Final whistle to blow for Kitchener Sports Association as it wraps operation after 80 years - Action News
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Kitchener-Waterloo

Final whistle to blow for Kitchener Sports Association as it wraps operation after 80 years

The Kitchener Sports Association says its folding the organization later this year after marking its 80th anniversary. The group's president says they haven't been able to get new members to join and take over the many volunteer activities they're involved in.

'Those experiences are hard to come by in life,' current president says reflecting on his 50 years

Norm Foss the President of the Kitchener Sports Association announces the group is celebrating its 80th anniversary and closing shop this year.
Norm Foss, the President of the Kitchener Sports Association says the group could see that the time was coming that it was going to end. " We are of an age where some of us are not going to be doing it anymore. And so we feel that we need to shut it down." (Kate Beuckert/CBC)

The Kitchener Sports Association will celebrate its 80th anniversaryand then close up shop for good this spring.

Norm Fossis the current president of the Kitchener Sports Association (KSA) and saidthe main issue the volunteer organization is facing is that it doesn't have the people to replace them.

"I'm 75. A Lot of our other members are of the same age and we aren't getting a new group of people in and it's just making things difficult for us to carry on all of our programs and especially operate at an executive level,"Fosssaid.

Foss says they've worked to get new members tojoin the organization for many years, but they've noticed in the last 10years interest has waned.

In late 2023, the association's board of directors and members unanimously approved plans to begin"sun-setting its operations." Foss says they plan to make their final year memorable and continue onthe group'scommunity building success.

Group formed for a legacy project

The association was formed in 1944 by a group of men whose sole purpose was to create a legacy project in honour of the soldiers who lost their lives in the Second World War. The project was the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium.

Now often referred to as The Aud, the building opened its doors in 1950. Since then, the associationhas contributed financially to a number of other projects in Kitchener, including the Activa Centre, baseball facilities at Breithaupt Park and the Lions Arena.

Foss explained to CBC K-W's The Morning Edition host Craig Norris that while those are "one-offs," the group's bread and butter has been regular programs helping local athletes.

"We have a grants committee that hands out grants to minor sports groups for travel, for equipment that they need, that sort of thing and that is still ongoing," Foss said.

"We do a volunteer recognition dinner for minor sports in town annually. We have a committee that hands out scholarships to local youth going to university, and there are others, so we need a certain number of volunteers to do all these things and do them well."

Foss said the source of their funds for the scholarships and grants came from holding bingo games and running the 50/50 draw at The Aud during the Kitchener Ranger games.

He says there'll be one more opportunity to have a sports association dinner and to hand out scholarships and grants.

Applications for the sports association grants will remain openuntil Feb. 15 and a volunteer recognition event will be held in March. More information can be found on the association's website.

Photo of the Kitchener Memorial Auditorium dated May 1951.
The Kitchener Memorial Auditorium officially opened on May 24, 1951. The Kitchener Sports Association, which still sells 50/50 draws at the game, was also instrumental in raising money for the twin icepads behind the Aud, and other sports centres in Kitchener. (Kitchener Public Library)

'It was really interesting'

Foss has beena 50 year member of the group who was first invited by a friend andsays it's a bittersweet ending.

"I got to meet really interesting people who were involved in just a range of sports across the city. And it was really interesting and it became fun and then it led to a whole bunch of other experiences," Foss said.

"Because of this, I've sat on a Memorial Cup organizing committee, I've helped run a lottery, I've helped run some bars for old timers hockey, and we even did a couple of years of an NHL Old Timers event at the auditorium run by [former NHL player] Vic Hadfield. Those experiences are hard to come by in life, and they're fun."

LISTEN|Norm Foss of the Kitchener Sports Association reflects on 80 years in the community:

The final whistle will blow on the Kitchener Sports Association later this year. The group announced its simultaneously celebrating its 80th anniversary and that it will fold its operation. Organizers say their group is getting older and they don't have younger people to replace them. KSA president Norm Foss talked about the past and what's left to do.