Planning grant
awarded for new clubhouse
UCI, Boys & Girls Clubs to use $100,000 grant to
study facility for Eggertsville
By CHRISTINE
VIDAL
Contributing Editor
A new and
permanent facility for the Amherst Boys & Girls Club to meet the needs
of children and families in the Eggertsville neighborhood adjacent to
the South Campus is on the horizon.
A $100,000
planning grant from the Boys & Girls Clubs of America to UB and the Boys
& Girls Clubs of Buffalo will fund a feasibility study for the club, which
first opened in Clark Gym on the South Campus and now is housed in St.
PeterÕs Church on Longmeadow Road.
The clubhouse,
to be developed in collaboration with the University Community Initiative,
the Boys & Girls Clubs of Buffalo, the Amherst Central School District
and the Town of Amherst Youth Board, will include a family support center
designed to address the needs of children ages 7-12 and their parents.
"We are delighted
to join the Amherst Central School District and the Buffalo Boys & Girls
Clubs as a partner for this most worthwhile project, which will benefit
families in the university communityÕs Eggertsville/Amherst neighborhood,"
said President William R. Greiner.
"UB is committed
to public-service programs such as this one," Greiner added. "WeÕre honored
that it was only one of three programs in the nation to be selected for
pilot project funding."
Greiner noted
that the planning grant was made possible thanks to the efforts of Thomas
Reynolds (R-Clarence), who represents the district in which the clubhouse
will provide services. Reynolds was part of a congressional delegation
that was instrumental in increasing the 2001 federal appropriation to
the Boys & Girls Clubs of America to $69 million from $50 million.
"This new
clubhouse is welcome news for children and parents alike," said Reynolds.
"IÕm grateful for the commitment that the Boys and Girls Clubs and UB
are making to this area, and for the role I was able to play in securing
the funding we need to help make this project a reality."
The Amherst
Boys & Girls Club provides guidance and support to neighborhood youth
through after-school recreational and academic programs. It is part of
the Boys & Girls Clubs of Buffalo, which has six clubhouses in the city
and two in the suburbs.
With a daily
attendance of 40 childrenÑand a waiting list of 50 or more who need the
services offeredÑthe Eggertsville club has outgrown its present location.
"The current
program serves a population of young people who are not only in need of
after-school enrichment programs, but whose families could benefit as
well from access to appropriate support services," said Mary H. Gresham,
vice president for public service and urban affairs, and dean of the Graduate
School of Education.
Studies have
shown the Amherst/Eggertsville neighborhood has a substantial need for
educational services, especially before- and after-school programs and
summer-vacation programs, she noted.
"Kids need
attention," Gresham said. "Parents need help."
"We are tremendously
excited about the clubhouse, and think it will be of great benefit to
the children and families of the Amherst/Eggertsville neighborhood," said
Dianne Rowe, executive director of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Buffalo.
"We also are looking forward to working with the University at Buffalo
on this important project."
Although
no specific site has been identified yet, the goal is to build a new Boys
& Girls Clubhouse strategically located in an area of the Eggertsville/Amherst
neighborhood, which is underserved in terms of after-school activities
and family services. The clubhouse will serve about 100 children and their
families.
In addition
to providing support services for families in the neighborhood, the clubhouse
will broaden the potential for training and service contributed by UB
programs and personnel.
The feasibility
study will be conducted by faculty in the School of Architecture and Planning.
The planning process will include soliciting input from all segments of
the Eggertsville/Amherst community.
The new clubhouse
also would meet community needs for recreational and adult information
and education opportunities, and provide an excellent resource to help
address identified social problems by serving as a service-referral agency
for children and families.
Founded in
1926, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Buffalo has partnerships with the Buffalo
Municipal Housing Authority, Erie County SheriffÕs Department and the
Buffalo Police Department; special prevention organizations that include
the Western New York Red Cross and Planned Parenthood of Western New York,
and sports organizations that include the Buffalo Bills, Buffalo Sabres,
Buffalo Destroyers and Buffalo Bisons.
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