Run Express Club is a youth running team under the tutelage of Lee Zumbach.

From a 2009 Frederick news post article by Bill Green.

Lee and Anne Zumbach of Pleasant Valley aren't running for office, but they are running ... a lot.
Though Lee is retired from 35 years of full-time teaching at Brunswick High School, he still coaches cross-country and track at Brunswick High, substitute teaches, runs when he can, works with Scouts, organizes running and recreation events, and tries to keep Brunswick vibrant with family and community activities.
Anne does all that ... and still teaches math full time at Brunswick High.
 
"We do everything together," Lee Zumbach said.
Although his family moved from Brunswick to Pleasant Valley some years ago, Lee Zumbach said, "Our life is Brunswick."
One recent Tuesday evening, 5:30 to 6:30, on the field at Brunswick Middle School, the husband and wife were coaching -- and running laps with -- about 20 runners, first- through eighth-graders, in the Potomac Valley Youth Association's Blue Ridge Express Running Club.
Then Anne was running off to a Boy Scout meeting of Troop 277. Lee is a merit badge counselor for the troop and is on the Scout committee.
Lee is treasurer for the Brunswick Area Recreation Council, and Anne is on the committee.
Lee is also an original member of Brunswick Main Street, a town revitalization organization.
When Brunswick considered annexing land several years ago, Lee Zumbach became concerned that the downtown would face irreparable decline.
"We've got to revitalize downtown," he said. "That's why I jumped into Main Street."
For Main Street, Lee Zumbach began to consider ways to encourage people to spend time in Brunswick.
It was then that he thought of the Potomac Street Mile race, which celebrated its fifth year Saturday. More people than ever have expressed interest in the event, Lee Zumbach said. Families and runners enjoyed the race and refreshments. Stores downtown were open, and some offered specials as part of the event.
"We encourage people to bring a picnic lunch," Lee Zumbach said. "It's a nice picnic atmosphere."
With the race event "the goal is twofold," he said, "to provide a healthy family recreation ... and competitive activity ... and show that Brunswick is an inviting destination."
"I'm glad to do my part," he said.
Anne said, "I go along and help."
Lee Zumbach's work with BARC has dovetailed with Main Street, as both groups provide community-oriented activities for Brunswick-area families.
Anne Zumbach said the demands on their time volunteering in so many organizations seem normal. She grew up in Myersville, where her father volunteered time with Scouts and coaching.
"He was always out volunteering," Anne Zumbach said.
Anne's mother, now 82, runs and competes in Senior Olympics.
From her parents, Anne Zumbach learned that if there is a need to fill, and she can fill it, she should. Lee Zumbach, a native of Scranton, Pa., agreed, adding that lots of people fill the roles that he cannot, but he uses his talents where he can.
 
Anne said it all started for them in the 1980s before their children were born, coaching tennis when there wasn't a program.
Three children of their own have come along since then, but she said the volunteer activities "kind of mushroomed." The Zumbach children, a boy, 20, and twin girls, 13, run and have taken part in Scouts with their parents.
Anne Zumbach said she wants girls to see a female coach.
"I think girls need women role models," she said. "So many coaches are men."
The Zumbachs train runners of all ages. Coaching the girls and boys together is "one of the hallmarks of our program," Lee Zumbach said.
A core of helpful volunteer parents makes it all work, the Zumbachs said, refusing to take all the credit for successful programs that have seen runners get to championships year after year.
Coaching recently, Lee Zumbach encouraged puffing runners with comments like "Help each other. ... You got your breath back? ... High five!"
The Zumbachs encourage their students to participate in sports for life, not just for competition or awards. Their aim is to get everyone active, and to help them learn a sport to do throughout life.
"Together" is a word that crops up in the Zumbachs' conversation repeatedly, and each finished the sentences of the other. The pair fosters cohesion among families, activities and communities.
Reflecting on the years of volunteering that started with a tennis program, Anne Zumbach said: "No one ever thought we'd be doing it this much longer. ... When you see a need you just end up doing it."