Local Boys and Girls Clubs, Planet Fitness organize school supply drive in Santa Maria and Atascadero

Students from lower-income families are poised to receive much-needed school supplies through a debut partnership between the Central Coast chapters of Planet Fitness and the Boys and Girls Clubs of Mid Central Coast.

click to enlarge Local Boys and Girls Clubs, Planet Fitness organize school supply drive in Santa Maria and Atascadero
Photo courtesy of Planet Fitness
STATIONERY STATION: Large boxes in the Atascadero and Santa Maria Planet Fitness locations await donations in the form of backpacks, lined notebooks, No. 2 pencils, pens, and crayons, among other school supplies to help kids in need.

Theresa Cappelletty, Planet Fitness’ regional manager, told the Sun that the two groups came together to promote a judgment-free environment for kids.

“These students come from different walks of life,” she said. “One person might need everything whereas another student might need pencils and a backpack. There’s no judgment, just donate what you can. By supplying that to students who can’t get that on their own, they aren’t going to be judged or bullied.”

Nationally, families are cutting back on spending in other arenas to make room for school supplies, which have become more costly because of inflation, according to CBS News reporting in 2022. Data from the National Retail Federation show that total spending on back-to-school products rose from $36.9 billion last year to $41.5 billion in 2023. Per American household, that amounts to roughly $864 in 2022 and $890 in 2023.

On the Central Coast, the Planet Fitness and Boys and Girls Club partnership aims to address the growing need for school supplies through local collection drives. From July 24 through Aug. 8, community members in San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara counties can donate essential items like backpacks, lined notebooks, No. 2 pencils, pens, crayons, glue sticks, calculators, erasers, and rulers at the Planet Fitness locations in Atascadero and Santa Maria. Drop off supplies at 1505 Stowell Center Plaza in Santa Maria or at 8210 El Camino Real in Atascadero.

“A lot of the teachers that are [Planet Fitness] members are so happy to hear that we are partnering in that way because they see firsthand how that impacts students in their learning if they don’t have those tools,” Cappelletty said.

Planet Fitness and Boys and Girls Clubs of America have a national partnership through a corporate sponsorship. Kelly White O’Neill, the marketing director of the Boys and Girls Clubs of Mid Central Coast, told the Sun that the unique aspect was the local Planet Fitness chapter reaching out to create the school supply drive.

“They really are taking their corporate sponsorship very seriously, and being very proactive to reach out to their local Boys and Girls Club to put the corporate sponsorship in place, which almost never happens,” White O’Neill said.

She added that both groups hope the school supply donations can drive home their anti-bullying messaging.

“We serve any child that needs us but historically the kids that we serve come from families with great need,” White O’Neill said. “School supplies are, of course, an issue and not every family has the resources to provide school supplies.”

The donations will help hundreds of kids across both counties. Once collected, the supplies will be delivered on Aug. 11 to schools in Santa Maria like Robert Bruce Elementary and Arellanes Elementary and Junior High schools and the Atascadero and Paso Robles school districts.

More school supply drives are in the works on the Central Coast, according to White O’Neill.

“The United Way in Northern Santa Barbara is doing the Cram the Van drive, and I believe some of our kids will benefit from that as well,” she said. 

Highlights

• Applications for participation in the inaugural Viking Charities Classic Car Show are now being accepted. The event serves as the successor to the popular 20-year Wheels and Windmills Car Show—which concluded last year. Three days of vehicle-oriented special events will take place Oct. 6 through Oct. 8 in Solvang as well as neighboring Buellton and Santa Ynez, highlighted by the Oct. 7 car show. Downtown Solvang will be transformed into a classic car (and motorcycle) mecca as more than 200 pre-1990 impeccably restored, stock, and customized vehicles—including hot rods, sports cars, muscle cars, vans, pickups, trucks, motorcycles, and other special interest vehicles—will be on display on the streets, competing for coveted prizes. For more information and car show participant applications, visit vikingcharitiesinc.com/carshow.

• A colorful, large-scale painted mural depicting the past, present, and future of Santa Maria now graces the former library at the City Civic Center, facing Broadway. The mural, 16 by 32 feet, was painted on 16 4-by-8-foot panels by local teens, under the direction of artists Kym Cochran and Jonathan Smith, of The Environment Makers Inc. This is part of the city’s public arts program and its Smart City, Safe City vision to enrich the community’s quality of life with a sense of its arts, culture, and heritage. For more information, call (805) 925-0951, Ext. 2260.

Reach New Times Staff Writer Bulbul Rajagopal, from the Sun’s sister paper, at [email protected].

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