The Bergen Record

Promoting anti-violence through skateboard­ing

Nonprofit SOLID now calls Patterson home

- Darren Tobia certainty

PATERSON — About 10 years ago, Steve Wolfe met a group of teenagers from Paterson while he was hosting a weekly skateboard­ing event in Midland Park.

Wolfe, the founder of a skateboard­ing nonprofit group called SOLID Foundation, was so impressed by the Paterson teens’ determinat­ion to get to the event — taking two connecting buses and walking a mile — that he offered to carpool with them.

Through those rides from the city to the suburbs and back, Wolfe said he learned about the struggles the innercity skaters endured and their untapped talent because they lacked the investment and infrastruc­ture to succeed in the sport.

Wolfe last month began the process of moving his nonprofit to a new home in an old industrial building at 39 Governor Street in Paterson’s 1st Ward. SOLID had bounced around to five locations since it received its nonprofit status in 2014.

But Wolfe’s group is on much firmer financial ground after getting back-toback community-based violence interventi­on grants from the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office — $293,537 in 2023 and $499,945 in 2024.

Pushing for Peace program

The funding is being used for SOLID’s Pushing For Peace program, a combinatio­n of periodic events and weekly anti-violence workshops for people aged 11 through 25 from Paterson’s most crime-plagued neighborho­ods. The skateboard­ing is being used to entice city youths to join the program.

“When we asked how our community of skaters see kids escaping these dangerous situations, the most common answer was opportunit­y,” Wolfe said. “Everything we do at SOLID is to give kids opportunit­ies to be inspired, feel supported and connect with community and resources.”

Though Paterson isn’t known for skateboard­ing, that is slowly changing. Wolfe has a feeling that SOLID’s new headquarte­rs is opening at just the right time.

A few flyers taped to the front door and the organizati­on’s van parked out front are the only things that distinguis­h the building from the other factories nearby. That will change in due time. Wolfe and his staff members — which includes one of the skaters he used to carpool with — were moving boxes into the new building when Paterson Press arrived for a tour recently.

The high ceilings will soon accommodat­e a half-pipe, which is a wooden semi-circular structure that allows skaters to use gravity to skate up and down the ramp and perform aerial feats. Wolfe was hoping to find an even bigger place, but he quickly found out that a nonprofit is not many landlords’ idea of an ideal tenant — especially one that deals with children and skateboard­ing.

“We had three strikes against us,” Wolfe joked.

Safe haven for young skateboard­ers

The SOLID facility will be a safe haven for many young skateboard­ers who aren’t always treated kindly by the world outside.

“People think we’re rebels,” said Darius “DJ” Sample, the organizati­on’s youth developmen­t specialist, who was a teenager when he first met Wolfe in Midland Park. “A lot of property owners would kick us out of places because they say we’re vandals.”

The irony is that although many people treat skateboard­ers like troublemak­ers, young people often turn to the sport precisely to stay out of trouble, Sample said.

“I’m a product of that,” he said. SOLID is more than just a place to try out new tricks, according to group members. In addition to the skateboard­ing lessons on the first floor, the building has a second floor where art classes and an after-school program will be held. These classes have already been taking place at 131 Ellison St. for the past year, but now everything will be under one roof.

In the early days of the nonprofit, Wolfe combined Christian ministry with his outreach, but his position has evolved on the issue.

“Back in the day, when SOLID started, I believed I had all the right answers about life and faith. I had a about how it all worked,” Wolfe said. “If kids asked to have a Bible study, would we? I don’t see why not, but I would rather facilitate questions than give answers.”

During the tour of the new headquarte­rs, the desks were still stacked on top of each other and the warehouse was filled with boxes of donated shoes and skateboard decks that some of the students will get for free.

“Apparently, if shoes are scuffed or get returned, stores can’t sell them,” Wolfe said. “We have five different retail shops that send us stuff they can’t sell. Almost every time the shoes are still brand new.”

One of the reasons Wolfe thinks skateboard­ing is such a good fit for a city such as Paterson — where a quarter of residents live below the poverty line — is that it requires little equipment compared to other sports.

“Skateboard­ing is an individual sport — you don’t need a team, coach, or a referee to call the plays,” Wolfe said. “You just take your board and hit the streets.”

Wolfe said things will be in place at the SOLID headquarte­rs in time for the expected opening date this fall.

“If a kid is interested in skating but doesn’t have a board, the skate community will provide one,” said Wolfe, who grew up in Hawthorne. “Kids have spare parts and they’ll put them together.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY DARREN TOBIA/PATERSON PRESS ?? SOLID’s new headquarte­rs are located at 39 Governor St. in Paterson.
PHOTOS BY DARREN TOBIA/PATERSON PRESS SOLID’s new headquarte­rs are located at 39 Governor St. in Paterson.
 ?? ?? Steve Wolfe, founder of skateboard­ing nonprofit SOLID.
Steve Wolfe, founder of skateboard­ing nonprofit SOLID.

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