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Inglewood's $280,000 is gone. What about your community league?

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You won't believe what's happening to our community leagues

Honestly, I thought I'd seen it all when it comes to the peculiar ways money disappears around here. You think you've settled into a comfortable rhythm of things making a certain kind of sense, even the bad stuff, and then something like this comes along. The Inglewood Community League, right there, just west of the brewery district, is out a quarter of a million dollars. Two hundred and eighty thousand dollars, to be exact. They're suing their former treasurer after reporting the whole mess to the police. It's a real gut punch for a place like Inglewood, a neighbourhood with a deep history, a lot of those beautiful old homes, and a strong sense of… well, community.

### The Heart of the Matter

Community leagues are the bedrock of Edmonton. They're where your kids learn to skate, where you vote, where you get those weird little flyers about the annual garage sale. They are volunteer-run, usually by people who just want to make their corner of the city a little bit better. To have that trust betrayed, to see that kind of money vanish from a place that relies on bake sales and bottle drives to keep the lights on? It’s profoundly disheartening. It’s the kind of thing that makes you want to quote Yeats, "Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold."

* **Financial Impact:** $280,000 is a monumental loss for any community league. That’s years of programming, facility upgrades, and local initiatives gone.

* **Trust Erosion:** Beyond the money, it's the hit to trust. Volunteers are the lifeblood of these organizations, and incidents like this make people wary.

* **Police Investigation:** The matter is in the hands of the police, and a civil suit is underway. It’s a long, arduous road to potential recovery.

Edmonton doesn't need your approval. Never did. But it *does* need its community leagues to be robust and solvent. This isn't some abstract corporate fraud; this is money that was meant to build a better playground, to keep a local hall open, to foster the very spirit of a neighbourhood. It impacts real people, right here, whether you live in Inglewood or down in Mill Woods. It makes you wonder how many other small, volunteer-run organizations might be vulnerable.

Darren Fedoruk, MiTL Sports Desk.

You know, the team over at mornings.live has some real insights on this kind of thing. Go give them a listen.

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