How One Question Sparked a Nonprofit That’s Changing Lives in North Idaho
When explaining how North Idaho Mountain Sports Education Fund (NIMSEF) came to be, Executive Director Jeff Rouleau kept circling back to one powerful idea: Can I solve that problem?
That simple question is how NIMSEF was born.
Years before the organization existed, Jeff was working as a ski instructor at Schweitzer Mountain. After hosting local fourth graders for a free ski day, instructors received thank-you notes from the students. One letter stopped Jeff in his tracks: “Thank you for the best day of my life ever, but I’ll probably never see you again, so goodbye.”
That sentence revealed a quiet truth: for some local kids, skiing wasn’t a seasonal activity; it was a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
Not long after, Jeff found himself on a chairlift making casual conversation with fellow community members. When he asked how often they had skied that season, their answer surprised him: “This is our only day. We just can’t afford to ski more than that.”
These were people who lived and worked in the community, raising families and contributing every day to the place they called home. Yet access to mountain sports was still out of reach.
That was the moment it clicked. “That just didn’t seem right to me. So I asked myself, ‘How do we fix this?’” Jeff reflects.
Why Access Matters
Jeff believes communities only function when everyone belongs. The mountain economy depends on restaurants, shops, banks, gas stations, roads, and first responders. Every role matters. So why should some kids grow up able to participate in mountain sports while others sit in school on Monday morning listening to stories they’ll never get to tell themselves?
“This program isn’t just about skiing. It’s about giving kids a sense that they belong here,” says Jeff.
Jeff brought the idea to Schweitzer’s leadership: a program designed to remove financial barriers and give local kids real access to skiing and snowboarding. They said yes. In its first year, NIMSEF served 22 kids. Today, the program supports roughly 90 students each season and has provided more than 1,000 scholarships to local youth.
“We’ve now given out over a thousand scholarships. That’s something I’m really proud of,” says Jeff.
Teaching Responsibility, Not Entitlement
From the very first year, NIMSEF asks students to have skin in the game. New participants are required to earn and contribute their first $50 themselves. Parents are encouraged to have kids work for it, whether that means walking dogs, shoveling snow, mowing lawns, cutting firewood, or doing extra chores. Jeff has watched kids arrive with jars of coins earned 25 cents at a time. He’s seen kids show up still dirty from a day of hard work.
“When kids work for something themselves, it means more. They value it differently,” he explains. Each year, the required contribution increases slightly, preparing students to eventually take full ownership of their participation. Kids also help by selling raffle tickets.
Through NIMSEF, students receive:
- Eight weeks of lessons
- Loaner gear (skis, boards, boots, helmets, goggles)
- A season pass to Schweitzer
- Coaching, structure, and access they otherwise wouldn’t have
Participant Adeo Laboy shares what the program has meant to him. He started out skiing, then discovered snowboarding and everything changed. Over the years, he progressed through multiple coaches and training levels, selling raffle tickets and working jobs to earn his contribution. Adeo recently received a scholarship to join the Snowboard Northwest competitive team. That opportunity would never have been visible without NIMSEF. Snowboarding has become more than a hobby. It’s become a passion and a dream for the future.
How the Community Can Help
NIMSEF relies on community support to continue its work. Donations can be made through the organization’s website via PayPal or by mailing a check. Financial support is critical; each season requires a substantial payment to Schweitzer for lift access alone.
The organization also accepts:
- Gently used outerwear
- Helmets and goggles
- Newer equipment that meets safety and insurance requirements
Each year, NIMSEF hosts a gear night at Schweitzer where students are outfitted, sometimes for the very first time, with everything they need.
A Problem Worth Solving
The North Idaho Mountain Sports Education Fund exists because someone noticed an unfair gap and refused to accept it as inevitable. What started with a child’s letter and a chairlift conversation became a solution that continues to change lives, one student, one family, one season at a time.
Sometimes, making a difference doesn’t start with a big plan.
It starts with a question:
Can I solve that problem?
And sometimes, the answer reshapes an entire community.













