School Sports Saved - Prior position paper
Flashback. Crushing road blocks to sports participaion often means overcoming powerful people at the top of the organizational charts
In episode #79 of Heavy Or Not, The OG Swim Guide, we break down a prior war with the Pittsburgh school‑district’s Superintendent of Schools.
She had a proposal to slash $600 K in sports programs and the comprehensive counter‑proposal helped keep those programs alive. It wasn’t a victory, but it wasn’t a defeat.
Coach Mark walks through the financial, strategic, and community arguments that turned a budget cut into a reform opportunity.
The district’s cut list (high‑school swimming, tennis, golf; middle‑school volleyball, wrestling; all intramurals) and the $600 K savings claim.
Highlights from the 45‑page “Alternative to Fewer Sports” position paper that challenged the cuts.
How the paper reframed athletics as a revenue source—e.g., the PPSH2O citywide aquatics model.
The three‑step reform plan: community‑led task force, an Olympic‑sports incubator, and lobbying for flexible state rules.
The broader value of sports: scholarship dollars, academic gains, attendance boosts, and community pride.
More and more we’re going to focus upon the road-blocks to sports participation.
Sadly, the biggest blocks come from those at the top of the organizational chart — the superintendent of schools, the mayor, the athletic directors, the league administrators.




