Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pruitt helped make event a ‘virtual’ hit

- Contact Mark Wiedmer at mwiedmer@timesfreep­ress.com.

It doesn’t take long for Jim Morgan to recall the day he knew the Boys & Girls Clubs of Chattanoog­a were going to be relied on like never before by our town’s neediest young people.

“March 17,” the nonprofit organizati­on’s CEO said this past week. “Schools had closed the day before due to the coronaviru­s. By the next afternoon we had people coming by pleading, ‘We need help, we need food.’”

Though the doors of its facilities were closed, the charity’s hearts were wide open. From that day to this one, the organizati­on has delivered more than 130,000 meals to the nearly 2,400 youth (ages 6-18) it serves.

“We delivered 100 meals that first week,” Morgan said. “It’s 1,300 meals a day now. We directly help families, and a lot of those families have never needed our help more than now.”

A lot of good people in this

city reached out to help Morgan’s organizati­on Thursday night through its first-ever “virtual” Stake ‘N Burger Dinner. Despite COVID-19 forcing the abandonmen­t of the format that had served it so well for 38 years, one in which kids eat steaks while adults munch on hamburgers, the two age groups sharing tables, Morgan noted Friday that this year’s event still raised close to $300,000. (The 2020 event’s online appeal for donations points out that sponsors become “stakeholde­rs” in the effort — hence the dinner’s name.)

“It was such a positive to see how quickly the community came together to help,” Morgan said. “Just how giving Chattanoog­ans are. We had several sponsors make extra donations to help this year at a time when a lot of large foundation­s have announced they’re pulling back.”

The fact that third-year University of Tennessee football coach Jeremy Pruitt was the virtual guest speaker probably didn’t hurt interest. And despite being seen on a computer screen only, Pruitt touched on several points that surely made every Volunteers fan proud and were worthy of Boys & Girls Clubs kids embracing, whether or not they ever play for the Big Orange.

“When we’re recruiting, we’re looking for student-athletes first,” Pruitt said. “Football is not going to last forever, so we work really hard to prepare them for life after football.”

He also said this: “The most important thing is intangible­s. What kind of character do they have? Are they dependable? Who they are off the field is a good indicator of who they’ll be on the field.”

And for those who think the UT coach is only interested in how a player interacts with him, think again.

“When I go to a high school to recruit, I like to go to the lunchroom,” he said. “I like to see how the young man interacts with the lunch ladies. A lot of times that’s a reflection of how he treats people in general.”

He also likes to sneak a peek at the recruit’s high school practice: “Is he the first one out there? Is he the last to leave? That will tell you how important football is to him.”

Perhaps most importantl­y, he told his virtual audience: “Number one, always tell the truth. When I was young, I was going to youth choir practice at my church one day, and I told a story to the choir director. My dad set me straight on that real quick when I got home.”

Nothing is moving real quick when it comes to escaping the coronaviru­s pandemic. Orlando Lightfoot, senior manager of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Chattanoog­a, has seen the frustratio­n in the eyes of so many children since they were first allowed to return to the organizati­on’s facilities in August.

“It’s almost impossible to impact kids when you’re not around them,” said the 45-yearold Lightfoot, one of the best basketball players ever produced in the Scenic City, as shown by his being twice named the Big Sky player of the year during his time at Idaho after graduating from City High School in 1989.

“Kids are our thing, and they miss those relationsh­ips. A lot has changed in six months. We didn’t have summer camp, so a lot of them were running around the streets. It takes time to reestablis­h those relationsh­ips.”

To help ease some of that isolation and give them a better chance to succeed in school, the club helped procure 60 Chromebook­s to assist with online learning and such, those purchases — and all those meals — greatly aided by sizable contributi­ons from the Community Foundation of Greater Chattanoog­a, the Federal Cares Act and grants from United Way’s Restore Hope program.

It hasn’t saved everyone. “The worst heartbreak has been when you’ve been delivering food to a family five days a week, and one day you knock on the door and no one answers because they’ve lost their residence,” said the 59-year-old Morgan. “When you finally find them, they’re in a homeless shelter. It’s just heartbreak­ing how quickly some of these families can lose everything.”

Morgan left a high-paying job in the private sector two years ago for his current role. A native of Beecher, Illinois, he was the first member of his family to attend college. He once worked with a nonprofit in Chicago that helped innercity kids advance their education.

“It’s incredibly rewarding to work with kids from really reduced circumstan­ces and help them be the first person in their family to go to college,” Morgan said.

For 38 years, the instant reward for all those Boys & Girls Clubs kids was to break bread at the Stake ‘N Burger Dinner with all those successful adults they aspire to become.

“Our kids missed it a lot,” Lightfoot said. “They really like meeting new people.”

He paused, then said what almost everyone everywhere is assuredly thinking these days.

“This,” Lightfoot said, “has been the worst six months ever.”

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Tennessee football coach Jeremy Pruitt was the virtual guest speaker this past week for the Boys & Girls Clubs of Chattanoog­a’s 38th annual Stake ’N Burger Dinner, which raises funds for the nonprofit organizati­on.
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Tennessee football coach Jeremy Pruitt was the virtual guest speaker this past week for the Boys & Girls Clubs of Chattanoog­a’s 38th annual Stake ’N Burger Dinner, which raises funds for the nonprofit organizati­on.
 ??  ?? Mark Wiedmer
Mark Wiedmer
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Boys & Girls Clubs of Chattanoog­a CEO Jim Morgan speaks during the organizati­on’s Great Futures Luncheon in February 2019.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Boys & Girls Clubs of Chattanoog­a CEO Jim Morgan speaks during the organizati­on’s Great Futures Luncheon in February 2019.
 ??  ?? Orlando Lightfoot
Orlando Lightfoot

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