Nonprofit partners receiving $560,000 in grants from Katz Amsterdam Charitable Trust in advance of 2021/22 winter season
Vail Resorts and the companyโs CEO, Rob Katz, via his family foundation, today announced 11 organizations receiving approximately $560,000 in grants as part of an ongoing commitment to increase youth access to outdoor recreation. Each of the nonprofit partners work to support youth of color in major metropolitan areas surrounding Vail Resortsโ locations, including Baltimore, Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, and New York, among others.
For the first time, Vail Resorts and the Katz Amsterdam Charitable Trust will also partner with the National Brotherhood of Skiers (NBS) to inspire the next generation of skiers and snowboarders and support NBSโ mission of developing and supporting athletes of color who will win international competitions.
โThis grant gives the NBS the opportunity to develop a true partnership with Katz Amsterdam and Vail Resorts. Our clubs in Boston, Detroit, New York, and Columbus, OH are positioned to leverage their well-established network of volunteers and long track record of conducting youth outreach trips to promote skiing and snowboarding within underrepresented communities. When combined with the resources and industry reach of Vail Resorts, we are encouraged about the outcomes this partnership will forge.โ
– Lee Valentine, executive vice president of NBS
Today’s donation is part of a five-year commitment, announced in 2019, to expand youth access programs to all 34 of Vail Resortsโ North American resorts. Through donated products and services totaling close to $1.1 million this year, Vail Resorts will provide free lift tickets, ski and ride school, meals, and equipment rentals, while funds from the Katz Amsterdam Charitable Trust will help develop and expand programs, support needed staffing and soft goods, and fund transportation. Vail Resorts currently hosts nearly 4,500 kids across its resorts each year, including Vail, Beaver Creek, Keystone, Breckenridge, Crested Butte, Park City, Heavenly, Kirkwood, Northstar, Stevens Pass, Afton Alps, Wilmot, Mt. Brighton, and Stowe. Through this five-year program expansion, the company hopes to more than double that number.
โVail Resorts is committed to making the sport more accessible through Epic for Everyone, including growing our youth access program. Weโre proud to be able to support and accelerate efforts to get kids on mountain across the country. By partnering with the National Brotherhood of Skiers and regional nonprofits closely tied to the communities surrounding our resort locations, weโre looking forward to introducing kids to skiing and snowboarding who otherwise may not have accessโbroadening lifelong engagement by removing some of the sportsโ barriers to entry.โ
– Vail Resorts CEO Rob Katz
Each skier or snowboarder will receive five on-snow sessions through the participating partner organization, as well as two additional sessions for both them and a guardian to continue practicing. Nonprofits will combine these services with youth mentorship for enriching, on-mountain programs includingโin partnership with resort team membersโan introduction to career opportunities in snow sports like snowmaking, operations, and ski and snowboard instruction.
The nonprofits receiving this yearโs grants include:
- National Brotherhood of SkiersโDetroit, Columbus, NYC, and Boston (access to Mt. Brighton, Alpine Valley, Hunter, Crotched, and Mount Sunapee): $97,775
- Sub-grants will go to four NBS clubs across the country. In addition to promoting winter sports for new participants, NBS prioritizes training and hiring ski and snowboard instructors of color. Through this partnership, the organizations intend for instructors of color to conduct on-snow programs so participants can better see themselves represented on-mountain.
- Boys and Girls Club of the Twin CitiesโMinneapolis and St. Paul (access to Afton Alps): $55,000
- Boys and Girls Club of Northeast OhioโCleveland (access to Alpine Valley): $25,000
- Boys and Girls Club of Boston (access to Crotched): $56,700
- Good Shepherd ServicesโNYC (access to Hunter): $100,000
- City Kids Wilderness ProjectโBaltimore and Washington, DC (access to Liberty and Whitetail): $45,162
- Boys and Girls Club of Metro Baltimore (access to Liberty and Whitetail): $20,356
- Indigenous Life Sport AcademyโWhistler, British Columbia (access to Whistler Blackcomb): $42,220 USD
- Chicago Youth Centers (access to Wilmot): $24,282
- Girls, Inc. Chicago (access to Wilmot): $16,421
- SOS OutreachโChicago and Detroit (access to Wilmot and Mt. Brighton): $76,940
To kick off the youth program last year, $1.5 million in grants was given to 14 organizations across North America. Due to the challenges presented by COVID-19, instead of increasing access to outdoor recreation, funds benefited the top priorities determined by the organization for the youth they serve.
No programs @ Vail, Beaver Creek, Breck, Keystone, Roundtop, Jack Frost / Big Boulder?
How about some support for ‘Winter4Kids’ @ The National Winter Activity Center in Vernon NJ.?
Do all the little black kids have to pay $220 a day for a lift ticket?
Remind us Anonymous, which settlement group were you part of? All of them since you are omnipresent or did you just choose a few to make sure you called them morons when they crossed that border. Did you write those books or does it all live in your head?
Maybe they should spend the time taking the youth to a library to read about forest management & wildlife management. Expanding the mind and not the selfie stick. If the earliest settlers had only killed all new growth in our open plains & forests, we wouldn’t be where we are today. Read about it, it’s all in the books that you morons don’t read anymore because you are too busy trying to gain followers.