Community Corner
Mercer Boxing Gym Gets $65K Grant For Mentoring Program
The program will offer healthy and safe alternatives and mentorship during after-school hours.
MERCER COUNTY, NJ – A boxing gym in Mercer County has received a state grant for its boxing and mentoring program, Attorney General Matthew J. Platkin and New Jersey State Athletic Control Board (SACB) Commissioner Larry Hazzard, Sr. Said.
The Ike Williams Boxing Academy in Trenton will receive $65,000 to continue its program that launched last year which provides participants with boxing knowledge and physical fitness training, as well as instruction on nutrition, wellness, and life skills.
The yearlong program is expected to reach 20 youth participants who will attend sessions three days per week, with each session lasting three hours.
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These participants take part in boxing fitness training as well as monthly workshops and field trips. The monthly life skills workshops are open to participants and their family members and area residents, meaning those seminars will benefit the larger community.
Another $65,000 grant is being provided to the Atlantic City Police Athletic League (AC PAL), Platkin said.
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“These programs transcend boxing and can have an impact far beyond the ring,” Platkin said in a statement. “The participants learn how to interact with others and explore an array of potential career paths, while developing and maintaining physical fitness through sports and healthy eating habits. The opportunities that are made available to participants give them a chance to better their own futures.”
The grant recipients in Trenton also highlighted how participants interact regularly with first responders to gain a better understanding of them, their work, their backgrounds, and possible future career paths.
Ike Williams Boxing Academy operators expect most of the participants will see an array of benefits from the overall experience, improving their interactive skills, physical fitness, awareness of different career options, and their understanding of healthy eating habits. The program aims to both keep youth out of the criminal justice system and reduce the recidivism of those who have had prior contact with it.
“The Ike Williams program was selected after several Trenton police officers, former Department of Corrections officers, and firefighters committed to participating in this program, offering the potential for positive interactions between young participants and first responders in a non-threatening environment, which could go far in changing preconceptions, strengthening police-community relations, and improving public safety in the city of Trenton,” said State Athletic Control Board Commissioner Larry Hazzard, Sr.
The program in Trenton also is expected to help students achieve academic success. Participants provide a copy of their school report card to the program facilitator, who maintains regular contact with school personnel should the participant have issues with classwork or behavior. Assessments are conducted regularly to identify participants’ needs and direction to services to assist them.
In addition to being trained in physical fitness and learning the business aspects of boxing, participants are expected to acquire life skills, attend career development workshops, assist in hosting an amateur boxing exhibition, and compete in amateur boxing events.
The program will enroll participants who are between the ages of 11 and 18 and who reside and attend school in disadvantaged and high-crime neighborhoods.
The programs will offer healthy and safe alternatives and mentorship during after-school hours.
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