Kids first and forever for Boys and Girls Clubs’ Mary Budke

Mary Budke will talk about kids all day long — and less so about herself.

“This isn’t really about me,” she said. “This is about this place, its mission.”

Over the last 20 years, Budke has worked her way up in the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula from starting as summer help in the Sequim Carroll C. Kendall Unit kitchen to become CEO of the organization.

Under her leadership, the Sequim and Port Angeles clubs have grown in numbers, and helped build and move into a new Port Angeles club in 2021.

Always modest, Budke didn’t want to mark her anniversary with the clubs in June, but after friends’ encouragement the staff and friends presented her with a cake and kind words.

Through her years with the organization, Budke has helped create a safe place for a countless number of children.

“We are very lucky to have someone so dedicated to serving the youth in our community,” said Nicole Pruden, a former club member and staffer who now works as the Sequim Village First Fed branch manager.

“She cares deeply for every club member and has helped so many develop into productive citizens who want to give back.”

Long-time Sequim club volunteer Stephen Rosales said he’s known Budke through her tenure saying she’ll do anything for children.

“She’s not the type to sit behind her desk,” he said.

That includes putting bandages on, fetching shoes, finding housing, filling in worker shifts, and more.

“This town is so blessed to have her,” Rosales said. “She was meant to be (CEO).”

The clubs’ board president Norma Turner has worked hand-in-hand with Budke to help fundraise for the clubs and to build the Port Angeles Club, named the Turner unit after her and husband Gene.

“Mary amazes me,” Turner said. “She has a strong work ethic and cares about people.

“She walks in the clubhouse, knows kids’ names and knows about them. Her ability to relate to people is phenomenal.”

Photo courtesy Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula/ Boys & Girls Club staff and members in Sequim celebrated CEO Mary Budke serving 20 years with the organization in June.

Photo courtesy Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula/ Boys & Girls Club staff and members in Sequim celebrated CEO Mary Budke serving 20 years with the organization in June.

Kitchen to kindergarten

A Wyoming native, Budke is one of six children, and despite helping start the Sequim club’s KinderKids program, she notes she skipped kindergarten to go straight into first grade.

“The kids think that is crazy,” she said.

She attended Idaho State University on an athletic scholarship for cross country and track where she met her football-playing husband Steven.

The couple eventually moved to Sequim in 1994 from Reno, Nev., with their young sons Brennan and Spencer.

She didn’t initially work after the move to Sequim, she said, but later went to work in the Helen Haller Elementary kitchen to support one of her sons who was having a hard time at lunch time.

While earning her Master’s degree through Old Dominion University through Naval Base Kitsap — Bangor she took a job at the Sequim club (Carrol C. Kendall Unit) during the summer of 2004 to help pay her phone bill.

Her intent was to become either a grade school or middle school teacher, but stayed on with the Sequim club to run its lunch program. In 2007, she was asked by former executive director Todd Bale to start a kindergarten enrichment program, KinderKids.

At the time, kindergarten was half days for Sequim School District.

“The Boys & Girls Clubs try to fill in the gaps in communities and not to duplicate other programs so we sunsetted the program when the school district went full day (in 2015),” Budke said.

Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash
Mary Budke said 21-year-old Colten Reed, Sequim High Class of 2021, is a club member that stands out to her over the years because of how much he’s grown. He applied at the Sequim club for a job two years ago, and is a kid-favorite, she said. “Against all odds, and I mean all odds, he’s about to finish his senior year at Central Washington University in IT management,” Budke said. “To see where he came from and where he is now is worth an Olympic gold medal,” she said.

Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash Mary Budke said 21-year-old Colten Reed, Sequim High Class of 2021, is a club member that stands out to her over the years because of how much he’s grown. He applied at the Sequim club for a job two years ago, and is a kid-favorite, she said. “Against all odds, and I mean all odds, he’s about to finish his senior year at Central Washington University in IT management,” Budke said. “To see where he came from and where he is now is worth an Olympic gold medal,” she said.

Leadership

A year into starting KinderKids, Budke said she was asked to apply for the open unit director position for Sequim, which she said is “an amazing job.”

Pruden said she started going to the Sequim club at age 15, and with support from Budke went on to become the Boys & Girls Clubs’ Washington State Youth of the Year in 2007.

Pruden worked at the Sequim club for about five years and said Budke always encouraged her and made her feel like she could accomplish whatever she put her mind to, including banking.

“Mary encouraged me to apply for a teller position when I didn’t think I was qualified enough,” Pruden said.

“She helped me get ready for the interview and inspired me to step outside of my comfort zone.

“I ended up getting the job and have now been in banking for 14 years.”

Budke was in the unit director position for less than two years when she was asked to serve as interim executive director for the organization.

The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula had seen a handful of executive directors leave the organization over a few years, and Budke said she initially said “no” to the job.

“I told the then board president I like this job too much,” she said.

But her husband later posed the question, “If not you, then who?”

“I took it on one condition that they start looking for someone else,” Budke said.

“Eleven months later I did interview for the permanent CEO position. I found I could help make the club stronger.”

Longtime clubs’ board member Ken Williams said she’s “taken off running and not looked back.”

“She’s known nationally, she’s that good,” he said. “She’s made herself into one of the best executives she could be.”

Some of Budke’s significant accomplishments, Williams said, include improving local perception of the clubs and continuing the USDA Summer Food Program.

“It’s a huge undertaking and it’s not a moneymaker,” he said. “But Mary said, ‘Yeah, but we’re feeding kids.’ And that’s Mary. Nationally, they’re using our clubs’ model.”

Olympic Peninsula News Group photo by Keith Thorpe/ Bagpiper Erik Evans of Port Angeles, right, leads children and staff members, including CEO Mary Budke down Francis Street from the old clubhouse of the Port Angeles Unit of the Boys & Girls Club to the new Turner Clubhouse on its first day of occupancy on March 5, 2021.

Olympic Peninsula News Group photo by Keith Thorpe/ Bagpiper Erik Evans of Port Angeles, right, leads children and staff members, including CEO Mary Budke down Francis Street from the old clubhouse of the Port Angeles Unit of the Boys & Girls Club to the new Turner Clubhouse on its first day of occupancy on March 5, 2021.

Clubs

The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula see as many as 375 students per day during the school year, and about 300 in the summer.

Budke said numbers have grown during the Covid-19 pandemic, particularly with children younger than 12.

During the initial outbreak, the club opened up to serve front line workers’ children.

“When schools closed, we were open the next day at 8 a.m.,” she said.

However, teens 15 and up weren’t allowed at first because of space restrictions and regulations.

Today, expanding services for teens remains a priority for the clubs’ leadership, Budke said.

During the pandemic, the Sequim club added a new playground in summer 2020, and opened the Port Angeles Turner unit (an approximate 15,400-square-foot building) in March 2021.

A new Port Angeles unit was a “far off dream,” Budke said, but in 2017 club staff shut down membership because they ran out of room due to space.

“I’m not an easy crier, but I cried that day,” she said.

“We had 183 kids and that was the day I realized they couldn’t have an optimum experience, so we had to turn kids away.

“It also set a fire in me to find a place where we didn’t have to say ‘You couldn’t come.’”

Budke said she, Turner and others with community, state and federal help raised $8.4 million for construction.

“I wouldn’t even let myself walk on the property when we started construction until we were 90 percent there to make me hold my feet to the fire and get the fundraising done,” Budke said.

“(The Port Angeles club is) an amazing thing,” Turner said. “When we walked in the door it was paid for because she cares, gets her facts straight and she’s respected by any legislator we go see.”

Rosales said Budke knows how to do the hard part of raising funds, and donors appreciate she’ll do any job.

Thinking about her efforts, Budke said, “if you put kids first, things get real simple after that.”

Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash/ Boys & Girls Clubs’ National Youth Talent performer Pearle Peterson sits with two of her biggest advocates last year, Tessa Jackson, Sequim unit director, and Mary Budke, CEO of the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula. Peterson went on to sing across the country including at the 2023 World Series.

Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash/ Boys & Girls Clubs’ National Youth Talent performer Pearle Peterson sits with two of her biggest advocates last year, Tessa Jackson, Sequim unit director, and Mary Budke, CEO of the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula. Peterson went on to sing across the country including at the 2023 World Series.

National stage

Sequim club member Pearle Peterson has known Budke since she started coming to the club as a 6-year-old.

“Mary was a safe person we could go to and talk to in and around the club,” she said.

Peterson has gone on to be the three-time Olympic Region Youth of the Year, and was chosen to be a National Youth Talent Performer where she’s performed across the nation for the clubs, most notably singing the national anthem at Game 2 of the 2023 World Series on Oct. 28 last year.

Budke has been working to help Peterson apply and receive scholarships to help attend the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign to study lyric theatre.

Before recording an audition video for consideration to sing at the World Series, Peterson remembers she and Budke both wearing Boys & Girls clubs shirts.

“Hers was significantly nicer than mine and we traded,” Peterson said.

“So she is the definition of someone who will give their shirt off their back to help.”

Sequim Gazette file photo/ Mary Budke, CEO of the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula, said one of her favorite things to hear in the clubs is when a club member is paged to check out and they don’t want to go home. “‘I’m not ready to go,’ or ‘why are you here?’ It’s my favorite,” she said.

Sequim Gazette file photo/ Mary Budke, CEO of the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula, said one of her favorite things to hear in the clubs is when a club member is paged to check out and they don’t want to go home. “‘I’m not ready to go,’ or ‘why are you here?’ It’s my favorite,” she said.

Helping hands

Rosales’ wife Kim, who runs the Sequim club’s Great Futures Preschool, said Budke was instrumental in helping her reopen her preschool in the Sequim club during Covid.

“(Mary said) ‘if you can’t stay where you’re at then we have a spot if you’re willing to do it … These kids need a place to go,’” Kim Rosales said.

“And we did. We had a full class show up for the first day.”

“At the end of day she’s such a role model to kids, especially to young women,” Peterson said.

“Mary is what keeps the club up and running. You’ll never hear it out of her mouth but every single kid and staff will tell you that.”

Budke said she’s proud that club membership has remained $30 a year, with summer noon-6 p.m. free, and beforehand costing a nominal fee, with scholarships available and abundant.

“It’s for every kid,” Budke said, whether they pull up in a fancy car, or walk to the club.

“They all have the same opportunity here.”

One of the main fundraisers for the clubs, Campaign for Kids, is ongoing through the end of the year.

“It’s one of my favorites because there’s not (something you receive), you’re simply giving from the heart for our daily operations,” Budke said.

For more about the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula, 400 W. Fir St., Sequim, and/or to donate, visit bgc-op.org or call 360-683-8095.