Category | CEO Blog | BGC Canada https://www.bgccan.com/en/ Opportunity Changes Everything. Wed, 29 Oct 2025 14:45:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://www.bgccan.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/favicon-admin.png Category | CEO Blog | BGC Canada https://www.bgccan.com/en/ 32 32 BGC is the #1 ‘Third Place’ for Kids https://www.bgccan.com/en/bgc-is-the-1-third-place-for-kids/ Wed, 29 Oct 2025 13:06:31 +0000 https://www.bgccan.com/?p=86272

By Owen Charters, President & CEO of BGC Canada

October 29, 2025

Kids need a place beyond home and school. At BGC Clubs, 160,000 kids find that special place each year.

When we talk about where kids grow up, we often think about two places: home and school. But there’s another place that plays a powerful role in shaping who they become—the ‘third place’.

Why Third Places Matter

The idea of a third place is important. It may have started as an idea, an academic concept of a place to pause between the rigours of school and the reality of home. But it has increasingly become vitally important in an era of screens, mental health challenges, and an ever-changing, always-on society.

A third place is a space that’s neither home nor school, but somewhere kids can belong. It’s where they can be themselves, connect with mentors, and build skills that will serve them for life. And across Canada, no one does that better than BGC Clubs.

BGC Clubs are built around one powerful idea: opportunity changes everything. In a world where kids and youth face growing challenges from stress and isolation to hunger and uncertainty, Clubs provide what every kid deserves: safety, support, and opportunity. Guided by 125 years of experience and across more than 600 communities in Canada, 160,000 young people find a place to belong each year.

RELATED: BGC Clubs want the best for Canadian kids.

BGC Clubs address critical issues that shape the future of young Canadians.

At BGC Clubs, kids find people who care. Through recreation, mentorship, and belonging, Clubs create safe, inclusive spaces where kids can talk, laugh, and just be kids. For many young people, that’s life-changing. It’s a reminder that they are seen, supported, and never alone.

BGC Clubs are where curiosity turns into confidence. From homework help to STEM and arts programs, leadership training to job readiness, BGC Clubs nurture every child’s potential. Kids build real-world skills, and even more importantly, they learn how to believe in themselves.

BGC Clubs step up to make sure kids have access to nutritious meals and snacks. For too many families, putting food on the table is a daily struggle. Kids who are fed can focus, learn, and thrive. Without food security, nothing else is possible.

BGC Clubs give kids a place to go after-school and a path forward for life. They give youth positive outlets and supportive mentors who help them make good choices, stay connected, and build stronger futures—for generations.

BGC Canada’s latest PSA: #1 Third Place for Kids

When home is the first place and school is the second, BGC Clubs are the third place where everything comes together—where kids find belonging, learn life skills, and build the confidence to lead.

The voice of The #1 Third Place for Kids campaign belongs to someone who knows firsthand what it means to belong at BGC. Kayla Grey, a proud BGC Alumni Hall of Fame member, lends her voice and her experience to bring the story to life. Through her work across traditional platforms and social media, she continues to amplify diverse voices and inspire the next generation, just like BGC Clubs do every day.

The third place is a place you choose to belong, not one where you are required. This choice matters, and it’s a safe, desirable place. Clubs provide that space and more—it becomes the space to find opportunities, to grow and flourish. We all need a third place in our lives.

Help us give kids a third place.

Donate today or partner with BGC.

The post BGC is the #1 ‘Third Place’ for Kids first appeared on BGC Canada.

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BGC Clubs rise above challenges to meet the needs of their communities https://www.bgccan.com/en/bgc-clubs-rise-above-challenges/ Mon, 03 Feb 2025 14:07:23 +0000 https://www.bgccan.com/?p=85020

By Owen Charters, President & CEO, BGC Canada

February 3, 2025

Over six hundred BGC Club locations across Canada serve nearly 150,000 children and youth. Each Club is being asked to do more to support young people, but they don’t always have the resources they need.

BGC Clubs support communities in key issue areas

During my time with BGC, I’ve had the opportunity to visit almost every one of our 85 BGC Clubs, and two truths stand out: Our Clubs are very dynamic, and they face challenges every day. Yet, repeatedly, Clubs rise above challenges to provide great service in their communities.

While the services provided at each Club look a little different, they all support key issue areas: before- and after-school care, youth employment, youth mental health, food insecurity, and learning, to name a few.

Those 85 BGC Clubs provide six hundred Club locations nationwide and serve 150,000 children and youth. With rising living costs, each Club is being asked to do more to support young people in their communities.

For example, we know that Canadians are facing food insecurity more than ever. From 2018 to 2022, food costs rose by 19.1%. Recent reports show that as of 2023, 1 in 4 Canadian children under 18 live in food-insecure households—that’s 2.8 million young people. Times like these are when BGC Clubs come in.

At BGC Canada, food support means more than just providing snacks

On top of providing nearly 7 million healthy meals and snacks every year, our food programs teach young people food literacy—where food comes from, how to prepare it, and how to make healthy choices. Without food literacy, food security is impossible.

When I visit a Club, food is the hub for everything: it’s the snack the kids gravitate to immediately when coming through the doors. It’s the smell of a hot dinner wafting through the halls for kids and families. And it’s making sure kids have the food they need for their family when they leave each night.

RELATED: BGC Clubs provide kids with basic needs so they can have brighter futures

Our Kid Food Nation and Kid Chef Nation programs were recently re-designed to help young people develop their food knowledge and cooking skills. This means that not only do they get healthy meals from their Club, but they also get skills that set them up for lifelong success.

Programs like these are why 81% of our kids know how to make healthier food choices. But with increasing food costs, BGC Clubs are struggling.

BGC Clubs have continued to prove their resiliency by supporting families with their food needs, but we can’t do it alone. For BGC Clubs to continue offering impactful programs and feed kids, we need your help. Together, we can provide opportunities to the children, teens, parents, and communities that turn to us for support.

Interested in supporting BGC Canada?

Donate today or partner with BGC.

The post BGC Clubs rise above challenges to meet the needs of their communities first appeared on BGC Canada.

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BGC Clubs want the best for Canadian kids https://www.bgccan.com/en/bgc-clubs-want-the-best-for-canadian-kids/ Mon, 18 Nov 2024 14:55:08 +0000 https://www.bgccan.com/?p=84615

By Owen Charters, President & CEO, BGC Canada

November 18, 2024

We don’t have to want to get down on the floor and play mini-stick hockey to love kids – and you don’t need to provide shoulder rides for photos. You just have to believe in their possibilities and want to give them their opportunities.

For some reason, the debate about kids – whether we like them, want them, and what we’re supposed to ‘feel’ if we’re a parent are all over the media right now.

Debates about parenting – do you have to like being a parent to be a parent? Do you even need to like kids to be a parent?

My friend from university, who swore she didn’t like kids – ended up as a teacher, and then had three kids of her own that she adores. And my childless friends who love kids, work with kids, and are basically surrogate parents to many kids.

Each of our individual relationships to kids is fraught. Maybe we love kids, but we don’t love working with kids. Or maybe we’re drawn to the kids with challenges – we see something in them that needs help, needs a relationship, someone who cares.

It would be unusual to work for Clubs and not like kids. It’s possible, but unusual.

Yet within our Club world, there are so many versions of why we want to work with kids, or at least, for kids.

I have always loved working with kids – trying to figure them out, what makes each one tick, and cherishing the good and the bad ones. (Badly behaved, that is – I really don’t believe there are bad kids.)

Related: BGC Clubs are a modern solution to help parents

A few Club staff have been surprised when I got down on the ground to interact with Club kids, had them climb on me for a photo, engage in a conversation or exchange silly jokes.

Whatever our motivations are for working for kids, it is the spark of joy in their eyes that I believe we each live for, the opening up of ideas, options, and possibilities for them. That’s not just our responsibility as parents, but as Clubs.

BGC Clubs provide opportunities that set young people up for success

Wanting the best for young people is an age-old tradition that Clubs perpetuate, indefinitely. That’s not up for debate.

Since 2022, Clubs have collected over 20,500 survey responses and conducted over 850 interviews as a part of the Learning & Impact Project—making it the largest evaluative study of its kind in Canada. The Learning & Impact Project has found:

  • 95% of Club kids have more people they like to spend time with. 
  • 92% of Club kids are better at helping out when it is needed. 
  • 91% of Club kids are more excited to try new things. 
  • 91% of Club kids are more confident in their abilities. 
  • 90% of Club kids feel more comfortable being themselves. 
  • 90% of Club kids are more aware of the feelings of others. 
  • 90% of Club kids are more physically active. 
  • 90% of Club kids work better with others. 

We don’t have to want to get down on the floor and play mini-stick hockey to love kids – and you don’t need to provide shoulder rides for photos. You just have to believe in their possibilities and want to give them opportunities. 

Interested in supporting BGC Canada?

Donate today or partner with BGC.

The post BGC Clubs want the best for Canadian kids first appeared on BGC Canada.

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