The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Two counties will add Boys & Girls Club

Henry and Clayton are eager to open long-awaited afterschoo­l programs to help nurture, inspire local youth.

- By Leon Stafford lstafford@ajc.com

After years of trying to make it happen, Clayton and Henry counties are launching Boys & Girls Clubs to offer south metro Atlanta kids access to after-school programs.

The programs, which will both be funded through a combinatio­n of municipal dollars and private fundraisin­g, are slated to open their doors in early to mid2020 and reach hundreds of children, from elementary students through high schoolers.

“I call this the hope project,” said Henry Commission­er Dee Clemmons, a leader in the effort to bring the program to the county and an alumna of the Boys & Girls Club in Decatur. “We have nothing like this in Henry County. There was a need in the southern region.”

Supporters said the clubs couldn’t have come at a better time. Henry needs the club because it doesn’t have enough youth programs to keep up with its rapid growth in population, which has almost doubled since 2000. Clayton, meanwhile, has seen an explosion of transient families move into the community, where many children are left without supervisio­n when the school day has ended.

“Pointe South really needs it,” said Clayton Commission­er Felicia Franklin-Warner, who has spearheade­d the county’s Boys & Girls Club effort. “I won’t say they need it most because that may be unfair to other areas ... but we could not go in there with the same platforms we’ve used in the county.”

Sustaining it won’t be easy. The Thomasvill­e Heights Boys & Girls Club in southwest Atlanta was shuttered last summer after eight

years of operation because of a lack of funding.

And initial support can erode. The city of Stonecrest and the Boys &Girls Clubs of Metro Atlanta earlier this year called off a plan for the youth group to take over a summer camp in the south DeKalb community after residents expressed concerns that it could lead to job losses for those already employed at the camp.

Henry and Clayton leaders said they have nailed down initial funding for the programs.

Henry and the city of McDonough are pledging a total of $300,000 for at least the first three years of operation, Clemmons said, while Clayton plans to spend about $200,000 to operate its program, which will be at the Southwest Intergener­ational Center, which is under constructi­on on Flint River Road. The Henry school board is considerin­g donating space for the county’s club and may vote on the facility soon.

“We have a true partnershi­p this time, and a true partnershi­p will get this done,” McDonough City Councilman Craig Elrod said last month during a Henry community meeting about the club launch. “This is an investment in our youth, so we are here for you, and we are your biggest cheerleade­r and your biggest partner.”

Clayton’s club, which will launch in summer 2020, will be affiliated with the Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro Atlanta,

Warner said. Henry will be part of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Georgia.

“You are on the verge of something great,” Phillip Bryant, CEO and president of the Central Georgia group, told the community meeting audience last month.

Elon Rodney, an officer with the Clayton County Police Department, said he thinks there are a lot of benefits to the organizati­on. Patrolling the Pointe South community, he deals with a lot of young people who get in trouble because they can’t afford after-school activities or live in areas where they aren’t available.

“They have idle hands, and they don’t see the opportunit­ies in themselves, so they get into bad things,” he said. “This gives them a place to go to instead of walking around aimlessly throughout Clayton County.”

He added that mixing the youths in with seniors at the Intergener­ational Center would also expose them to Clayton residents who can act as guides.

“It will bring a lot more people together and give the younger generation the opportunit­y to be mentored by the older generation,” he said.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Clayton’s Boys & Girls Club will be in the Southwest Intergener­ational Center being built in Jonesboro. One supporter, Elon Rodney, an officer with the Clayton County Police Department, said kids will gain by sharing space with older generation­s.
BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM Clayton’s Boys & Girls Club will be in the Southwest Intergener­ational Center being built in Jonesboro. One supporter, Elon Rodney, an officer with the Clayton County Police Department, said kids will gain by sharing space with older generation­s.
 ?? BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Clayton plans to spend about $200,000 to operate its Boys & Girls Club program, which will be at the Southwest Intergener­ational Center, which is under constructi­on on Flint River Road in Jonesboro.
BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM Clayton plans to spend about $200,000 to operate its Boys & Girls Club program, which will be at the Southwest Intergener­ational Center, which is under constructi­on on Flint River Road in Jonesboro.

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