A boost for high
school sailing in the U.S.
Nov. 19, 2008
The
Interscholastic Sailing Association (ISSA) plans to broaden the
base of high school sailing in the United States, starting with
a $25,000 grant from the California International
Sailing Association (CISA) supporting a bid for private
donations.
Tim Hogan for
15 years led CISA's programs of advanced racing clinics and
funding travel to major regattas for young sailors in California
and Hawaii. In 2005 he moved on to become president of ISSA, the
national governing body for seven high school sailing districts
in the U.S. He now heads the Hogan Fund to benefit high school
sailing.
Unlike
traditional team sports, sailing is not funded by school
athletic programs, although in competition participants may
represent the schools they attend. As a result, the sport has
lagged in development except in the Northeast, where ISSA
started in prep schools in 1930, and in the Pacific Coast
district of California and Hawaii where competition is strong.
The other districts are the Mid-Atlantic, South Atlantic,
Southeast, Midwest and Northwest.
All donations
to ISSA's Hogan Fund are tax deductible under 501(c)3. Hogan may
be contacted at
thogan@tphenterprises.net.
For more information on ISSA go to
www.highschoolsailingusa.org.
CISA, since
its founding in 1971, has funded local sailing programs and
racing clinics and supported young and promising amateur sailors
by providing travel grants for regional, national and
international competition. Several U.S. Olympic sailors,
including Andrew Campbell, Graham Biehl, Alison Jolly and John
Shadden, benefitted from the advanced training at CISA clinics.
"CISA is
moving very well now," Hogan said, "and I need to spend my time
with high school sailing. My biggest challenge is to get high
school sailing endowed."
To start, the
$25,000 will be spent to train coaches and purchase equipment in
the weaker ISSA districts.
"Sailors are
not all coming from yacht clubs but from community sailing
programs that need help," Hogan said. "In California we have
high school sailing and junior sailing at the yacht clubs that
kind of blend together. We want to do that in the other
districts."
ISSA oversees
four major events each year: a national singlehanded
championship for the Cressy Trophy, the Mallory for doublehanded
sailing, the Baker for team racing and the Great Oaks
Invitational.
"But how many
of our 350 [ISSA] teams get to go to those regattas?" Hogan
asked. "About 10 percent. The goal is to grow ISSA and make it a
truly national scene."
MEDIA CONTACT
Rich Roberts
310.835.2526
richsail@earthlink.net