Dallas

AT LAST! Urban Boarding Experience plans big expansion

AT LAST! Urban Boarding Experience started just before the COVID-19 pandemic

NBC Universal, Inc.

A special Dallas place in South Oak Cliff that helps kids from rough neighborhoods get a better start has big expansion plans.

Founder Randy Bowman said AT LAST! Urban Boarding Experience on East Overton Road is located in a zip code that is one of the stateโ€™s highest contributors to Texas prisons.

It got started just before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Despite that setback, it has made big progress in serving families.

Bowman, a successful businessman, said he grew up in a rough part of Dallas with a single mom who struggled to do the best she could for her kids.

He envisioned โ€œAT LAST!โ€ as a way to help kids like him succeed.

โ€œHow would impoverished kids perform in school if they had the same educational resources that their more affluent peers have available to them when they are at home,โ€ Bowman said.

Parent Benjamin Simms said he knows the answer to that question from his 6 and 8-year-old boys, who are in the program.

โ€œIโ€™ve already seen the benefits, I mean, social interaction, again the resources, being exposed to things that they may not be exposed to just being at home with us,โ€ Simms said.

Simms said he and his wife canโ€™t always provide what AT LAST! offers.

The program selects second through sixth-grade boys and girls through a lottery for the 16 beds currently available because thereโ€™s tremendous demand.

โ€œWe have to get them while they are young to get them the kind of shot that they need in life,โ€ Bowman said.

The kids stay in the boarding environment when they are not at school Sunday night through Friday afternoon, with one counselor assigned to every three kids.

โ€œWe want them to feel inspired when they come in,โ€ Bowman said. โ€œItโ€™s nicer than a lot of families in any neighborhood have.โ€

NBC 5 first visited what was a former dumping ground back in early 2020 before the COVID-19 pandemic, when the city council was considering a $400,000 grant to help get the program going.

The first building was just a shell at that time.

The neighborhood Dallas City Council Member Carolyn King Arnold is a former teacher who was an early supporter of the program and remains supportive now.

โ€œAt Last means at last we have a solution to address some of the kids we call latchkey kids, kids that donโ€™t have an opportunity to get additional enrichment,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s extremely rewarding for us to have this investment from the city of Dallas to be a partner with AT LAST!โ€

The program currently has just 12 children, but the goal is expanding to 180 with new buildings planned on the Overton Road site.

It is beside a park and across the street from South Oak Cliff High School.

โ€œWe look forward to expanding and really being a partner as they expand,โ€ King Arnold said.

The long-term dream is to open other At Last boarding locations around the city.

Parent Benjamin Simms said there is clearly a need.

โ€œOver time it will change a community. It will make a community that much better,โ€ Simms said.

AT LAST! Urban Boarding seeks private donations for most of the expenses. Families selected to participate pay nothing for the service.

Contact Us