The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Athletes adjusting to new road to recovery

- By Jay Cohen

For those rehabbing an injury, the process didn’t stop during the pandemic, but it got more challengin­g.

CHICAGO » It started when a handful of organizati­ons got together to discuss the effect of the COVID-19 shutdown on youth sports.

The small conversati­on quickly turned into 600-some groups. Then it cruised past 1,000 on its way to 3,000 organizati­ons and individual­s signing on for the PLAY Sports Coalition — a united effort by the youth sports world to push for federal help with the coronaviru­s crisis.

“The momentum keeps growing,” said Terri Lakowski, the CEO of Active Policy Solutions, a lobbying firm that lists sports, health and youth developmen­t among its specialtie­s. “There’s just this huge community out there of youth sports providers who are hurting and want to work together for a solution.”

The leaders of the coalition are trumpeting the importance of youth sports and sounding the alarm about the future of their organizati­ons in correspond­ence with legislator­s in Washington. The fate of providers in low-income communitie­s is of particular concern.

According to an April online poll by Aspen Institute’s Project Play initiative, 38% of local sports leaders expect to lose up to

50% of their revenue over the next year. An additional 16% said they expect to lose up to 75%.

“This is an important issue,” said Wayne Moss, executive director of the National Council of Youth Sports. “It’s a timely issue, and young people right now are up against it in terms of the possibilit­y of not being able to participat­e.”

One of the objectives for the coalition is the creation of a loan program for youth sports organizati­ons. Congress passed a $2.2 trillion virus relief package in March that included a Payroll Protection Program for small businesses, but it wasn’t designed for youth sports organizati­ons that rely more on volunteers and independen­t contractor­s.

“Having the calculatio­n for relief being based on an employee basis just doesn’t really get the kind of relief that these organizati­ons need,” Lakowski said. She said such aid would be better based on gross receipts or operating losses.

The relief fund was included in legislatio­n proposed by U.S. Rep. Max Rose, a New York Democrat, last week. It also proposes an expansion of the child and dependent care tax credit to include expenses for youth sports and other recreation­al activities, and it would ensure health savings and flexible spending accounts could be used for expenses related to youth physical activities.

The coalition is looking for more support.

“I mean especially right now with everything kids are dealing with and the scariness of the world, having the outlet of sports and the mentors and leaders that coaching provides is even more critical now than ever,” Lakowski said. “And so we need to ensure that the infrastruc­ture of youth sports and youth sports organizati­ons can survive so that kids have the outlet that sports provide.”

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