To kick-start physical activity and learning now and throughout the summer, the YMCA of Central Massachusetts is celebrating Healthy Kids Day® with a FREE community event for kids and families. YMCA’s Healthy Kids Day®, the Y’s national initiative to improve families’ health and well-being, features activities such as music, games, and arts and crafts to motivate and teach families how to develop a healthy routine at home.
158th Annual Meeting and Volunteer Recognition Event
We are sooo excited about our 158th Annual Meeting and Volunteer Appreciation Event on Wednesday, April 20th. This year we are holding our event at Polar Park in Worcester, MA!!! How cool is that?!
Wednesday, April 20, 2022
Reception & Program: 5:00 – 7:00 pm
Polar Park
100 Madison St, Worcester, MA 01608
Caring Connected Community
WORCESTER — From the front desk to the yoga mat to “Ms. G’s” classroom, the Greendale YMCA is dripping with neighborhood spirit.
“Having a great time,” is how Linda Allen, 80 years young and a retired high school math teacher, described her part-time job as front-desk receptionist.
Swim Lessons and More
Fitchburg’s Montachusett Community Branch YMCA offers swim lessons and more
“Learning to swim gives one confidence and I believe that confidence spills over into other areas of life,
said Montachusett Y Aquatics Director Lillie Skerry. “I see it all the time.”
Lizz Gordon-Hughes has been teaching swim lessons in the Montachusett Y heated indoor pool since the fall of 2020 and brings waterfront director experience with her. As of now, her schedule includes three group classes for kids on Saturdays.
“I like working with kids in general,” the mom of three said, “helping them getting over that anxiety of being in the water and seeing them progress.”
One energetic group of youngsters she teaches includes 8-year-old Samantha Lee of Fitchburg, who before September had never swam before. Nowadays Lee and other swim students move around the water like fish, learning how to float, go under water and paddle, gaining confidence and learning about water safety under Gordon-Hughes’s tutelage.
“It just feels good,” Samantha said of swimming.
Gordon-Hughes is one of 11 aquatic staff members at the Montachusett Y, including seven lifeguards on the pool schedule, plus two subs. Two of the lifeguards are also swim instructors and they have a substitute swim teacher as well. Skerry said there are about 70 staff members total at the Montachusett Y branch and over 500 employees at the six YMCA of Central Massachsuetts branches, including Fitchburg and Leominster.
Skerry started working for the Y in 2007 and has had many roles in the organization, including lifeguard, swim instructor, and teaching water aerobics classes. She became the aquatics coordinator for both the Montachusett and Central Community Branch in downtown Worcester in 2014 and later that same year was promoted to aquatics director. She is now the director just at Montachusett.
“I miss the people at CCB, but I do not miss the drive,” Skerry said.
Like so many other businesses and organizations, the Montachusett Y has certainly felt the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The YMCA of Central Massachusetts closed its branches to members in March 2020 and reopened in July of that same year. Skerry said their hours “are still limited at this time,” weekends from 6 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. and Saturdays from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m.
“We look forward to the days when we can also remain open 1 to 4 p.m. weekdays, but we do not yet know when that will be,” she said.
Throughout the pandemic, the Montachusett Y and other branches have offered free day care for essential workers and Skerry said when remote learning kicked off, they had classrooms of children sorted by grade from different schools in the area “each doing their own Zoom classes.”
“During our shutdown, we made phone calls to our senior citizen members to see how they were doing, well-being checkups, and we delivered hundreds of thousands of meals to families,” Skerry said. “From April 2020 to August 2021, the Y association delivered over 1.6 million meals to families in need.”
YMCA of Central MA Executive Director Ted McDonnell said the organization “is an inclusive environment open to people of all ages” and that it is important to them to provide a space for people of all ages to gather and be active through their programs and classes including swim, yoga, teen centers, open gym and Silver Sneakers for seniors.
“With a mission centered on balance, the Y brings families closer together, encourages good health, and fosters connections through fitness, sports, fun and shared interests,” he said. “As a result, thousands of youth, adults, and families from central Massachusetts are receiving the support, guidance, and resources needed to achieve health and well-being for their spirit, mind, and body.”
One of those resources are the popular year-round group swim lessons Montachusett offers to the public, including parent-child sessions, with 45 students currently taking weekly lessons and a few on a waiting list. There are seven swim sessions per year with a short break between sessions. Skerry said most students attend more than one swim session.
“It is our hope that once we are open longer hours, we will also have swim teachers available in the afternoon so that we can add some more classes to the schedule,” she said.
In addition, the Y also offers private swim lessons if there is a swim instructor whose availability matches the student’s availability and family swim on Tuesday and Thursday evenings.
“I enjoy seeing people of all ages learn to swim,” Skerry said. “Also, there is just something soothing about being in the water. People always say they feel better after a swim, like the water just washed away all of their worries. And it is great to see families, grandparents, parents and children all having good clean fun in the pool.”
She said there are still some colleges and universities in the U.S. that require students to pass a basic swim test to graduate, including Columbia University, Cornell University, Dartmouth College, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and University of Notre Dame.
“Learning to swim is a life lesson,” she said.
View the original article at sentinelandenterprise.com
View Program Enrollment for swim lesson availability
Worcester to distribute at home tests
Worcester to distribute over 135,000 rapid at-home COVID-19 tests on Friday to 21 community organizations
WORCESTER – More than 135,000 rapid, at-home COVID-19 test kits will be distributed to 21 community organizations, social service agencies and other groups on Friday in Worcester.
The City of Worcester’s Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Public Health and the Office of Emergency Management will be distributing iHealth Labs OTC rapid antigen test kits. The city of Worcester has been allocated 67,770 kits, each with two tests for a total 135,540 tests.
The kits are being provided by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. They will be distributed at Union Station at 11:30 a.m.
Along with the 21 organizations to receive the kits on Friday, anyone who gets their first, second or booster shot of the COVID-19 vaccine at the Worcester Public Library’svaccine clinic on Saturday will also receive a kit while supplies last.
The library’s vaccine clinic runs from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Main Branch at 3 Salem Square.
These are the 21 organizations receiving at-home test kits:
- African Community Education
- Ansaar of Worcester
- Big Brothers/Big Sisters
- Boys & Girls Club of Worcester
- Centro
- Dismas House
- El Buen Samaritano
- Friendly House
- Girls Inc.
- Guild of St. Agnes
- Hope for Worcester
- Main South CDC
- QCC – Food Pantry
- Pernet
- Project New Hope
- Rock of Salvation
- Worcester Common Ground
- Worcester Community Action Council
- Worcester Interfaith
- YMCA of Central Massachusetts
- YWCA of Central Massachusetts
Montachusett Community Branch Holiday Craft Fair
Montachusett Community Branch YMCA’s holiday craft fair to benefit Annual Campaign
“We measure success through lives impacted,” Montachusett YMCA Business Office Manager Laurie Sleeper said. “The young boy who builds self-confidence in swim lessons, the mom who achieves a healthy weight through Zumba classes, the children eating nutritious meals for free in our after-school programs.”
Money raised for the campaign will be used for programs and activities including six weeks of swim lessons for a child, learning-loss
prevention through one week of summer camp, SAT preparation for one teen in the Minority Achievers Program, registration for a YMCA youth sports program, and others including giving five teens critical life skills they need to make positive choices and build hope for the future and a yearlong YMCA membership for a family in need valued at $1,000.
“Strengthening the foundations of community is what the Y is all about,” Sleeper said, “and what better way to do that than raising funds for those most in need in our neighborhoods?”
Sleeper said that so far 20 small businesses are signed up for the craft fair and will be offering a variety of crafts and handmade products including candles, soap, Christmas decorations, plants, DIY home decor, hot cocoa bombs, baked goods and more.
“Each year, each of our branches try to raise money for our Annual Campaign through events,” Sleeper said. “This year we were given the suggestion of a craft fair by one of our employees and thought it sounded like a great idea.”
The YMCA will be providing child care on-site from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Santa’s Workshop for those who want to shop without their kids. The $25 per family fee includes four hours of fun activities and lunch. Children will have the opportunity to shop for items for family members at the craft fair if money is sent with them.
Sleeper said 100% of the money raised “will directly support Central Massachusetts community members through the Y’s Annual Campaign, providing confidential assistance to those in need.”
“It is easy to help us change lives,” she said. “Make a gift, come to one of our annual events, become a corporator, volunteer, or contact us to find out about other opportunities.”
For more information and to reserve a vendor spot, call Laurie Sleeper at 978-343-4847, ext. 4208, or email [email protected].
Read the original article on Sentinel and Enterprise
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13
- 14
- …
- 48
- Next Page »