Jackson Free Press logo

This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
Note that any opinions expressed in legacy Jackson Free Press stories do not reflect a position of the Mississippi Free Press or necessarily of its staff and board members.

Boys & Girls Club of Central Mississippi is planning to close three of its facilities Dec. 31 due to a lack of funds. Credit: Courtesy Boys & Girls Club

More than 1,000 Jackson schoolchildren could be left unsupervised after school if a local community organization does not receive donations soon. The Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Mississippi plans to close three of its six Jackson-area facilities at the end of the school year if it does not raise $500,000 by April 1. The groupโ€™s board of directors picked the Walker, Magnolia and Bolton units, which together serve roughly 1,200 children, for potential closure after a long and difficult process, Executive Director Billy Redd said.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been cutting back for several years,โ€ Redd said. โ€œWe got to this point where there are no more cuts.โ€

The organizationโ€™s dire financial situation is partly the consequence of the global economic recession, which has made grant money scarce even as demand for community services grows. The organization has also operated with a budget short on donations and long on grants for several years, according to Andre Conway, vice president of development.

โ€œI think the community has gotten a little complacent in saying: โ€˜The Boys and Girls Clubs have always been here. Theyโ€™ll always be taken care of.’โ€ Redd said. โ€œThatโ€™s true as long as the community steps up to support it. The other complacency is probably us as an organization. We need to do a better job telling our story.โ€

That story, Redd believes, includes the greater social benefits that come with helping and supervising Jackson youthโ€”fewer high school dropouts, less juvenile crime and long-term economic development.

Dorothy Blackman, director of the Walker Unit Boys & Girls Club on Raymond Road, has already warned parents and children about the possibility of closure.

โ€œThe children are heartbroken; so are some of the parents,โ€ Blackman said. โ€œA lot of parents canโ€™t afford after-school care for their children. That means if this club is nonexistent, then these children are going home to baby-sit themselves.โ€

Between 90 and 95 percent of the children at the Boys & Girls Clubs receive free or reduced-price lunch at school, Redd said. Parents pay only $25 of the $500 it costs the organization per year to take care of a child, saddling the organization with what Redd calls โ€œa significant fundraising burden.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve had people say, โ€˜Well, why donโ€™t you raise your rates?โ€ Redd said. โ€œIf we raise our rates, we dump more kids out on the street because the parents canโ€™t afford it.โ€

Instead of raising fees, Redd first shortened club hours last year, closing centers at 6 p.m. instead of 8 p.m. It was a difficult decision, he says, given evidence that teenagers are far less likely to commit crimes if supervised through the evening. More recently, the organization cut staff hours at all its facilities.

The Boys & Girls Clubs are not alone in their financial hardship. With private donors losing their investments and foundation money drying up, the entire nonprofit sector is suffering along with other businesses, according to Mississippi Center for Nonprofits Director Mark McCrary.

โ€œDonations are down,โ€ McCrary said. โ€œEven the traditional givers, the people they have a relationship with, are cutting 25 to 50 percent of the contribution they gave last year or the last couple years.โ€

Stewpot Community Services, which provides clothing and shelter to homeless people in Jackson, is also feeling the effects of the downturn on private giving and grant money. Stewpot Executive Director Frank Spencer said that in January, Stewpot collected only $25,000 of the roughly $85,000 it needs to raise every month.

Stewpot will close the Flowers Shelter for Women and Children this weekend, Spencer said, because it never received essential grant money.

โ€œThe wiser thing to do is to close it down until we can be sure of funding it this year,โ€ Spencer said of the Livingston Street facility, which serves roughly 30 women and children per month.

The federal stimulus package will provide some additional sources for grant money, whether through state or federal agencies. Organizations like Stewpot and the Boys & Girls Clubs will need to be aggressive in applying for federal money, though, and federal funds cannot arrive quickly enough to save the three Boys & Girls Clubs in jeopardy.

Conway says that private donors have supplied roughly $100,000 already, but that the full $500,000 is necessary to keep those centers open through 2009.

Bernard Williams, a pastor and father of two girls who attend the Walker Unit, sees danger for the entire community if the club closes.

โ€œIt would be a terrible loss,โ€ Williams said. โ€œWhere will they go? Will we lose them to drugs? Will we lose them to the streets?โ€

Previous Comments

Man, this is sad. I wish I had half a mil that I could just pull out of my pocket and give to them.


This is CRAZY. Where are the churches, especially the MEGA churches who have built all of these eloborate structures. Mississippi’s focus is on the building of prisons; not on programs that serve as deterrence. Closing these types of outlets for parents who need after school care for there kids is one way that the state can depend on a boost for their prison census. Haley says he does not want the money from the Feds and I guess with the closing of so many things, he is right. Pretty soon, we will only need shovels to cover up the dirt made by Barbours administration.


May I have contact information for local representative of the Boys and Girls Club, anyone????


Queen601, I don’t know the MAIN person in charge: It use to be George Terry. He lives in Woodlea here in Jackson. I do know the three directors and they are as follows: Mrs. Albert 1450 W. Captol St 601-948-7211 Mr. Dilworth 470 Sykes Road 601-372-4111 Mrs. Blackmon Boys and Girls Club Raymond Road I don’t have Mrs. Blackmon’s telephone # or the specific address on Raymond Road. I hope this info. is helpful. Also, Opra donated the Boys and Girls Club in her home town. Perhaps it would be a great idea to see if she is willing to help save other MS Clubs. I don’t mean to get ahead of your thinking; however, if I can assist in any way, please let me know.


justjess, not a problem. i have no intention of watching us fail our children in this way therefore…any information you can provide is helpful. I’ll be in touch with details. Thank you!

MFP Solutions Lab logo

The Mississippi Free Press produced this story through the MFP Solutions Lab, supported by the Solutions Journalism Network. This series digs into Mississippiโ€™s systemic issues and sheds light on responses to them in other communities. Beyond just reporting on problems, these stories interrogate their causes and inspect potential solutions.