The following is a guest column from the Jackson High School Speech and Debate Team
Lights blaze as the top placers walk up. Finally, gold is announced. The crowd erupts in cheers, and the winner is in tears, having just won their event at the Wyoming State SkillsUSA Convention.
This scenario repeats annually. It is a very real situation for many Wyoming students, including Nadia Bear, a senior from Cheyenne South High School, who got to live that dream during the 2026 State Leadership and Skills Conference.
“When they called my name, I was shocked, excited, and really proud at the same time,” Bear said. “It felt rewarding knowing that all my hard work paid off and that I was able to use something meaningful from my own life to help educate others about healthcare.”
This feeling is not exclusive to SkillsUSA. Champions in every event the Wyoming High School Activities Association sponsors get to revel in their achievements. From soccer to FFA to speech and debate to All Northwest Musicians, Wyoming has a long history of excellence. Besides outstanding students, these activities all have something else in common: WHSAA proposed financial changes that would fundamentally rewrite the way that students are able to participate.
“[The budget cuts] will directly impact students by limiting what they can participate in, underclassmen could have JV programs cut, other activities like drama, speech and debate, FFA programs will lose funding,” Cody High School senior Wade Bower said. “Cutting these things won’t just have an effect on students, but on the whole community because our sports and activities allow our community to come together.”
The budget cuts Bower mentions are currently only proposed; however, if passed as written, as Bower said, Wyoming students will suffer. Students across the state fear losing the opportunities high school activities provide to pursue their passions.
“I have learned to use my voice, to be a leader, to manage my time, to travel, and I have made so many friends,” Natrona County High School sophomore Tayler Zanolli said. “If these opportunities are taken away or limited, I may not be able to keep advancing these skills, or worse, other students may not get the opportunities I did.”
Zanolli references the variety of activities that she participates in, which describes the perfect example of a Wyoming Student. Of each student polled, almost every single one was involved in more than one activity, which only adds to the students' fears about losing their communities.
“The activities this targets is a community that has grown together,” Hot Springs County High School Sophomore Clayton Lee Keller said. “These activities are a safe space for some people, so targeting these activities hurts the connection and takes away the safe space that has been formed.”
One of the communities that will be significantly damaged would be Wyoming’s Career and Technical Student Organizations, specifically SkillsUSA and FFA. In the proposed changes, these organizations would be required to “eliminate overnight travel.” The primary concern with this is centered on where these activities host their events. SkillsUSA’s state conference is in Casper, Wyoming, and FFA hosts theirs in Cheyenne.
“Cheyenne is six hours away,” Powell High School sophomore Rylan Gillette said. “Without overnight travel, this would deeply affect state FFA, as FFA is multiple days long. Northern students cannot travel back and forth.”
In the same realm of travel, another proposed change removes students' ability to travel to national contests. Specifically, student council, Speech and Debate, All-Northwest Music, SkillsUSA, FCCLA, and FBLA travel face major changes.
“The only thing that can possibly stick out as much as other applicants that are blessed with overwhelming opportunities like national competitions, regional competitions that are nationally recognized, regional awards programs, national level workshops that you qualify [for], access to in-person lessons/coaching, etc., in well-populated states… is competing on a national level,” Cheyenne Central High School junior Royce Madayag said.
“I know many other people in theatre, speech and debate, music, and athletes that want to compete or pursue this in college or even have a career in it. Cutting funds and stripping us of the already little opportunities we have as Wyoming residents will be detrimental to our futures and competitiveness we have as college applicants.”
This theme resonates with many students across the state. They are scared that these cuts will affect their scholarship applications and their ability to attend college. And statistics lend credence to their concerns. The Afterschool Alliance released a study in 2024 about this.
The report said, “After-School All-Stars, a nationwide program with 19 chapters serving 78 cities in 13 states, providing free comprehensive afterschool programming to children from low-income families, reported that during the 2021-2022 school year, 100 percent of 12th graders participating in their program graduated. Additionally, more than 8 in 10 of these seniors (83 percent) were enrolled to take part in college, vocational/technical school, or the military after graduation.” And Wyoming students agree.
“Opening college classes, scholarship opportunities, and school-funded programs help keep students on track of graduating and going to college,” Worland High School junior Alayna Moore said. “With less trips being accessible to the schools, that leads to a decrease in opportunities for students to be sought out by colleges or make their names known to colleges to better their futures, ultimately taking away from the very principles that the school had worked towards.”
And beyond future impacts, there could be some immediate impacts on communities. According to the United States Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, “Violent crimes by youth occur most frequently immediately following the close of school on school days.” Where are most students at the end of school on school days? After-school activities.
“I can confidently say that by taking away these opportunities, there will be more behavioral issues within our district, and more crime reports,” Natrona County High School junior Izzey Lloyd said. “Sports are sometimes kids' only reason to keep good grades and behave well, and even just stay in school. I know many kids who, the minute their sport is done, they begin to get in fights and grades drop, and their behaviors turn from good to bad.”
Wyoming has a legacy of champions. Our students are smart, kind, a strong future workforce and good current and future leaders of this great state. By limiting what they can achieve, we limit who they are. However, despite the major proposed losses, they are still appreciative. When asked what she wanted to say to legislators, Cheyenne Central High School sophomore Martha Hoover said this:
“This bill hurts the people who want to be sitting in your seats someday. We appreciate you for the effort that you put in, and want you to know that we are so much more than high school students. We are the future.”





