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30th Laurel Run is Friday, Saturday

People participate in the 2025 Laurel’s Legacy Lap. For Laurel’s Lap, people with disabilities — on their own, or with support from others — make their way around the paved pathway surrounding the field in downtown Silver Creek. Submitted photo

An annual celebration of people with Down syndrome and other developmental disabilities returns for its 30th year when the Laurel Memorial Run/Walk takes place this weekend.

The Laurel Run/Walk takes place over two days. Activities begin Friday. A kickoff ceremony will be held at 8 a.m. in The Resource Center’s facility at 75 Jones & Gifford Avenue in Jamestown. At about 8:30, volunteer runners will set off on the initial leg of a flag relay to Dunkirk.

Representatives from The Resource Center and area school districts, as well as Sheriff Jim Quattrone, will run the various legs of the relay while carrying Laurel Run flags. Patrol units from area law enforcement agencies accompany the runners to ensure their safety on the busy roads.

The relay run ends in the parking lot of The Resource Center’s facility at 186 Lake Shore Drive West in Dunkirk. The community is invited to attend the victory celebration and to cheer on the last set of relay runners, who are expected to arrive between 12:45 and 1:15 p.m.

For the 14th straight year, several people are planning to jog and/or bike the entire 31-mile relay route. That event is called the Laurel-thon.

This year’s Laurel Run logo was created by Forestville High School student Andreanna Craig.

Anyone wishing to run a portion of the flag relay, or to take on the Laurel-thon, is invited to do so. Call 716-661-4735 for information.

Also on Friday, Laurel’s Legacy Lap will take place at McCrea Point Park in Jamestown. For that free event, people with disabilities can arrive at the park anytime from 8:45 to 9:45 a.m. and complete a lap along the paved path at the park.

The main Laurel Run/Walk activities take place the following day in Silver Creek. Check-in and registration begin at 7 a.m. in the village square. At 8:30, a 5-kilometer running race, a 5K disability awareness walk and a 1K fun walk will begin, followed at 9 a.m. by an 8K running race.

For the 5K and 8K events, medals will be given to the top three male and female finishers in each age group. Besides the individual competition, there will be a team challenge. Awards will be given to the three fastest teams in both the 5K and the 8K, with each team’s time determined by the combined times of its first four finishers.

Saturday’s events also will include fun runs for children age 7 and younger starting at 10 a.m., followed by another Laurel’s Legacy Lap, which is for anyone with a disability.

Pictured are Wayne, Elaine and Laurel Hotelling. Submitted photo

The Laurel Run was created in 1997 by Silver Creek residents Wayne and Elaine Hotelling in honor of their daughter Laurel, who had Down syndrome. The Hotellings’ goal in creating Laurel Run was to educate the public that people with disabilities can accomplish much when given the opportunity. Thanks to the support she received from her family, her community and The Resource Center, Laurel had a full and productive life. She passed away in 2017 at the age of 54.

Money raised through the Laurel Run/Walk goes to Filling the Gap, which works with The Resource Center to improve the lives of people with disabilities and their families in Chautauqua County. Most of the event proceeds are directed to The Resource Center Laurel Run Fund at the Chautauqua Region Community Foundation and are used to promote disability awareness initiatives and to enhance employment and work training opportunities for people with disabilities.

A portion of the Laurel Run/Walk proceeds will be directed to the Dr. John Vona “Smile” Fund at the Community Foundation. Dr. Vona was a longtime dentist in Northern Chautauqua County who spent the last 20 years of his career at The Resource Center. Dr. Vona was passionate about ensuring the oral health of people with disabilities, and his children established the Smile Fund to provide money so people with special needs can access quality dental care.

Dr. Vona was the dentist for Laurel Hotelling and the Hotellings’ other children. He also was a regular attendee at the Laurel Run/Walk events in Silver Creek, cheering on his granddaughter, Kim (Vona) Tomasik, who has won the women’s 8K race a record eight times.

To register to participate in one of the Laurel Run/Walk events or to make a donation, visit fillingthegap.net.

Starting at $4.00/week.

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