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NY: Middle schools lose sports programs
M.S. 223 is one of dozens of middle schools across New York City that are losing sports teams because of an odd logistical fact... The result is that sports teams are being added at some schools and cut at others.
29-Oct-2010, Excerted from Examiner.com, New York, by Albert Samaha

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MA: The High Cost Of High School Sports

29-Nov-2010  CBSlocal.com; Boston, MA

Whether it was Little League, youth soccer, or the high school field hockey team, youth sports played a big role in shaping many adults’ lives. As the years pass, it is getting harder and harder for kids to get on the playing field. Cost has become a big challenge.

User fees, booster clubs and budget cuts are now facts of life for young athletes and their families.

At Haverhill High School, it costs fans $5 to get into a soccer or field hockey game; it used to be free. That ticket price applies to the school’s students, and to parents of players on the teams.

 

 

“The admission fee is actually, I think, a little ridiculous,” said Dan Faircloth, whose twin daughters play soccer for Haverhill High. “It’s not nickels and dimes anymore. It’s dollars, fives.”

While those $5 tickets add up, it’s just a slice of the cost. Annual fees for kids to participate on high school teams can easily top $200 per sport, per child. Many towns establish family caps, but even those can approach $1,000 a year.

One solution – fundraising. Students and parents are being asked to act like sales agents, pushing candy and calendars to help foot the bill.  “In the last two weeks I have bought calendars as a fundraiser for these kids, and candy for these kids,” said grandparent Linda Baxter.

Administrators say budget cuts have left them no choice, so creativity is the key.  In Hull, where the high school sits under a Logan Airport flight path, they want to sell advertising on the school’s roof.

“Our idea is to approach the businesses and say, ‘hey, you want to put your logo up here on our roof? Give us some money for it and all these planes, all those thousands of passengers every day flying over this high school are going to see your logo’,“ principal Mike Devine explained.

Not every school system has fees. In fact, the state’s largest public school system, in Boston, does not charge students to play sports.

“I know it’s pretty expensive to play sports in most suburban schools, but we don’t have as many coaches as the suburban schools have,” said West Roxbury High School football coach Leo Sybertz. “We only have two assistant coaches, but they’re very good guys. They do an excellent job.”



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