YMCA Kicks Off $16 million Capital Campaign

If you wonder if McCook is on the move, just look at all the things happening or that are in the works.

There is the new city pool, which remains open for another two weeks on the weekends. There are new events, including Third Thursdays through October, bringing shopping, music, food and fun to Norris Avenue and Cars Under the Stars drive-in theater, which is showing Pixar’s “Up” Saturday night at the Red Willow County Fairgrounds. There are numerous housing projects, helping alleviate an issue that is a topic at every discussion. And there is the ballfield project, which has grown to include space for not just new baseball fields but new businesses and housing and green space for the community. 

All of these projects are building excitement for the future of McCook and Southwest Nebraska.

But perhaps one of the most needed and most overdue projects is the McCook YMCA renovation and expansion project. 

This $16 million campaign is designed to bring the McCook facility both up-to-speed, with much needed repairs, and to expand the building, to provide more space, programs and possibilities than is currently offered. 

McCook’s leaders had the foresight to bring the YMCA to McCook in the 1920s, constructing a building on Norris Avenue that was used for nearly 60 years. Everyone who used the facility has memories, nearly all involving the pool in the basement and the spiral staircase between floors.

Then in the late 1970s and early ‘80s, McCook again stepped up to build a new modern facility next to the high school. Opened in 1982, that building was built with a 20 to 30-year lifespan. With more than 40 years in the facility, it is showing the wear and tear of constant use over the past four decades. 

The YMCA will be celebrating its 100th anniversary in McCook in just a few years. There are only a handful of businesses and organizations that can say they were around a few decades ago much less a century. 

This fund-raising campaign is an ambitious goal to not only renovate and expand the current facility. But this isn’t a luxury or a desire; this is a necessity if we want our community to grow and thrive. This project is needed if we want our community to be here 100 years from now. 

While the city of McCook helps with youth sporting activities by maintaining the public green spaces, the YMCA serves as the community’s recreational department. It oversees nearly all youth and adult sports programs. It provides the space and instructors for group fitness classes. 

And this Y project doesn’t just affect those living in McCook. 

With the only indoor pool for 60 miles in any direction, the Y attracts swimmers from St. Francis to Araphoe to Curtis. And the youth and adult sports programs provide recreation for residents of McCook, as well as most of the surrounding towns. 

When I moved to McCook in 1995, the YMCA was one of my first memories. I got married on a Saturday and played in the adult volleyball league with my new husband and in-laws the following Tuesday. And I was coaching youth soccer the following spring, despite not having any kids in the league. 

And since then, all of my children have spent countless hours in the pool, either as a swimmer and diver or a lifeguard or both. When the kids were younger, every Wednesday night was spent at the YMCA swimming pool, as our inexpensive outing with friends and their kids. 

This is my “why” for the Y fund-raising campaign: because of what the Y has meant to me in the past and what it means to our future. Each and everyone of us has a “why” this particular asset is important to McCook and Southwest Nebraska and Northwest Kansas. 

As the YMCA embarks on this fund-raising campaign with the hopes of beginning the renovations this fall, it is important for each of us to consider how we can help and why it is important to the community. Maybe you benefit directly from the YMCA, learning how to swim, playing a sport, attending an event. Or maybe you benefit indirectly because your business needs employees, who need the YMCA. 

Everyone has a different “why” for the Y and in the end, each of us can be part of helping make "McCook on the Move."

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Building Connections in McCook Matters June in McCook will be abuzz with fun events including a Youth Summit, hosted by McCook Community Foundation Fund. Our young people in Youth Change Reaction will host the first Nebraska Community Foundation gathering for youth, which will bring youth from across Nebraska to McCook. While still in the planning stages, our students identified that McCook is great because of connections . Our young people easily recognize how critical this factor is to people attraction, to people retention, and to improve their futures. What I miss most about my high school classroom is connections with students and colleagues. In education, I taught first, second, and sometimes third generations in families. My husband, Greg, and I are not McCook natives, but I eventually knew who was related to whom and usually where the parent(s) were employed. Going to the grocery store meant greetings from students and sometimes their family members. I officially retired from my high school classroom nine years ago in May. When you retire, the most-asked question becomes “What do you do with your time?” I try to maintain those connections and make new ones by belonging. For the past seven years, Sharon Bohling and I have volunteered to help plan and organize Bison Days for our high school students, which took place February 10 and 11. It would not happen without the financial support of McCook Community Foundation Fund, plus the McCook High School, local businesses, and the talented people of Southwest Nebraska who say “yes” when one of us reaches out to ask for the donation of time and talent. I would venture that they allow us to be on the Bison Days’ committee because we both have connections within our community—it’s certainly not our computer savvy. Connections can also solve a problem. Recently, I signed up to help a local family in crisis. My morning plan revolved around delivering my donation at a designated drop-off place. That didn’t work out. Fortunately, I still work with youth in various capacities, so I know that Keri Wilkinson works for Camy Bradley. Keri was an organizer for the family fundraiser, so I walked in Camy’s office hoping to find Keri. She was not there, so Camy and I visited briefly. She knew someone (who I did not know) who could possibly give me further direction. Only in a town with connections are you able to interrupt someone’s business, have her reach out for you using her connections , and offer to keep the donations for me until Keri’s return. Another great example of connecting can be found over coffee. Dee Friehe and I are longtime teacher friends. During a chance meeting at the grocery store a few weeks ago, she shared how she was there following a funeral service and was gathering supplies to deliver supper to the grieving family that night. She also updated me on her group of adults who meet for coffee on Thursdays at Ember’s, which varies from 8-28 depending on the day. She recognized the need for adults moving to McCook or folks just wanting to get out to make connections . Dee’s husband, Mark, also hosts his own group of men who are new(er) to McCook. She regaled me with stories of their Christmas party and other special gatherings. Wanting to call McCook your home is solidified by building connections . Ronda Graff has written about McCook Connects which matches a McCook person with someone new to the community of similar interests. I earned my McCook Connects’ T-shirt welcoming a young family with children. We have since spent many hot summer days sitting on bleachers together cheering on our 4-H horse kids while they show their horses. Warning: I connected them with a “free” new-to-them horse. Be careful connecting with me or you’ll probably own a horse. You do not have to be retired to connect in this community. Volunteering is a surefire way to meet people. McCook has many civic groups looking for new faces. Attend a church here; we have many welcoming congregations. Go to ball games or school concerts, attend concerts in the park, learn a new skill through the college, show up at a Third Thursday event or invite the neighbors for a BBQ. Take your youngsters to story hour or Move and Groove at the library. Go watch an event at the Kiplinger Arena. You can even take it a step further: Make a friend or call a friend and invite him/her to go with you. It is human connection that keeps us healthy and happy. If McCook Community Foundation Fund can help you connect in some meaningful way, please reach out for advice or support. *** While Pam Wolford may be retired, she is just as busy serving on the McCook Community Foundation Fund committee and started a new Learn and Return Scholarship with MCFF, while stepping up to grandparent whenever the call comes in.
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