After Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Northwest Indiana made the decision to close its doors on March 13 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Clubs across Porter and Lake counties sat empty. Like nonprofits across the country, the organization was faced with the challenge of maintaining viability and continuing to serve the community in ways that stayed true to its mission. For weeks, leadership debated the crucial next steps that would define the organization’s response to the pandemic.
The first step was figuring out what the organization could do immediately for Club families. For Boys & Girls Clubs’ vice president of human resources and operations Kris Condon, this meant reaching out to Club parents and asking what they were struggling with and what the organization could do to help.
“Some of our families told us they were struggling with e-learning, some were having a hard time easing their children’s anxieties, and many of the parents we spoke with were struggling to provide hot dinners for their families,” Condon said.
Beginning in April, Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Northwest Indiana began offering e-learning assistance, where Club kids could schedule video conferences with and receive tutoring from staff members, and a parent hotline, which allowed Club parents to speak with the organization’s Social Services Director. In terms of scope, however, the greatest impact came from its Family Dinners program. Through April and May, Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Northwest Indiana distributed over 4,000 take-and-bake dinners to Club members, in part with funding from Legacy Foundation, Crown Point Community Foundation, United Way of Porter County, and Porter County Community Foundation.
Staff who were not remotely tutoring Club members or distributing dinners were busy behind the scenes, deep cleaning and sanitizing Clubs. Meanwhile, the organization’s leadership was looking forward. Knowing that the 2,200 Club members the organization serves daily had been cooped up for over two months, away from their friends and unable to socialize, president and CEO Ryan Smiley tasked his executive team with developing a plan to safely reopen and provide Boys & Girls Clubs youth with the Best Summer Ever.
Smiley said that while it was important for Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Northwest Indiana to be able to help its communities over the past few months, the organization was eager to start serving youth directly again when it was safe to do so.
“We are fortunate to have been in a position to help our Club families, but we are a people-based organization,” Smiley said. “The greatest impact we have is by serving youth in Northwest Indiana and providing them with high quality programming that develops academic and social-emotional skills. When Governor Holcomb eased the restrictions for gathering and it was safe for us to open back up, we wanted to be ready to go.”
On Monday, after weeks of closure, Clubs were ready to go. With a number of safety restrictions in place, Boys & Girls Clubs in Portage, Chesterton, Valparaiso, South Haven, and Cedar Lake re-opened their doors. Smiley is hopeful that as Clubs across the region continue to re-open, they can provide region youth with some much-needed optimism.
“During the time our Clubs were closed, the work never stopped and our commitment to youth never wavered,” he said. “We knew that eventually we would re-open, and that when we did, our focus had to be on giving kids the Best Summer Ever.”
For more information on the safety protocols Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Northwest Indiana is implementing, visit www.bgcgreaternwi.org.