UH Football Program Teams up with Youth Impact Program to Help At-Risk Youth
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) –
Hawaii News Now – KGMB and KHNL
Next month the University of Hawaii football program will host a camp that’s about far more than just X’s and O’s. Its aim is to help at-risk middle school boys in all walks of life.
It’s called the Youth Impact Program and it was founded by three-time Super Bowl Champion and 2017 Polynesian Football Hall of Fame inductee Riki Ellison.
“When I came over here from New Zealand and I was exposed to the University of Southern California and given access, seeing my heroes changed my life forever at that critical age of 6th, 7th, and 8th grade,” Ellison said.
So he started the Youth Impact Program more than a decade ago to promote positive development in low-income, at-risk 10-14-year-old boys through football. The program has been used at USC, Michigan, Northwestern, and Stanford among others. Now for the first time, it comes to Hawaii.
“Why am I not doing this here and giving back to my bloodline and my Polynesian heritage and to Hawaii,” Ellison questioned as he was inducted at the Polynesian Cultural Center in January.
For two weeks in July, the program will provide kids with more than 60 hours of classroom time, 20 hours of football and fitness training and mentoring, field trips, transportation, clothing, and two meals a deal all free of charge thanks to a group effort from UH, the US Army and Marines, Roy Yamaguchi and more than 20 restaurants, and many more.