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ARCHS' Lifelong Learning:

Basketball/Lifeskills

ARCHS' Funding Partner: City of St. Louis Department of Parks, Recreation and Forestry

Goal: Establish relationships between young men and police officers while providing healthy exercise and teaching life skills.

ARCHS' Service Delivery Partners: Fathers' Support Center, St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department

Key Results to Date: More than 320 young men have participated in hundreds of hours of lifeskills training (financial, health, leadership topics) and recreational activities.

Availability: Open to City residents. Contact City of St. Louis Parks Dept.

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ARCHS' Basketball/Lifeskills Partnership

A life skills instructor speaks to participants about building credit.A life skills instructor speaks to participants about building credit.North City resident Kenny Williams and his team had just posted another victory in the St. Louis NITES Basketball League, and the group of young men was all smiles as they walked off the court. Their successful efforts did not end on the basketball court though, because all were headed to a life skills learning class right after to continue in their winning ways.

The league is a partnership between ARCHS, the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department, St. Louis Department of Parks, Recreation and Forestry and Fathers' Support Center. Over 240 men between the ages of 18-35 form 10 teams for an 11-week basketball league.

ARCHS was selected by the City of St. Louis to manage the partnership via a competitive Request for Proposal (RFP) process.

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ARCHS' Programming Goes Above and Beyond With Job Placements

Mack Caldwell (left) and Nico Reed at a recent ARCHS' Adult Basketball/Life Skills awards banquet. Both Caldwell and Reed have found employment with ARCHS' partners.Mack Caldwell (left) and Nico Reed at a recent ARCHS' Adult Basketball/Life Skills awards banquet. Both Caldwell and Reed have found employment with ARCHS' partners.ARCHS is known across the State of Missouri for managing programs that impact the lives of thousands of the area's most vulnerable citizens. However, when ARCHS' program participants begin finding careers within ARCHS' partnership umbrella, it's a testament to the extra mile that is taken to truly change lives.

St. Louis residents Mack Caldwell and Nico Reed, who are participants in ARCHS' Basketball/Life Skills program, have recently found employment with two of the organization's partners. Caldwell serves as a Youth Facilitator with Fathers' Support Center and Reed is a Youth Support Worker in the ASAP after school program at Langston Middle School.

"I take a lot of what I learn at basketball and apply it to my job," Caldwell said. "I see the camaraderie the guys have while playing basketball and things we learn in the life skills classes and analyze what I can so I can teach the kids I work with some things."

"I love working with the kids," Reed said. "It's a big responsibility because they look up to you and you have to set an example. I try and take the positives out of Adult Basketball and teach the kids I work with some things they can relate too."
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