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A Club that Fosters Growth & So Much More

Grassroots community organizations such as the St. Alban’s Boys and Girls Club are a big part of what makes Toronto neighbourhoods such great places to call home. untitled untitled1

 

 

 

 

The club, which is headquartered in Vermont Square Park near Bathurst and Bloor, adheres to the values of inclusion, compassion, caring and safety for the thousands of children and young adults who have entered its doors. The organization’s mission statement kind of says it all: We provide a safe, supportive place where children and youth can experience new opportunities, overcome barriers, build positive relationships and develop confidence and skills for life.

“I think it’s a key component to the community and that it has a positive impact,” says Anna Sturino, the club’s director of operations. “I believe for some families it has probably saved them and, for some children, it has been their only form of family.”

What began as a recreational group for boys in 1949 thanks to Toronto police inspector Bill Bolton would eventually be renamed the St. Alban’s Boys and Girls Club in 1978. This, of course, was long after girls started using the club’s programs and services as early as 1960.

In 1999, the club merged with the Jane and Finch Boys and Girls Club, which allowed it to grow and offer outreach, programs and services at 18 locations in the Jane and Finch, Weston-Mount Dennis, Lawrence Heights and Bathurst and Dupont communities.

For a nominal membership fee, members get access to the building and its programs and services, which are many. The club, which is open seven days a week, offers programs for toddlers, pre-schoolers, school-aged children, youth and young adults.

Is your little Donatella Versace dying to design her own Grade 8 grad dress? She might want to check out Fashion Class. Got a wee Shaquille O’Neal on your hands? Sign up for basketball at St. Alban’s.  Got a miniature Bill Nye the Science Guy in your home? Let them see how science helps in the unfolding of magic tricks and mentalism.

Aquatic programs are available in addition to nutrition and wellness, various sports such as soccer and volleyball, skateboarding and ball hockey.  The club offers an early years program free of charge to the public as well as a preschool daycare program, an after-school program for children six to 12 and youth programs for those 13 and up.

A creative arts department is available for those interested in dance, theatre and drama, animation, photography and music.

St. Alban’s also offers programs and services geared to at-risk youth such as Roger’s Raising the Grade, a program that pairs youth with adult mentors. In addition, there is also a homework assistance club.

Many of the programs’ facilitators, mentors and frontline staff are former club members or college and university students who are working toward careers as youth workers, teachers, recreationists or social workers.

“It feels like a family here,” says Sturino. “Everyone belongs and is accepted and we do anything we can for people. I think we’re only successful because of companies like Freeman Real Estate, who have supported us and come on board to help with fundraising events in support of this community.”

 

 

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