no matter how things turn out it will always be a “race issue.” It’s never their fault. They were told two years ago they needed to become 501(c)3 compliant to be in ANY league yet their leadership failed to complete the steps necessary to receive that status. Their financial records are non existent; there’s no accountability. They recruited kids from other schools so the kids could play with kids that “look like them.”
Bobby deal has documentation of NB Mills 501c3 and NB Mills never recruited any schools players. It’s proof on all those matters. The problem is people assume what they are told and never try to get facts. Treat NB Mills like you treat any other school!!! It’s common to be ignorant when you have the slightest understanding! You know what they say about pointing the finger, right?
If the parents/adults that attend NB Mills youth sports events would act in a manner expected of any GROWN UP, then this wouldn’t even be an issue. Let the NB Mills kids play on other teams and let’s move on. One school shouldn’t cost the county time and money.