Stephen
Chan, senior advisor to Mayor Michelle Wu for partnerships; Steve
Tompkins, sheriff of Suffolk County and RCC board chair; Michael Turner,
executive director, Reggie Lewis Track and Athletic Center; Jack
Fleming, president and CEO of the BAA; Jonathan K. Jefferson, president,
Roxbury Community College; and State Rep. Chynah Tyler.
A group of women exercise at the Reggie Lewis Track and Athletic Center.
The Reggie Lewis Track and Athletic Center announced last Thursday a first-of-its-kind, multiyear partnership with the Boston Athletic Association, the nonprofit that hosts the Boston Marathon.
The four-year agreement will include a $700,000 direct monetary investment as well as entries to the marathon, the BAA said, which will contribute up to $1.3 million to the Reggie’s fundraising efforts as the community sports center seeks to expand its sports and wellness programming.
“This is huge,” said Michael Turner, executive director of the Reggie. “From the moment I stepped in here, I saw what the Reggie could be. But we needed support [and] help to make that happen.”
The announcement comes as the Reggie prepares to celebrate its forthcoming 30th anniversary with a fundraising campaign in which it aims to raise $5 million, a portion of which will come from the BAA’s investment. Affiliates of the sports center announced a series of events to celebrate the fundraising effort, including a 5K race and a golf tournament at Franklin Park and health and wellness forums.
With the investment, the track and athletic center, home to competitive youth sports groups and events as well as adult and community programming, looks to widen its offerings, including growing its “Sensational Seniors Exercise Program.”
The full slate of events and programs for 2025 will be announced later this year.
Turner
said the partnership with the BAA will help improve the life expectancy
of Roxbury residents, which is about 23 years less than that of
residents in the Back Bay, by further promoting health and physical
activity.
“We’re going to close this gap. That’s our goal,” he said. “And their support is what’s going to help us do that.”
The
Reggie conducted surveys to gauge what community members need and will
tailor its offerings to align with the feedback, Turner said. With the
support of the BAA, which has previously hosted events at the sports
center, the Reggie will be able to hire additional staff, such as
nutritionists.
As part
of the partnership, there are stipulations the Reggie has to adhere to,
including offering a running club, Turner said. But the BAA has “fully
supported” the ideas Reggie officials have presented thus far.
“The
BAA’s mission focuses on the promotion of a healthy lifestyle,
especially through running, and there’s no better way that we can live
out our mission … than by putting on good events and channeling that
back into the community, and this is a perfect example of that,” said
Jack Fleming, president and CEO of the BAA.
He
said while the partnership is the first one of its sort the BAA has
ever undertaken, the organization will continue to pursue more
collaborations with community organizations to “help provide
opportunities for everyone.”
Also
in attendance at the Oct. 24 gathering were Stephen Chan, Mayor
Michelle Wu’s senior advisor for partnerships; Jonathan K. Jefferson,
president of Roxbury Community College, whose sports teams use the
Reggie; and state Rep. Chynah Tyler.
“We
are adding on to the legacy of what the Reggie Lewis Center means to us
all,” said Tyler, who recalled growing up playing sports in the
neighborhood arena. She added that “it is very difficult to be able to
add on to what we do here in the state, particularly for assets like the
Reggie Lewis Center, because dollars are short. … For the BAA to be
able to be hands-on and to make this happen today, it’s been a true
honor to be a part of this.”
Jefferson,
who began his role in July, lauded “one of the largest financial
commitments ever made by a nonprofit organization” to the Reggie.
“It
is through partnerships like this one that we make real, sustainable
change,” he said in his remarks, stating that the collaboration will
provide “all Boston residents with access to quality, affordable
wellness and well-being resources.”
Steven
Tompkins, sheriff of Suffolk County and RCC’s board chair, said the new
partnership is an opportunity to “celebrate the history of this storied
institution” and allow it to continue its services.
“This
center is not just here for this community. This is a statewide
facility,” Tompkins said. “The importance for all of the adults in the
room and others is to make sure our kids have an opportunity to be kids
and to grow up and be vibrant.”