Kids camp will get wheel help
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Lindsay Sandham
It is a tad smaller than its French namesake and not nearly as
competitive, but the Tour de OC still manages to hold its royal
style.
Scheduled for this Saturday, the annual bike-a-thon fundraiser at
Vanguard University brings in donations for the Royal Family Kids
Camp, a week-long summer camp for abused children.
The camp was founded locally in the late 1980s and has since grown
into a nationwide organization.
“Our goal is to have a camp in every county in the United States,”
said the co-chairman of this year’s bike-a-thon, retired police
officer and current Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustee Dave
Brooks.
The Costa Mesa resident has helped with the camp on many different
levels. He started as camp director and then took over fundraising
responsibilities.
A couple who were involved with the camp at that time, mentioned
they had organized a bike-a-thon fundraiser for a sick relative and
that it had been quite successful. That sparked the idea of hosting a
similar event for the camp.
“We had 12 riders the first year,” Brooks said. “We will have
about 150 riders this year. Every year has been bigger and better.”
The ride started as a two-day event, from Anaheim Stadium to the
San Diego Train Station, with an overnight camping stop in San
Clemente. Part of this ride required passing through Camp Pendleton,
but after Sept. 11, beefed-up security made it harder to gain
clearance for all the riders, Brooks said.
“So we decided to take it to a one-day ride,” he said. “We do the
one-day ride, and we keep it all in Orange County.”
Thus, the Tour de OC was born.
There are four different rides to choose from. They include a
25-mile ride, which has an entry fee of $25 and a fundraising goal of
$75 per rider; and a 55-mile and a 100-mile ride, both with an entry
fee of $40 and a goal of $150. Brooks said the entry fee covers the
cost of putting on the event, and the rest goes toward Royal Family
Kids Camp.
“The fourth ride is a kids’ fun ride -- we’re starting that this
year,” he said. “We have a closed course on the campus at Vanguard
University for children up to 12 years old.”
He said the long rides start and end at Vanguard, so this year
they will have bounce houses, free popcorn, free food and carnival
games set up for the families of participants while they wait.
Costa Mesa resident Gary Petrak has tackled the ride three times
and was a counselor at the camp several years ago.
“The motivation [for me] is to help fund the abused-kids camp,” he
said.
In fact, he said, two years ago it rained so hard during the ride
that he thought if it weren’t for the camp, he wouldn’t have been
riding at all.
Petrak also said the ride is a really good way for inexperienced
cyclists to get into cycling.
“It’s a really well-supported ride,” he said. “This ride is over
the top on how they take care of you.”
A team of motorcyclists, Motorcycle Amateur Radio Club, follows
along with the participants to ensure their health and safety. The
motorcyclists work with Support and Gear, which will drive to the
rescue should a rider need repair work on his or her bicycle, Brooks
said.
The goal of the bike-a-thon is to raise $45,000, as it costs $450
to send one child to camp, and they try to send 100 kids from Orange
County every year.
“The first year [we] had 37 children that actually attended the
camp,” Brooks said.
In the beginning, Royal Family worked with the county’s social
services agency to recruit abused children for the camp, but when
budget cuts were made, the agency eliminated its summer camp program.
Fortunately, Brooks said, by the time this happened, word of mouth
spread, and foster parents and organizations that deal with foster
children were aware of Royal Family Kids Camp.
The weeklong program, run entirely by volunteers and held near
Twin Peaks and Lake Arrowhead in the San Bernardino Mountains, offers
a variety of activities such as swimming, archery, fishing and
woodworking.
Petrak, who originally heard about the camp through his church,
noted that there is one counselor for every two children, which has a
huge impact on them.
“These kids do not usually have an example of an adult in their
life who is not going to abuse them,” he said. “It takes a day or two
for them to trust you. You have to let them see that you don’t have
an agenda.”
Brooks said all volunteers go through background checks,
fingerprinting and interviews in order to become a counselor.
For more information on the Tour de OC, visit
https://www.gearingup.net.
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