16 April, 2019
Creating hope: Bridge II Sports
Special Interest programme / Partner story / Video
Photo: © Bridge II Sports
“Disability doesn’t define outcomes, opportunities do,” says Ashley Thomas, founder and director of Bridge II Sports, a not-for-profit organisation based in North Carolina, the US, that provides opportunities to youth and adults with physical disabilities to engage in sport.
For Ashley, who uses a wheelchair due to spina bifida, sport became a saving grace:
“I learned you’ve got to get out of yourself, you’ve got to get out ‘of oh poor me’ and you really have to proactively engage somewhere else.”
Founded in 2006 in North Carolina, US, Bridge II Sports develops programmes that centre on recreation, exercise and competitive sports for people with disabilities. Bridge II Sports has since expanded to include 11 adapted sports, programmes in public schools, and major sporting events for veterans. Ultimately, the programmes aim to create inclusive sporting environments that encourage people with disabilities to feel
Bridge II Sports is achieving its goals. Engaging with people of all ages with physical disabilities, its programmes are “finding the player within” and helping to improve people’s lives. So far, 94 per cent of children who participate in its programmes continue on to college or tech school. In addition, thanks to Bridge II Sports’ efforts, legislation has been passed in the state of North Carolina to get programmes for adaptive sports into public schools.
Congratulations to Ashley and the team at Bridge II Sports for all their hard work and great efforts. We are excited about what is to come!
This grant falls under the Special Interest Programme, which you can find here. Oak’s Special Interest grants cover a wide range of fields, including health, humanitarian relief, education and the arts.