Saturday, April 30, 2022

Fwd: Please read-- very important-- Making our City safer--Great need to increase the numbers of teens applying for City summer jobs.

----- Forwarded message ---------
From: Richard Flanagan


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Richard Flanagan
Date: Fri, Apr 29, 2022


Subject: Please read-- very important-- Making our City safe

If I can support the Mayor, PPS, P4W,  and you in any way please do not be afraid to ask. 

There is great need for a hands on youth recruitment campaign if you are going to meet your summer jobs placement numbers.

The attached scope of services should help you visualize what needs to be done. Recruitment of these teens needs to be time consuming and intensive.

More than willing to meet if you so wish. Thank you for all you do.

Thanks,

Rick Flanagan
Cell 412-913-4360
_____________________________________________________________________________________________


(Hard copy sent to the Mayor's office) (Attached and below is a proposed recruitment work scope.)


April 28, 2022

To Mayor Edward Gainey, City of Pittsburgh

From: Rick Flanagan

           Email: Rickflanagan2010@gmail.com   Cell: 412-913-4360

I greatly appreciate your focus on teenage violence. I am writing this letter to express my concern on one of your best tools to having a peaceful summer is in trouble. With your leadership the path forward could become very positive.

 

I have had the opportunity to talk with some Community and Organizational leaders about the numbers of youth that are applying for your summer jobs program. My sense of things is that the numbers of applicants are down from last year. Remembering that last year's numbers were down from previous years because of the pandemic.  You may want to request a detailed report from the lead agency who you have entrusted with the management of the summer program-----Partner4Work.  I would recommend you gain specific data on the youth applicant pool coming out of neighborhoods like Homewood, Hill District, and Garfield.

 

Our City really needs for you take control of the situation and move towards having hundreds of our most vulnerable youth apply for summer employment. Failure to do this will result in more youth being out in the streets this summer.

 

For over 20 years I worked in partnership with the City on campaigning around having low income youth apply for summer employment. Presently I am retired and volunteer from time to time. I am willing to volunteer some time and support you if you wish to take control and mount a recruitment campaign.

 

Included with this mailing is a work scope of activities that I firmly believe will result in the applicant pool greatly increasing. Many of these activities have a direct role for you to play and other activities require your leadership to hold other leaders accountable for taking action. I have CC'd this letter to other City leadership to encourage them to get back to you with what they can do.

 

If you wish to meet to go over these action ideas, I am more than willing to meet. Most important to me is that our City takes control and moves to have our youth apply for your program. Time is running out.

 

Thank you for your leadership and I stand ready to support you.

 

Scope of Services For Summer Job Recruitment 2022

1. Broad Based Recruitment

a. Develop a social media outreach campaign to students and other agencies involved in the recruitment process. City should campaign to their own income eligible staff.

b. Make phone calls to students and families. Call every student that applied over the past two years. Have the City's Parks and Recreation Department call families they work with. Have Parks and Recreation take the City's lead partnering with Partner4Work on recruitment. Have Parks and Recreation be directly accountable to Mayor Edward Gainey on the success of an enhanced recruitment effort.

c. Send out recruitment text messages to students, parents, and agencies utilizing a text message service. City leadership can access a master list of 1,000's of phone numbers to text.

d. Answer or respond to phone calls from applicants, parents, and agencies. Partner4Work plays a key role in this matter as manager of the program.

e. Make copies of the template application for distribution.

f. Collect interest forms from PPS students during lunch time recruitment sessions and campaign to these students to have them follow thru on the application process. Mayor Gainey could visit a few of the schools that have the most at risk students. Make it a media event.

g. Conduct trainings helping city organizations understand the application process and encourage them to conduct recruitment activities.

h. Have Pittsburgh churches post information in their church bulletins.    

i. Distribute flyers in varying places of business that families and teens visit.

j. Conduct postal mailings and email campaigns to non-profit and corporate leadership in Pittsburgh.

k. Engage Learn and Earn contractors encouraging and supporting their efforts to recruit Learn and Earn applicants. Have these contractors understand that if summer recruitment goals are not meant there may not be adequate numbers of youth to fill their summer contracts.

l. Encourage and support the juvenile court system and Pittsburgh's foster care agencies in an effort to have their children apply for Learn and Earn.

m. Distribute the City of Pittsburgh tee shirts and other giveaways to City students that fill out a Learn and Earn interest form during lunch room recruitment session.

n. Work with the media to distribute information.

 

 

2. School Based Recruitment

a. Collaborate with Pittsburgh Public Schools (PPS) to have PPS make calls to their families utilizing their robo-call system. Have the Mayor be the voice on the robo-call.

b. Engage counselors and other staff at PPS, private schools and charter schools about the application process so they can aid their students in completion of the application.

c. Send emails to staff at PPS, charter and private schools.

d. Develop a close working relationship with PPS and recruit students during the school day. Go into every high school classroom and recruit.

e. Send emails to staff at charter and private schools.

f. Send a recruitment mailer out to all PPS students 14 years and older. Get mailing labels from PPS. This would be about a 6,000-piece bulk mailing. (This is very important.)

g. Post promotional materials at the schools. Create a City produced flyer or acquire a flyer from Partner4Work.

h. Encourage school based personal to lead recruitment campaigns in their schools.

i. Have schools make regular morning announcements.

j. Hands on work with PPS to conduct an ongoing systemwide recruitment campaign. Work in partnership with PPS.


*** Raise more funds from the foundation and corporate community in order to serve the larger number of applicants resulting from an intensive recruitment campaign.

*** Tie grant funding directly into the numbers of youth served.


--


--

--
Ta.
 
 
Mark Rauterkus       Mark@Rauterkus.com 
Webmaster, International Swim Coaches Association, SwimISCA.org
Executive Director of SKWIM USA, a 501(c)(3), SKWIM.us
The Pittsburgh Project - swim coach and head lifeguard
Coach at The Ellis School for Swimming, T&F and Triathlon
Pittsburgh Combined Water Polo Team & Renegades (Masters) 

CLOH.org & Rauterkus.com & 4Rs.org

412 298 3432 = cell

Thursday, April 14, 2022

[Art-All-Night] Call for Artist and Volunteers for the 25th Art All Night April 23-24 2022




CALL FOR ARTISTS AND VOLUNTEERS

The 25th annual Art All Night will be held April 23rd - April 24th, 2022! This year we have a new location, 6 30th Street in the Strip neighborhood of Pittsburgh PA. The show will be open to the public from 4 p.m. Saturday all night long until 2 p.m. Sunday. View art, hear music, create art, meet friends, and make memories "All Night" long!

Artists
We invite you to submit one (and only one) piece of artwork during this one-of-a-kind neighborhood event attended by thousands of people each year. Artist registration instructions are available at www.artallnight.org where you can use the online registration system anytime. We HIGHLY recommend registering online as registration lines at the event can get long. Artists submitting art pieces must show a photo ID during both registration and pick up.

All artwork must arrive READY TO HANG or be displayed. Wall mounted pieces must be ready to hang from a nail(s). A limited number of clips will be available for unframed artwork. Registration is Saturday April 23rd from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m sharp. We do not accept any artwork after 2 p.m. Pick up is Sunday April 24th, from 2:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. with no exceptions.

Video artists must submit their work by Tuesday, April 19th. Please visit our website for more details.

Volunteers
We need everyone to help with this wonderful event by volunteering. Shifts are as short as 2 hours and we need YOU. Your help is the only way the show goes on and the only way it continues. Please help us put on one of Pittsburgh's great events. Check out the volunteer section of the website www.artallnight.org.

Art All Night... No fee. No jury. No censorship. 412-235-1950

Please forward this message to your friends!


_______________________________________________
This message was sent to mark@skwimusa.org

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--

= = = 
Mark Rauterkus
Executive Director of SKWIM USA dot org, a 501(c)(3)
Mark@SKWIMUSA.org
412-298-3432 = cell

Also publishing at https://CLOH.org

Monday, April 04, 2022

Fwd: Don't Miss Saving Lives, Keeping the Peace This Sunday

- Forwarded message --


Don't Miss

Saving Lives,
Keeping the Peace
A Forum on Policing
and Social Justice

Sunday, April 10
1:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.

First United
Methodist Church
5401 Centre Avenue, Pittsburgh PA 15232

(Revival Chili
Food Truck available at 12:00 noon)

(Vigil from
12:30 p.m. –  1:00 p.m.)

MASKS REQUIRED.

Dedicated to the memory of Jim Rogers and Peter Spencer, Black Pittsburgh residents whose tragic deaths show the need for reform and accountability.

This event will be an opportunity for participants to explore how communities of faith can be supportive of the on-going, long-term efforts of organizations that have been working with law enforcement and local government to bring about changes for the common good.  This gathering will be a space to listen, learn, ask questions, and identify how we can best do our part in this important work. Featuring guest speakers and panel discussions. Ask questions. Speak your truth. Hear from Black clergy, police, and let them hear from you!

Register online today.


Show your support - Donate today to help us continue this important, life-saving justice work.

Moving People of Faith to Action:
Pennsylvania Interfaith Impact Network

office@piinpa.org

www.piinpa.org

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter
Phone: 412.621.9230  
Fax: 412.621.1057

PIIN - Pennsylvania Interfaith Impact Network
None
Pittsburgh, PA None
United States

Saturday, April 02, 2022

Fwd: Registration Open!

--- Forwarded message ---------
From: AQUA Live 


Register for AQUA Live 2022 ✨
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It's official: Registration for AQUA Live 2022 is now OPEN! Take advantage of our lowest rates of the year by registering before August 6, 2022, with early-bird pricing.
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"I'm looking forward to this show and all it has to offer!"
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I'D LIKE TO REGISTER!
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Monday, March 28, 2022

Fwd: 3 weeks until TINMAN #2 in sunny Durban

---- Forwarded message ---
From: TINMAN <support@bactive.com>


3 weeks until TINMAN #2 in sunny Durban

THE DURBAN TINMAN IS BACK ON THE 24th APRIL. 

Are you a TINMAN? 

It's time to sign up and come have some great family fun with us at the Durban TinMan Series, which is back at Suncoast on the 24th April. 



These events are perfect for kids from 8yrs and up, giving them an amazing safe outdoor sporting experience, while building their confidence and giving a event that parents can compete side by side with their kids. There is full road closure for the bike route and the running route takes the runners along the beautiful flat promenade.

It's time for you to TRI ! 

 

ENTER (CLICK HERE)

Events you can enter:

  • 10km Run (12yrs up) 
  • Mini Tri (200m Swim / 5km Cycle / 2.5km Run) 8yrs up. 
  • Sprint Tri (600m Swim / 20km Cycle / 5km Run) 16yrs up. 
  • Sprint RELAY TEAM (600m Swim / 20km Cycle (4 laps) / 5km Run)
  • Challenge Tri (1.2km Swim / 30km Cycle / 10km Run) 17yrs up. 
  • Challenge RELAY TEAM (1.2km Swim / 30km Cycle / 10km Run)
  • Challenge Duathlon (10km Run / 30km Cycle / 5km Run) 17yrs up.


Get your motivation to an all time high, sign up, get training for an awesome family event in April.  

We can't wait to see you there! 

The B-Active Team

ENTER (CLICK HERE)

 

Would you like to update your profile?
Update your preferences or Unsubscribe

Copyright © 2022 B-Active SA, All rights reserved.

Friday, March 18, 2022

Fwd: Should the Olympic committee have a role in youth sport governance? You bet!

Interesting. 
Reposting is not a sign of agreement. 
Mark 

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Sportkid Newsletter

They already do, but further reform is needed and the USOPC may be the only way to get it done.  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌

The Sportkid Newsletter is officially 1 year old! Thanks for your support.

We've covered a lot of ground over the past year. By combining commentary of current events in sport with a developmental outlook I'm hoping you have found these articles interesting.

As this current article notes each sport has its own unique practices but problems are common to all. To solve issues NGBs don't have to reinvent the wheel. Solutions are everywhere. As I suggest below, considering the mix between centralization and segmentation could address concerns in many sports.

If you know someone who might be interested in receiving this letter please share it:

Share The Sportkid Newsletter


Should the Olympic committee have a role in youth sport governance? You bet!

They already do, but further reform is needed and the USOPC may be the only way to get it done.

One of the evergreen topics for anyone interested in youth sports is how to reform the system so that it is more like the way youth and sport used to be in the good old days of sandlot baseball, foot races in the street, and long afternoons of endless physical activities. When we compare youth sport today to what many coaches and administrators experienced in their younger years we witness a shrinking landscape of opportunity, increasing costs, out of control competitive schedules, and a general dissatisfaction with the whole experience. But sandlot baseball is gone forever and the nostalgia we feel for our youth sport past isn't real, it's a quirk of memory and movies. It never really existed the way we like to think it did.

This past week I read an article about what needs to change with US soccer clubs. The author was examining the way competitions were conducted and noted that players did not get enough rest between matches. Tournaments often had to optimize expensive travel trips and schedule multiple games over a short period, sometimes multiple games on the same day. All of this was done so that the youth level competitions mimicked those at much higher levels of performance.

Among the plethora of issues that exist with youth soccer development in America, one of the premier issues is the overscheduling of games in a season. Specifically, this issue refers to players having too many games concentrated in a short time period rather than having too many overall games. This distinction is important because the central problem is the insufficient rest period in between games and not the specific number of games in a season. Similarly, you could also add that the ratio of training sessions to games could be altered to having fewer games and more training. Eric Udelson

A day later I was scrolling through a Facebook swimming forum and noticed a post from a parent wondering whether it was worth it to travel several hundred miles and spend a few days in a hotel for a youngster to compete in a meet where he had only one qualification time. The parent was juggling costs against limited participation, so it's easy to conclude that she was looking for someone to validate her concern that it might not be worth it. Most of the commenters, however, focused on the sport culture aspects; advancing within the sport hierarchy, seizing or not passing up an opportunity to compete, etc. Few acknowledged that the actual cost of the opportunity was what the parent was asking about. When we get mired in the minutiae of our sport structure and reward framework we miss real world concerns, in this case the financial costs involved. 

Excessive competitive expectations and increasing financial requirements are part of the dark side of youth sport. Excessive competition leads to lousy athlete experiences and for no other reason than to fill out competitive brackets that meet the adult idea of what a tournament should look like. Competitive structures, no matter how recreational in nature they are at first, all eventually take on the look and feel of high performance events. Athletes face increasingly pressurized competitions, longer travel times, and less recovery between games and events regardless of their age and ability level. And, as I wrote previously, increasing costs in youth sport is just another form of elimination. While practitioners may talk about how steadily increasing costs undermine the sport-for-all liberalities common to practically all youth sport programs, few see what they, their club, or even their sport can do about it. 

Reforming the youth sport system often seems to be more important to those who are outside it. Perspectives vary of course but those directly involved with a sport rarely see their own critical issues as part of a larger system. The feeling is that problems within soccer, swimming, or volleyball, for example, are unique to the sports themselves rather than part of a bigger picture. Soccer leagues often combine long-distance travel with a compressed tournament bracket to fit as many games as possible into a 3-day weekend; and swimming has its almost never ending ladder of end-of-season, 3- to 4-day competitions. To an outsider these are examples of the same thing but it's unlikely that practitioners in each sport would see it that way. 

But there really is a system; some call it a paradigm, hipsters call it the zeitgeist, hippies used to refer to it as the establishment. No matter what it's called it shapes how we do things not only in sport but in all kinds of social interactions. I noted previously that Norway's national sport governing bodies (NGBs) agree to an overarching practice that allows child-athletes to have a less pressurized sport experience while they are young and only begin ramping up the training, competition, and performance expectations as athletes get older. This kind of social agreement works in Norway because it's small and though immigration has been increasing it remains ethnically Norwegian. Dominant cultural expectations are widely accepted, so it's easier to convince sport practitioners of the value of common guidelines for sport participation. It also helps that the Norwegian Sports Confederation (NIF), an umbrella organization that includes all sports in Norway, also controls much of the funding for sport. Controlling the money gives the NIF more influence over NGBs than it would otherwise have.

Contrast what one might reasonably describe as centralized control in Norway with the way sport is structured in the United States and some cultural differences become apparent. The United States Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) would be the NIF equivalent in the U.S. But unlike the NIF, the USOPC has not tried to enforce standard competition structures on NGBs. The funding provided to the various sport bodies is aimed primarily at high performance with money going to both NGBs and individual athletes ($111 million in 2020). Developmental funds ($34 million) were spent on athlete safety, opportunity, and representation. NGBs are on their own as far as low-level, technical development is concerned and this includes the competitive framework employed at the various age and ability levels.

If the USOPC wanted to address the cost to families of young athletes and improve the competitive experiences of youngsters then the obvious way is to make competing at a young age less attractive. That sounds bad but actually leads to a good result. For individual sports this is easy. In swimming, for example, the youngest athletes could be combined into a 12 years & under group for competition. Younger athletes (8-, 9-, and 10-year-olds) would still be allowed to compete but their age group would be 12 & under, thus they would have less motivation to compete until they were a little older and those who did compete would not be under unreasonable pressure to perform well because the would be racing the 'big kids'. National recognition times that are now kept for 10 & under athletes would be eliminated and the youngest group would be switched to 12 & under.

What would this accomplish? First, it would shift the importance of competition to an age when it is more appropriate while still allowing younger athletes who wanted to compete to do so. Second, it would reduce the cost of participation for the youngest athletes and new families to the sport by limiting competitive expectations and the travel and lodging expenses associated with it. It's a win, win.

In swimming and other CGS sports (those measured in centimeters, grams, and seconds) and target sports like archery or golf a competitive scheme like this would be technically easy to implement. Other sports such as combat and court activities would be a different matter, since allowing much younger athletes to compete against older athletes would invite injury. Team sports, as well, would need a different strategy but in all cases the basic idea—reducing competition and pressure on the youngest athletes—would be the goal.

Why technically easy? Because many things in sport have a certain inertia that makes change difficult. Age group competition that looks the same as that at the elite, collegiate, and international levels is common and expected. But it was implemented before anyone considered—before anyone even knew—that it might not be a very good idea to do it that way. So while changing the youngest competitive levels is easy to do conceptually there would be massive pushback from those who expect it as part of the way we've always done it. This is why the Norway model of instituting guidelines from the national Olympic committee might be the best way to shift youth sport in a better direction.

The USOPC already sets NGB funding contingent on administrative and athlete protection regimes. After reaching a reasonable consensus, policies governing youth sport competitive frameworks could also become part of the funding process.

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