Home USA Ice Hockey 24 Degrees of Color Shines Bright in Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration

24 Degrees of Color Shines Bright in Hispanic Heritage Month Celebration

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To celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, 24 Degrees of Color hosted a Hispanic Heritage Celebration, complete with traditional music, cultural dress and food. Having big plans for the day, Troutman could have never imagined the unforgettable turnout.

“If I could sum it up in one word, I just felt overwhelmed.” Troutman recalled. “I kept telling everybody I felt overwhelmed. I was very emotional.”

Over 80 athletes and their parents attended the event, packing meeting rooms and filling the ice. It is the latest culmination of many long, hard days of work for Troutman and 24 Degrees of Color.

The 24 Degrees of Color program was founded in 2021, an umbrella program of the ThruGUIDANCE Ministries organization that introduces young people in underserved communities to ice sports. Troutman was compelled to start the program when she felt dismissed while trying to register her daughter for ice sports. 

As she began to lay the groundwork for the program, the Los Angeles Kings reached out to her, excited to partner with their “We Are All Kings” program in advancing their DEI efforts. After holding her first Learn to Skate program in 2021 with only eight young skaters, Troutman was worried about finding unique ways to market the sport of hockey to minorities in the community.

“I started with eight kids in the first Learn To Skate session and Learn To Play session,” Troutman said. “The next Learn To Play session, I had 32. The next, I had 100.” 

Lucky for her, the program took off like wildfire. There were so many young kids interested in the program that she had to create a waitlist.

“By the third program we held in 2021, I had 50 kids waitlisted. At this point we’ve seen about 425 kids come through our program.”

Troutman credits the program’s growth and retention to a strong concentration on communication and taking a community-based approach to acclimating new parents to hockey.

“We are very communal. When parents register with us, we have a parent orientation,” Troutman explained. “One of the biggest areas of opportunity, with ice sports in the rinks that I’ve been in, is that there’s not a great onboarding process. You go on to these websites trying to figure it out, and unless you were born and raised in ice sports or know someone, it’s just hard to understand it all.”

24 Degrees of Color meets with parents to try and bridge that gap in knowledge, holding meetings that explain small things like how to wash and sanitize hockey gear to educating the parents on the different pathways their child can explore playing youth hockey. She recalls a time when her young daughter began skating at her local rink, and how it took a skating coach two months to inform her that the skates she bought for her daughter were too big and could potentially cause injury. Using her experience as an example, Troutman aims to replicate the experience she wishes she had early on when she was a new parent exploring ice sports for the first time. 

“Because the community aspect is so core to our program, it breeds a larger community, right?” Troutman said. “So right now, we have about 120 kids on our waitlist.” 

For many young athletes, seeing someone who looks like them can make them feel seen in ways words cannot express. Troutman holds this sentiment dear and makes it a point to introduce newer skaters to those who have become veterans in her program, allowing for the newer skaters to have a friend and a familiar face on the ice. A familiar face can go a long way for someone relatively new to hockey, especially as 95% of 24 Degrees of Color skaters are first timers. 

“With my parents, I make sure they know each other,” Troutman said. “I make sure that they know who they’re on the ice with. Then, you know, now when you go to these rinks, they’re very diverse.” 

Making a surprise appearance at the celebration, former player Al Montoya eagerly told his hockey story to the attendees, his love and pride for his country of Cuba tangible and heavy as he orated. 

“The biggest thing for me with these kids is that I hope that by meeting Al, they find a role model in him,” Troutman said. “I know that they resonated with this story because they said it afterwards. A lot of the parents were just like, ‘Oh my gosh, we have similar stories.’ 



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