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DEALT A FULL HOUSE
Growing up in a big family with adopted siblings, OSU recruit Wells comfortable in a crowd, ready to lend a hand to Buckeyes
By Marla Ridenour
Beacon Journal sportswriter
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She already has raised the recruit deemed the nation's best running back. This fall, she'll have two sons attending Ohio State: Parade All-American Chris Wells and his older brother Lenny.
Before Wednesday's national signing day makes it official, Paulette Wells was thinking about road trips to Texas and Iowa to follow Chris, the Garfield standout who will begin his first year with the Buckeyes when he enrolls March 26. But she couldn't escape the contents of the manila envelope lying below the television in the living room entertainment center.
Inside was information on two brothers, 17 and 15, who have been in foster care half their lives. For 10 years, Paulette and James Wells have acted on her calling to help less fortunate children in the Akron area. They became foster parents in 1996 and adopted their first child in 1999.
Now the family of 13 includes five adoptees. Nine people live in their modest five-bedroom, two-bath Cape Cod with gray aluminum siding and scarlet shutters.
``She likes to give kids another chance,'' James Wells said.
``Today's foster kids are tomorrow's homeless people,'' Paulette Wells said.
Paulette Wells has already turned down the request to help the two brothers. She told A Child's Waiting, a local agency that has a national network of children from newborn to 17, that their home would need another bedroom and bathroom to handle anyone else.
``We're taking donations for another bathroom,'' she said, and she doesn't sound like she's joking.
The subsidy -- the Ohio minimum is $250 per month -- and health-care card the Wells receive for each adoptee doesn't seem to go far. A recent dinner for the clan meant cooking 20 pork chops, 50 chicken wings, five bags of frozen green beans and a 10-pound bag of potatoes destined for mashing.
``We never have leftovers. Sometimes potatoes,'' Paulette Wells said.
The Wells' 11 children seem like a classic example of
Yours, Mine and Ours. James' daughters Carlyse, 18, and Jalyse, 15, live with their mother. Two of Paulette's children, Cherise, 31, and Donald, 21, have moved out. Joey, 18, and Chris, 17, nicknamed ``Beanie'' because he was a long stringbean as a baby, remain at home. Adopted were Lenny, 19, Jordan, 15, Courtney, 13, James, 12, and Traci, 12. Traci was the first to join the household when she was 7 and is very close to Chris. Lenny, abandoned at birth at the hospital, arrived when he was 12.
Paulette Wells downplays how they all came together and said they've molded into ``one big family.'' Chris doesn't seem fazed by the number of children under their roof.
``I like it,'' he said. ``I don't know what I'd do without them. I'd be bored.
``It's great growing up with a big family, all of us looking out for the others. There's always so many people at our house. Always somebody visiting, somebody's friends over. It's like a community center.''
Other than Chris, the most athletic are Joey, who played football at Central-Hower, and Courtney, who stands 5-foot-11 and plays basketball, volleyball and softball. James participates in soccer, Jordan football.
Chris seemed undaunted by his parents' rules, like the assigned chores. Each has a day to do the dishes, a day to clean the bathroom, a day to wash clothes. Paulette said lately Joey and Chris have paid the younger ones to do their work, which helps supplement their $5 to $6 a week allowance.
``They're always saying, `Mom, we need a raise,' '' Paulette Wells said. ``I say, `When I get a raise, you get a raise.' ''
Paulette, 46, drives a van for Akron Board of Education special education students, starting her run about 7:30 each morning. She is also looking for a part-time job. James, 41, is a shipping clerk for Wellman Products.
Their income tax refund, boosted by a $10,000 tax credit for each adopted child, is always earmarked before it arrives. Next on the horizon is a joint graduation picnic for Chris and Joey in June. Earlier this month, came expenses for a trip to San Antonio, Texas, for 18 family members, including Paulette's 80-year-old mother, Florence Wheeler, to watch Chris play in the U.S. Army All-American Bowl. Rushing for 67 yards and three touchdowns, Chris was named Most Valuable Player, prompting Paulette to send him balloons at school and order a large arrow sign for their front yard.
Already excelling with his combination of strength and smarts, Chris Wells could feel pressure to eventually reach the NFL and provide for his parents and siblings.
``I'd like to do it out of my heart,'' he said. ``There's not any pressure that I've got to take care of my family. My brothers and sisters are real smart, they're going to be able to take care of themselves. I'm pretty sure they're going to have great jobs.''
Paulette boasted that Traci and James carry 4.0 grade-point averages, and Jordan has a 3.5 and Courtney a 2.5. They also get a monetary reward for good grades, often with a little extra from their grandma.
James and Paulette Wells have been married 13 ½ years, meeting when she was working part-time at a check-cashing business.
``She thought I was loaded. I'd been working a lot of overtime,'' James said with a smile.
At that time, Paulette Wells was an education assistant in the Akron schools and what she saw began to trouble her.
``A lot of kids were in foster homes and they came to school so unkempt,'' she said. ``I thought, `Maybe I can take some of these kids and make a difference.' ''
Chris, who plans to room with Lenny in their sophomore year at OSU, said he never felt deprived. He's proud of what his parents have done.
``My mom and dad did a great job raising us,'' he said. ``We've always thought about helping other people.''