“Retired exec teaches kids to persevere”

Charlotte, NC

February 2010

Reggie McAfee: “Retired exec teaches kids to persevere”

The slogan "Attitude is everything" is inscribed on Reggie McAfee's business card.

McAfee should know: A child of public housing in Cincinnati, he became a star runner in high school in Ohio and college in North Carolina. Now, he heads a Charlotte-based nonprofit that uses running as a tool for teaching kids to keep on keeping on.

"If you're used to persevering and setting goals, and if you're committed, you can achieve any goal," says McAfee, chairman and executive director of Cross-Country for Youth. "Those skills transfer to everything in your life."

McAfee launched the nonprofit in 2006 after taking early retirement at Xerox.

Operating with an annual budget of roughly $125,000 and 60 to 70 volunteers, Cross-County for Youth uses cross-country running as a tool to teach kids in elementary and middle school "to live healthy lives with character."

The nonprofit teams with schools, offering a 10-week program each fall for roughly 16 kids per school, with each kid paying $125 to participate.The kids attend a one-hour practice twice a week run by two volunteer coaches, with each practice following a 30-minute session on character, also led by volunteers.

In just three years, the program has grown from 70 kids the first year to 205 this school year. And the kids represent a broad demographic group, divided roughly evenly among whites, African Americans and Hispanics, including both at-risk kids and affluent kids.

Scholarships are available, funded with money raised at an annual bowl-a-thon set for April 24 at AMF Carolina Lanes in Matthews. McAfee aims to expand the model throughout North Carolina.

In 1999, McAfee was the top Xerox salesman in the U.S. In 2006, when the company offered him early retirement, he figured it was a perfect time to pursue his dream of giving back by working with kids. "I did not have a father figure," he says. "But there were so many people who stood in the gap to be that person. I always said, ‘If I have an opportunity to give back and improve the lives of others, I will.'"

This fall, McAfee hopes to expand the nonprofit's program within a 75-mile radius of Charlotte, and is looking for schools with volunteers who have good character and a passion to work with kids. "This program is not about being great runners," McAfee says. "It's more about having kids be great people." 


 

The above story is excerpted from the Philanthropy Journal’s Giving and Community page, sponsored by NCGives. Read the full article here.

Comments

Leave Your Comment


Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Gifts Included

Talent

A former national champion runner, retired Xerox executive Reggie McAfee started and now runs a nonprofit that uses cross-country running to teach more than 200 Charlotte-area elementary and middle-school students to live “healthy lives with character."

Be Like Reggie!

Learn how you can help strengthen your community's giving story.

Learn How You Can Participate