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About
the International Inline Skating Association
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December
20, 2004
CONTACT:
Kalinda Mathis
718.874.2424
kalinda@mindspring.com
Jeremy Stonier
609-249-1703
Inline
Skating Association Restructures
Mission
Accomplished; Will Respond to Future Challenges
Wilmington,
NC. — The Board of Directors of the International Inline Skating
Association (IISA) agreed today that the group has accomplished
its original mission and will subsequently right-size
the Association in 2005 in response to that accomplishment.
The not-for-profit trade association, whose members include
Rollerblade®, K2, Salomon, Bauer Nike, Roller Derby, Roces,
Verducci, Hyper Wheels, and Concept Sports provided a central
foundation for the industry segment during both phenomenal growth
and difficult challenges in its 13 year history.
Established
in 1991, the IISA was the by-product of a consumer membership
organization begun by Rollerblade with an agenda promoting safety,
education and access for inline skaters and the emerging sport.
In the early years, the group represented all aspects of
the quickly growing community of manufacturers, suppliers,
retailers, athletes and enthusiasts. As participation grew 30 percent annually and
skaters began skating in different environments, several
sport-specific functions of the IISA developed into independent
organizations such as the National Inline Hockey Association
(which later was folded into USA Hockey Inline), USA Inline Racing
and later, the Aggressive Skaters Association.
"The
IISA, through the leadership of Kalinda Mathis, has done an
amazing job supporting and strengthening an entire industry
throughout the past decade,” commented Jeremy Stonier, President
of the IISA. “The instructor programs, government lobbying, and
public relations activity of the association accelerated the
worldwide acceptance of the sport and contributed to its
incredible rise in popularity … and that is something we can all
be very proud of.”
Robert
O. Naegele Jr., IISA President Emeritus remarked, "The IISA
was a “circle-the-wagon'” response from all of us
who love the sport. From the grassroots leadership of skaters like
David Cooper to the dedication and expertise of IISA Legal Counsel
Kent Correll together as athletes, novices, professional racers,
extreme skaters, hockey players, race promoters and manufacturers,
we developed a great team to protect and promote our passion”.
In
1994, the group stepped up its efforts in education.
The Instructor Certification Program (ICP) seeded inline
education programs all over the world including Europe, Asia and
the Middle East. Over 3000 skaters have been certified to
teach—resulting in millions of people learning to inline skate.
In addition, the Association’s National Skate
Patrol program provided free braking lessons to skaters in urban
parks throughout the US. NSP initiated monitored group social
skates through city streets- early iterations of the famous 20,000
participant Night Skate that today occurs each week in Paris and
other international cities. The
IISA’s Gear-up! Safety program was awarded by the U.S. Consumer
Products Safety Commission—the first time the award had ever
been given to a manufacturer’s organization.
“The
IISA is a model for the value of an industry taking off their
completive hats and working together to accomplish common goals to
everyone’s benefit. Dedicated
industry leaders who actively participated in the Association
along with the creative talents and efforts of its volunteers,
instructors and staff resulted in a fluid, successful organization
that grew a new sport and established an industry in a relatively
short period of time”, stated IISA Executive Director, Kalinda
Mathis.
The
Association’s government relations efforts challenged the “No
Rollerblading” signs that popped up across the United States as
inline continued to be America’s fastest growing sport.
The IISA developed grassroots forces to fight skate bans
and establish pro-skater legislation at the local level.
Additionally, several states gave skaters the same rights to the
road as cyclists.
More
recently, the Association helped grow the inline marathon
movement, advancing awareness that long-distance skating is fun,
and a great fitness alternative.
The IISA established a partnership for the first ever Walt
Disney World Inline Marathon and more inline marathons are being
added around the country. Finally,
the IISA served as a credible resource to the media spearheading
its acceptance of the sport which peaked at 32 million in 1995 and
leveled to 19 million today—cementing its place as one of the
top fitness activities in America along the way.
Chairman
Keith D’Entremont notes that “these accomplishments have been
achieved by individuals such as Kris Simeone leading the
instructor program and Rick Short leading the patrols. Many
individuals can be deservedly proud of their contributions, and
the skating public is better-off as a result.”
The
restructure will result in the departure of Kalinda Mathis, who
served as Executive Director seven of her eleven years with the
IISA. Ms. Mathis will join the
SGMA International as Director of Marketing and will serve on its
leadership team, led by incoming CEO Tom Cove, that will
transition and renew the organization in 2005.
The
participating inline companies will continue to meet together to
react to future challenges as they occur. The IISA’s Instructor
Certification program will be managed by USA Fit of Houston, Texas
and the National Skate Patrol Program will operate as an
independent organization.
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