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"Our Youth, Our Community, Our Future"


Hyannis Youth & Community Center News


2007 News

HYCC scores with help of Barnstable Youth Hockey

Barnstable Youth Hockey Enthusiasts raise the $50,000 check presented to the Hyannis Youth & Community Center in January. Photo courtesy of David Still II and the Barnstable Patriot.

 

2006 News

Million Dollar Check

Barnstable Town Council President Hank Farnham accepts a $1 million check from Mark Thompson, President of the Lyndon P. Lorusso Foundation for the new Hyannis Youth & Community Center. Joining Mr. Farnham and Mr. Thompson for the ceremony were Dave Chase, President of the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation, Andrew Court, Lorusso Foundation Trustee, and Town Manager John Klimm.

 

Press Releases: Fall 2004

Youth center funding tops $15 million

Barnstable Patriot October 21, 2004

photo courtesy Lynne Poyant RAY OF LIGHT – Former Boston Bruins great Ray Bourque helped celebrate the opening of the Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Memorial Skating Rink Saturday, where it was announced that another $1 million was donated for its replacement. Attending the ceremony (l-r) were Dr. Gail Lese, assistant town manager Paul Niedzwiecki, Sen. Therese Murray, David Chase, Banknorth board member John Drew, town council president Gary Brown, Ray Bourque and youth center foundation president Paul Lebel.

By David Still II

With another $1 million donation, fund-raising for the Hyannis Youth and Community Center is $1 million over its original $14 million goal, and that’s all to the good, according to the organization’s president.

 

The pledge was comes from the Lyndon Paul Lorusso Charitable Trust of 2002, a philanthropic organization formed by Paul and Lila Lorusso from the remaining assets Independence Park. For the donation, the entire ground floor of the center will be named for Lyndon P. Lorusso, the Lorusso’s son who died in a 1971 accident. It is the latest in a long line of large donations and namings for the Lorusso family, which has done much philanthropic in Lyndon’s name.

 

The announcement of the donation and naming was made by Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation chairman Paul Lebel just prior to the season opening at the rink on Saturday.

 

“At this point we’ve raised about $15 million,” said David Chase, president of the foundation.

 

That’s more than the original estimates for constructing and equipping the center called for. In the coming months, those numbers will be revisited as the final design work is completed.

 

The youth center got a significant boost last month with the passage of the state’s supplemental 2004 budget, which tapped more than $400 million in state surplus fund for new spending and projects. Included in that amount was $3.5 million for the non-town matching grant for the center, bringing the total to $14 million prior to the latest gift.

 

Chase said that the town and fund-raising group will have discussions about what to do with any excess funds. Options include the town simply not spending its full $9 million commitment, or perhaps putting it toward the establishment of an ongoing endowment for the center’s operations and maintenance. Such an endowment has been discussed and is desired by the foundation, but talks with the town on those matters have yet to take place.

 

One thing that is certain, Chase said, is that the fund-raising effort has not ended.

“We’re not done raising money,” Chase said. Those interested in making a donation or simply learning more about the youth center should log on to www.hyannisyouth.org.

 

The announcement came as part of the season opening for the skating rink, which featured a special appearance by former Boston Bruins captain Ray Bourque. His appearance was coordinated through Banknorth, for which the former Bruin serves as a spokesman. Banknorth is among the larger contributors to the youth center, providing a large enough donation to have the main lobby carry its name.

Bourque skated, provided a clinic and scrimmaged with four different groups as part of the afternoon, appropriately called “An Afternoon with Ray Bourque.”

Chase estimated that there were between 400 and 500 people in attendance.

 

The Center

If all goes according to plan, the current rink will be torn down in Spring 2006 and the new twin-rink facility, along with its large gymnasium and function room, will open its doors in the fall of that year.

 

While the Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. Memorial Skating Rink, built as an open arena in 1957 and covered in 1965, will cease to exist, Chase said that the name will remain in some fashion and will be associated with the new ice rinks. The exact details have not been worked out with the family. U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy assisted in the initial funding of the project, securing a $1 million U.S. Department of Education grant toward its construction.

 

There remain numerous other naming opportunities for the project, including name of the overall facility. According to the organization’s Web site, www.hyannisyouth.org, that honor would require a gift of $2.5 million.

 

Other naming opportunities include the gymnasium ($250,000); computer room ($100,000); fitness/ballet studio ($50,000) and other small areas and fixtures.

Already taken are the café (Scudder Family/Hy-Line), the main lobby (Banknorth of Massachusetts), the function room (Tony Shepley/Shepley Wood Products), the rink lobby (Barnstable Youth Hockey Association), the game room (the Tracy family), and the home bench in the small rink (Puritan Cape Cod), among others.

 

David Still is the editor of the Barnstable Patriot. He welcomes your feedback.

 

 

 

State’s $3.5M comes in for youth center.

Work toward 2006 opening begins

Barnstable Patriot September 23, 2004

By the time Governor Mitt Romney signed the supplemental ’04 budget last Friday, the $3.5 million for the Hyannis Youth And Community Center was already assured.

The work by Cape legislators, with a big hand from Senate Ways and Means Chairman Therese Murray, helped the project avoid the swipe of Romney’s veto pen and was even called out within Romney’s comments to the press after the bill was finalized. The governor vetoed $76 million from the budget package approved by the House and Senate for a total supplemental spending package of $439 million.

The $3.5 million completes the non-town funding portion of the $14 million project, allowing it to proceed to the design and engineering stage. David Chase, president of the youth center’s non-profit group, expects that bids for design work would go out this fall or winter, with plans set by next summer. Construction could begin after the 2005-06 skating season.

In addition to the $9 million commitment from the town is a $1 million federal Department of Education grant, secured through U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy. Release of the town funds was contingent upon a $4 million private match.

In an e-mail to supporters, Chase wrote, “Given the time that has elapsed, rising steel prices, and rising interest rates, the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation will continue fundraising to cover these rising costs and to eventually begin building an endowment.”

In the e-mail, Chase credited Murray, Rep. Demetrius Atsalis, Sen. Rob O’Leary, Rep. Jeff Perry and even a couple of candidates in the November election. Larry Wheatley, running for state representative in the Fifth Barnstable District, and Dr. Gail Lese, running for Cape and islands state senator, were singled out for their support.

 


Press Releases: Summer 2004

Fleet Marathon Man Sets Pace for Individual Donations

Local runner Fred Palmer, senior advisor with Quick & Reilly financial services at Fleet Bank in Cotuit and Falmouth, has raised more than three thousand dollars to date for the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation.  Palmer ran in this spring’s Boston Marathon and despite temperatures approaching 90 degrees, finished the 26-mile course in less than four hours.  “I was hoping for 3-3/4 hours”, he commented, “but the heat was brutal - dehydration started affecting me near the end – I was happy to finish.” 

Palmer began running for health reasons, and his first event was the 10-mile Johnny Kelley Road Race held annually in Hyannis.  The next milestone for the Cotuit resident was the New York marathon, where he finished in three hours, fifty minutes.  While at the events, Palmer noted that many participants ran to raise funds for worthy causes.  Having a daughter who figure skates and a son just starting in the Barnstable Youth Hockey Program, Palmer was aware of the plans for the new Hyannis Youth & Community Center.  “I’ve been dying for the new rinks to be built”, he says, “I thought I’d see what I could raise to help out.”  Palmer has been encouraged by the positive response he has received, with generous contributions from family, friends and colleagues at Fleet Bank.  “Fleet is matching the bank employees’ funds”, Palmer adds with a smile, bringing the total to “more than $3,000.00 so far.”

Palmer is hoping that increased exposure of his efforts will encourage more contributions, which are still being accepted in his name (contact information below).  The Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation is also working with Palmer to organize a “Main Street Mile” Fun Run to raise funds for the Foundation this October 9.  Details will be available on the Foundation’s website.

In partnership with the Town of Barnstable, the Hyannis Youth and Community Center Foundation is conducting launched a capital campaign to raise the $14 million needed to build the Center.  The Center will be built with a combination of Federal and private foundation grants, individual and corporate philanthropy, and bonds, which will be repaid from revenues.  The operating budget of the facility will also be paid for out of revenues.  Fundraising to date has generated $10.36 million of the $14 million projected cost.  There are no plans for Town funds to be diverted to this project from other critical needs such as schools, roads and public safety.

This state of the art facility will provide much needed recreational and community services to the youth and residents of the Town of Barnstable. Design plans will include a youth center, gymnasium, two full size ice rinks, and all-purpose community meeting rooms.  The facility will be constructed where the Kennedy Memorial Skating Rink currently stands, to better serve the large number of families with a high need for youth-related services in the immediate neighborhood.  Financial status will not be a barrier to participation at the Center.  Tax deductible donations should be made payable to the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation and mailed to P.O. Box 1604, Hyannis, MA  02601. For more information, visit the web site at www.hyannisyouth.org or call (508) 775-6769.

 

s Press Releases: Spring 2004

Local Runners Raise Funds for Youth Center

The Hyannis Youth & Community Center continues to benefit from the generosity of local runners. Hyannis personal trainer Julie Johnson finished the City of Los Angeles Marathon on March 7 in four hours, seven minutes and 16 seconds. Despite temperatures exceeding 90 degrees, Johnson finished in 44th place in her division, and in the top tenth overall. Johnson raised over $500.00 for the Youth Center.

Another local marathon runner, Fred Palmer, will be dedicating his performance in this year's Boston Marathon to the Hyannis Youth & Community Center. Having children in Barnstable Recreation programs for many years, Palmer recognizes the need for a new Youth Center, and will be running this April 19 to help raise awareness for the Center's fundraising campaign. To support Fred and the Youth Center, please send donations to Hyannis Youth & Community Center, Box 1604, Hyannis, MA 02601.

"We really appreciate these individuals stepping forward - literally - to help raise money for the Center", comments HY&CC Foundation President Paul Lebel. "We'd love to see more runners involved and raising funds as the road race season takes off."

In partnership with the Town of Barnstable, the Hyannis Youth and Community Center Foundation has launched a capital campaign to raise the $14 million needed to build the Center. The Center will be built with a combination of Federal and private foundation grants, individual and corporate philanthropy, and bonds, which will be repaid from revenues. The operating budget of the facility will also be paid for out of revenues. Fundraising to date has generated $10.36 million of the $14 million projected cost. There are no plans for Town funds to be diverted to this project from other critical needs such as schools, roads and public safety.

This state of the art facility will provide much needed recreational and community services to the youth and residents of the Town of Barnstable. Design plans will include a youth center, gymnasium, two full size ice rinks, and all-purpose community meeting rooms. The facility will be constructed where the Kennedy Memorial Skating Rink currently stands, to better serve the large number of families with a high need for youth-related services in the immediate neighborhood. Financial status will not be a barrier to participation at the Center.

Tax deductible donations should be made payable to the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation and mailed to P.O. Box 1604, Hyannis, MA 02601. For more information, call (508)775-6769.


Local Runner Raising Funds for Youth Center

Julie Johnson, a personal trainer in Hyannis, is running in the Los Angeles Marathon Sunday, March 7 to raise funds for the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation. This will be the fourth marathon in eight years for Ms. Johnson, who has previously competed to raise awareness of and money to help fight leukemia and cancer. A mother of two middle school students, Ms. Johnson says this marathon "is for the kids," an effort to support the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation's building fund to give Barnstable's young people "a place to go". Johnson has already collected more than $500.00 in pledges and continues to accept donations. A former all Star Cross Country runner at Dennis-Yarmouth Regional High School, Johnson has been running more than forty miles a week to train for the event. Her goal is to finish the marathon in under 3-1/2 hours.

Individuals wishing to make a pledge for the Youth Center in honor of Ms. Johnson's Marathon effort should call 617-335-6908 or 508-775-6769.

In partnership with the Town of Barnstable, the Hyannis Youth and Community Center Foundation has launched a capital campaign to raise the $14 million needed to build the Center. The Center will be built with a combination of Federal and private foundation grants, individual and corporate philanthropy, and bonds, which will be repaid from revenues. The operating budget of the facility will also be paid for out of revenues. Fundraising to date has generated $10.36 million of the $14 million projected cost. There are no plans for Town funds to be diverted to this project from other critical needs such as schools, roads and public safety.

This state of the art facility will provide much needed recreational and community services to the youth and residents of the Town of Barnstable. Design plans will include a youth center, gymnasium, two full size ice rinks, and all-purpose community meeting rooms. The facility will be constructed where the Kennedy Memorial Skating Rink currently stands, to better serve the large number of families with a high need for youth-related services in the immediate neighborhood. Financial status will not be a barrier to participation at the Center.

Tax deductible donations should be made payable to the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation and mailed to P.O. Box 1604, Hyannis, MA 02601. For more information, call (508)775-6769.


Press Releases: December 2003

The Christmas Gift that Will Keep on Giving

As might be expected, the Barnstable Youth Hockey Association recently presented the Hyannis Youth and Community Center Foundation with a generous gift in the amount of $65,000. "We are just so pleased and happy to provide this donation", said BYHA Treasurer John Robichaud. "For years the Barnstable Youth Hockey Association has struggled to find quality ice time. Every year, we have more than 450 skaters in a program that starts Labor Day", he added, which necessitates the rental of ice from fully enclosed rinks outside of Barnstable. "We're looking forward to buying more ice time for our expanding program in our own town." Robichaud also sees the opportunity for expanded skating and other sports programs housed in a "great facility for the entire town of Barnstable."

While the Donation Thermometers rise, plans are underway for a gala spring skating exhibition in March and a celebrity golf tournament in the spring. Donation cans placed in local businesses are also getting filled by Barnstable citizens who are showing they care about the future of their community.

In partnership with the Town of Barnstable, the Hyannis Youth and Community Center Foundation has launched a capital campaign to raise the $14 million needed to build the Center. The Center will be built with a combination of Federal and private foundation grants, individual and corporate philanthropy, and bonds, which will be repaid from revenues. The operating budget of the facility will also be paid for out of revenues. Fundraising to date has generated $10.36 million of the $14 million projected cost. There are no plans for Town funds to be diverted to this project from other critical needs such as schools, roads and public safety.

This state of the art facility will provide much needed recreational and community services to the youth and residents of the Town of Barnstable. Design plans will include a youth center, gymnasium, two full size ice rinks, and all-purpose community meeting rooms. The facility will be constructed where the Kennedy Memorial Skating Rink currently stands, to better serve the large number of families with a high need for youth-related services in the immediate neighborhood. Financial status will not be a barrier to participation at the Center.

Tax deductible donations should be made payable to the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation and mailed to P.O. Box 1604, Hyannis, MA 02601. For more information, call (508)775-6769.


Press Releases: Fall 2003

Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation
President Paul Lebel accepts donation check from
Murray, David and Phil Scudder

The Scudder Family Jumps On Board

The Hyannis Youth and Community Center Foundation's fundraising efforts are advancing along with several significant donations by local philanthropists. At a recent breakfast meeting, the Foundation's President Paul Lebel announced several generous contributions, including a $75,000.00 gift from the Scudder Family of Hy-Line Cruises. "Our family lived just a couple of blocks away from the Kennedy Memorial Rink", said Philip Scudder, "we were "rink rats". We spent countless hours in the skating and hockey programs. It's certainly time for a new ice rink, but more importantly, by expanding the facility to include basketball courts, dance and game rooms and by locating it on the same property in downtown Hyannis, this Center will open opportunities for many, many more of our town's youth. The Scudder family is very happy to be part of this project."

The Foundation is also looking forward to year-end donations from Barnstable residents supporting the Youth Center. Plans are underway for a fundraising event in Winter 2004. Donation containers have been distributed to local business for public contributions. "We're pursuing all avenues for raising funds", says Lebel, "and we're encouraged by the response. The reaction has been positive everywhere we go."

In partnership with the Town of Barnstable, the Hyannis Youth and Community Center Foundation has launched a capital campaign to raise the $14 million needed to build the Center. The Center will be built with a combination of Federal and private foundation grants, individual and corporate philanthropy, and bonds, which will be repaid from revenues. The operating budget of the facility will also be paid for out of revenues. Fundraising to date has generated $10.36 million of the $14 million projected cost. There are no plans for Town funds to be diverted to this project from other critical needs such as schools, roads and public safety.

This state of the art facility will provide much needed recreational and community services to the youth and residents of the Town of Barnstable. Design plans will include a youth center, gymnasium, two full size ice rinks, and all-purpose community meeting rooms. The facility will be constructed where the Kennedy Memorial Skating Rink currently stands, to better serve the large number of families with a high need for youth-related services in the immediate neighborhood. Financial status will not be a barrier to participation at the Center.

Tax deductible donations should be made payable to the Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation and mailed to P.O. Box 1604, Hyannis, MA 02601. For more information, call (508)775-6769.

 


© Hyannis Youth & Community Center Foundation