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The
following is an article published in Deer Valley Magazine about
Black Mountain BMX:
Debbie Kelley: The heart of Black Mountain BMX
“Rider down on the last turn. Rider down. Could someone buddy-up with
this little guy. . .”
“Do we have volunteers to sing the National Anthem tonight?”
Bright lights light up the meticulously groom BMX track. Boys and girls
of all ages scurrying around the track. They push their bikes up the
hill to the starting gate - pro’s and novice at the starting line.
It’s a typical practice night at Black Mountain BMX.
Kids on bikes on and off the track, pushing themselves,
mastering their stamina and technique with their parents watching,
encouraging and showing their support. It’s odd to see kids racing and
the parents and spectators calm and respectful of other racers.
The concession stand at the east end of the track has a nice menu
and a very helpful staff. Different, they treat you like they know you
well, like family. What is it about their job that they like it so
much. The pay?
With so many people and bikes, one would think the race
registration would be chaotic, but it is seamlessly smooth. How does
the staff know everyone, all the kids by name, newcomers and veterans
alike? No signs posting restrictions or rules. How does everyone know
what’s going on or what to do? It didn’t take long to find out how it
all works so well. All you have to do is ask a racer, parents, grandma,
Suzie, and certainly not the least, but rather the heart of the track,
Debbie Kelley.
It’s Debbie Kelley’s voice that echoes over the PA system from the
tower above the nationally renowned BMX track. And, it’s her presence,
her ability to lead people and an entire organization through her
example, that makes this track unique and well known. You won’t see her
rushing around giving orders. What you will see her doing is
interacting with the children, parents and those who volunteer at the
track.
Interested to know the secrets of how Black Mountain BMX came to
be so successful, I asked Debbie if she’d like to share her story with
our readers. After all business owners dream of smooth operations such
as hers. She graciously agreed and that’s when the Mensa puzzle began.
I asked Debbie Kelley how she had accomplished a well-run and
nationally known track. If you don’t listen carefully, you’ll miss the
hidden answers in her responses. She credits the gifts of others, their
commitment to kids, the kids themselves and the sport. If I didn't know
better, I may have mistaken her for a politician. I wanted to know how
SHE successfully hired the right people, set up the smooth running
operations, how she knew how to develop and maintain the nicest track
in the state. Every question produced a response that led to the
efforts of others associated with the track, never herself.
Debbie says all the people who work the track are volunteers. They’re
there because they want to be, and they’ve been there a long time. The
guy who drops the starting gate, the happy people at the concession
stand, track groomers, helpers and buddies for young and new
riders, and Grandma and Suzie at the sign up window -- they’re all
volunteers.
Debbie said Grandma started coming to the track when her daughter
passed away and she took her grandson in to raise him. Her grandson
became a BMX racer at Black Mountain and Grandma has been with the
track now for 19 years. Grandma is known by everyone at the track,
she’s vibrant, helpful and will gently teach you a manner or two.
Suzie, who is also at the sign up window, doubles as the track nurse.
She started at the track when her son was in BMX in 1993, and although
he doesn’t race anymore, she’s still there getting to know each and
every racer, parent and spectator. What’s more welcoming than someone
remembering your name out of hundreds of people? The track is run by many
others with stories like Grandma and Suzie’s. People LIKE it at Black Mountain,
and the key to why lies inside of Debbie Kelley. Here’s her story and all the
elements that make the business of BMX seem like anything but business.
Debbie Kelley was born in Tucson, Arizona, and has resided in Phoenix
since she was two-years old. Her grandfather was born at Fort Apache
and her mother was born in Dragoon, Arizona. She grew up in the area of
23rd Avenue and Northern, when it was way out in the middle of farm
country.
Living in the “country” in Phoenix, Arizona, helped foster the
hard worker in Debbie. She was raised around animals and was brought up
in a large family.
“I always had horses and animals growing up,” said Debbie, “I have
always loved babies and animals.”
Early in life, she learned that if she wanted something, there’s
always a way to get it. In her case it was through hard work and
creativity.
“When I wanted something, I knew I would get there,” Debbie
explained, “ I would buy nearly-dead calves for a low price, nourish
them, give them medical care, bathe them, put a big red ribbon on them
and show them at auctions. I’d get four times the amount I paid for
them.”
“My mom and dad bought me my first horse, but I had to take care
of all its needs - food and necessities.
“To make the money to buy horse feed, I would iron for people at
.10 cents a piece and wash windows.
“I wanted to buy a saddle, so until I earned enough to buy one, I
rode bare back.
“I bought a calf and a burro from an auction house, traded those
for a little stud colt, which had wire cuts all over his legs. What
happened was, I saw this man with a stick with a suave at the end of
it, trying to medicate the wounds on this colt. I think if he’d had a
gun, he would have just shot it, but he was willing to trade my calf
and burro for the colt.
“I never got kicked more times than I did with that colt! But, it
turned out to be a nice horse, then I traded it for a saddle.”
Then on to her next challenge. She had needed a saddle to
participate in the junior rodeo and take lessons at Parkers Riding
Academy.
“Back then, Parkers Riding Academy was the ‘elite’ academy of
Arizona,” recalls Debbie, “Anytime other riders would see the Parker
riders coming to the show, they’d become discouraged because they knew
they were the best.
“I went to Mrs. Parker and worked out an arrangement where I could
earn lessons on weekends by feeding their horses and cleaning the
stalls.”
Debbie’s long haul in buying, nurturing, trading and bargaining,
were all part of one long journey to get where she wanted to go.
But that’s only the adventurous side of her youth that helped make
her the leader she is today. In addition to learning how to have
confidence in herself and her creative money making ideas, she became a
young mother to her siblings following her mother’s serious accident,
which left scar tissue on her brain and altered thereafter.
“I remember, my mother sang like an angel. She could play songs
on the guitar by just listening to the tune. She wrote poetry and could
draw beautifully!” Debbie reminisces.
Debbie didn’t voice any negative responses about her struggles
during her childhood, she seamlessly carries each moment as a building
block to complete the whole picture.
“I came from a very gifted family,” explained Debbie.
“There were five of us, two were twins. “My elder brother John is a
world renown artist, extremely gifted in sculpting, bronze statues,
painting, corporate identities, such as
Coca Cola. . .it just comes to him naturally.
“My younger sister Sandra tours Europe singing in opera’s in many
different languages,
“Charlotte, one of the twins, has my dad’s mind. A’s just went
through the pores of her skin and Robert, her twin, is a gifted
athlete.
“I don’t know what my gifts are,” says Debbie humbly, “I achieved
a Phi Theta Kappa status at ASU, but I really had to work hard for it.
“One of the things I prayed for when I was pregnant with my first
child, was for an ‘average’ child. I’ve seen in my life the struggles
of those who are gifted.”
At twenty years old, Debbie married her friend and love, Pete
Kelley at St. Simon and Jude Catholic Church, the spark that lead to
Debbie’s life at Black Mountain BMX.
Pete loved racing cars. He had a 1955 Chevy, he called the Blue
Sleeper. At a time when everyone had sleek Camaro’s, Pete and Debbie
were winning drag races in their boxy ‘55 Chevy. They toured and raced
at Manzanita Raceway and B-Line Dragway.
In 1973, Pete started two automotive businesses in Phoenix, Pete
Kelley’s Automotive and Kelley Machine Shop. Kelley Machine Shop is
still in the family, run by sons Troy and Shawn Kelley, in the area of
17th Avenue and Hatcher.
Pete and Debbie blended their two hobbies, Pete’s cars and
Debbie’s horses. They bred and trained registered Morgan horses,
showing them all over the Western U.S.
“Our first Filly was undefeated,” recalls Debbie, “We were little
backyard breeders with a U-haul in contrast to the elite who drove up
with the nicest trailers and attendants to groom their horses. We
groomed our own and we were so proud when our horse would win.”
Pete and Debbie had their businesses and a nice comfortable home at
Sunburst Farms when they started their family.
In 1975, to add to the list of hobby’s and adventures, the
Kelley’s introduced their first two sons to BMX. Shawn was five years
old and Troy was two. Later, their third son, Todd began racing big
wheels at the track at only 19 months old.
“We used to race at PXA at the corner of 43rd Avenue and Union
Hills. Back then it was in the middle of nowhere,” says Debbie.
“In 1981, Pete and I helped build the Black Mountain track where
it is today off 7th Street just South of Happy Valley Road, with former
owners Tom Wiley and Mike Guidici. We didn’t take the track over until
1987.
“At that time, the track resembled a dump. With a great deal of
work and pride, we have transformed it into one of the best facilities
in the nation.
“Pete and I worked at all the tracks we raced at. We traveled to
other states with the kids and I kept a little black book of all the
great ideas I saw at other tracks.
“The track has always been a heart thing,” says Debbie.
Everything Debbie did, started with heart and a 100 percent
service to others.
In June of 1982, Pete was diagnosed with Leukemia. His oncologist
administered an unorthodox treatment at that time, giving Pete
chemotherapy in pill form everyday. The norm was an intravenous chemo
treatment every six weeks.
“Pete initially spent one month in the hospital,” recalled Debbie,
“When the doctor told Pete he was dying, Pete said, I’m not dying, God
won’t take me yet, I have three kids to raise!”
From 1982 to 1995, Pete’s leukemia remained in a Chronic state. In
March 1995, it went acute.
“Pete was so loved, thousands of people tested to be a donor,”
says Debbie, “We knew so many people from traveling around the world.
Blood services would set up blood and platelet drives at the
National’s and at our local races to help Pete.”
Pete Kelley died in October 1995, eight months after his leukemia
became acute.
“It was really a challenge, within two and half years I lost my
mother, my husband and my dad. And, two years after that, I lost my
mother-in-law, Bea Kelley,” Debbie says with her chin up, but sadness
in her eyes.
“That was a time when the BMX family really pulled together.
Pete’s memorial services were held at St. Helen's Church, offering
seating for 1,000 people. There were so many people, the hall was full
and people were all around the building.”
“When you lose someone close to you, you realize how important it
is to capture and appreciate moments while you can,” explained Debbie.
In spite of the great heartaches Debbie has endured. Her gentle
spirit remains bitter-free. She’s committed to living each day alive
and of service to others, especially to youth in our community and
around the world.
“What we do out here [on the track] has nothing to do with bike
racing,” says Debbie, “BMX in itself is a family. It started in the
‘70’s by kids with bikes.”
It makes sense that a sport started by kids would be fun,
individually competitive (meaning, you go at your own pace), and their
parents would be right there encouraging and cheering them on. None of
the typical sports politics apply at the BMX track.
“It’s a place for parents and kids to be together. We joke about
keeping parents off the streets!” Debbie laughs.
“We are teaching kids about tradition, the importance of family,
personal responsibility and accountability, along with how to care for
others needs in the community,” explained Debbie.
“We are so committed to responding to the needs of those in our
community.
“I read in a paper that the Thomas J. Pappas school for the
homeless needed books; we held a book drive at the track and had three
pickup trucks full of books from the kids for the school.
“The school again had a need for glasses, so we had an eyeglass
drive, then school cloths, then special needs...
“Black Mountain BMX has been the national number one fundraiser
for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society's “Race for Life” every year
except two since 1987. This past March, Debbie Kelley received the “Dr.
Kenneth McCredie” award from the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society on
behalf of ABA in Washington D.C. The award was a result of the ABA’s
efforts in raising $2.5 million for the society.
Other fundraisers Debbie has Black Mountain helping is “Feed the
Hungry” drive for Westside Food Bank, and the Daisy Mountain Fire
Department’s “Toys for Tots” race.
“Kids get more out of the track than a sport and competition,”
Debbie said, “Kids are recognized and receive an enamel pen when they
make honor roll.
“We also had a yearly ‘DARE Classic’ race for the city of ElMirage
at Black Mountain, to encourage and support kids to stay off drugs. The
only way kids could participate in the race is to complete all the
requirements of the DARE program. The race changed the program from one
of little interest to one that everyone wanted to be involved with.”
“Another thing we do at the track, is ask for kids to sing the
National Anthem. I think it’s important that they are involved and know
the words and learn American traditions,” Debbie adds. “We post the
red, white and blue, have everyone stand before the race and have our
young people sing the anthem.
“If we can teach our children from the start how to spend time
together, how to give to others, we have succeeded. It is truly the
whole intent, our goal and mission.”
Debbie’s next challenge is to raise enough money to put a roof
over the track. “The weather plays a big part in track operations,”
says Debbie, “A roof would help keep the track from becoming muddy;
delaying races, practices and interfering with the winter nationals.
Kids and families really need these places to gather and support one
another.”
The property in which the track is located is state owned and
leased by Black Mountain BMX. Hosting the nationals each year helps
make the land payment. As with all businesses after 911, business and
revenues were slow, so Debbie has often times taken track operation
expenses out her own pocket.
“If the track pays for itself, it’s a blessing. If not, then I may
have to dip into the house budget. . . it always comes back,” says
Debbie.
Following the interview with Debbie Kelley, I came to see, she is
the heart of Black Mountain BMX. She has brought her life’s
experiences, patience and genuine love of others to a place where
children and adults excel on their own, both in service and personal
challenges.
Debbie believes in others. She doesn’t have the need to be higher
than anyone. She considers herself an equal in all regards. She gives
people the freedom and trust to do what they are good at, developing
their own sense of pride in track operations. There is no hierarchal
system that causes the friction found in an average workplace. Everyone
is equal, accountable, appreciated and takes 100 percent credit for the
track’s smooth, successful operations. Debbie Kelley is a leader, a
successful one, because she believes in others and gives them the
freedom to do a good job.
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