ACA's "Operation Summer Camp"
Gives military children the gift of camp

When one or both parents are deployed, families are turned upside-down. Logistically, financially, emotionally – the challenges are sudden and dramatic.
Since 2003, an innovative program called Operation Summer Camp (OSC) has helped Pennsylvania families meet some of those challenges by sending about 150 military kids to camp, tuition free. Launched by the nonprofit American Camp Association (ACA) Keystone Section, serving camps and families in Pennsylvania and Delaware, OSC matches military children with one to seven-week "camperships" donated by day and overnight camps across the state. Together, ACA camps have donated more than $400,000 in total camperships.
OSC started as a quick response to an immediate need, says ACA Keystone president Cheryl Magen. "When one or both parents are deployed, families can lose income, childcare, and stability."
ACA approached the PA Air National Guard's 111th Fighter Wing to help match children to camperships. When Tech. Sgt. Maureen Mowers was deployed for basic training, her two sons spent the summer at Camp Kweebec. The boys enjoyed their first overnight camp experience, and Mowers knew they were safe and happy. Mowers says, "It’s very generous of the camps to provide family support. I’m glad the children have had the opportunity to experience camp.”
Unlike other week-long camp programs exclusively for military children, OSC allows a child to experience a traditional camp program with non-military kids. Lt. Col. Scott Hreso, a fighter pilot for 30 years and a single father of four, said that Operation Summer Camp enabled his 15-year old daughter to attend International Gymnastics Camp, where she “made a lot of friends, improved her technical cheerleading skills, and got a real morale boost.”
Hreso’s children have lived through his deployments many times. “Because she was with other, non-military kids, camp was a good way for my daughter to forget about her family problems, learn a lot, and feel like a regular kid,” says Hreso. In appreciation, he presented the camp with an American flag that he flew over Iraq.
After OSC was recognized by the Pentagon as an outstanding program, ACA took steps to expand the program in Pennsylvania and across the country. "Building relationships with different military units is a slow process, and the economy has had an impact on camperships. But each summer we try to help as many children as we can," Magen says.
In western Pennsylvania, OSC is now offered to Air National Guard families through the 171st Air Refueling Wing's Family Readiness Coordinator, Deborah Krall. Hoping to work with more branches of the armed forces as the program grows, Magen advises parents in other military units to ask their family services office to contact ACA .
Jean Moretti, Family Readiness Coordinator at the 111th Fighter Wing, says that OSC gives children a chance to play and live like other children, away from the constant worry and uncertainty that comes with active military parents. “Military family children would never have had these opportunities if it wasn’t for the generosity of the ACA-member camps,” says Moretti.
On a perfect summer day in July 2004, nine-year-old Ryan Mowers was practicing archery with his bunk at Camp Kweebec in Schwenksville, Pennsylvania. As he squinted down the arrow, he looked like any other fourth grader enjoying his first summer at camp. At the pool, his brother, 12-year-old Brandyn Mowers, was just drying off. Older, and maybe a little wiser, Brandyn was quieter than the other boys in his bunk. Though he didn't talk about it, Brandyn knew that his mother was about to be deployed for combat training in the Pennsylvania Air National Guard. He didn't know how long she'd be away. But he knew that she might get sent to Iraq. And he was old enough to remember how scared he felt when his father, also an Airman, had been sent overseas after September 11, 2001.
On that same perfect day, Staff Sgt. Patti Findley of the PA Air National Guard's 111th Fighter Wing was visiting Camp Kweebec with a reporter from the Philadelphia Inquirer. Off-duty, Sgt. Findley was a professional photographer. On duty, in uniform, she was taking pictures for The Sandy Hog Gazette, the 111th's news bulletin, while the Inquirer reporter researched a story about "Operation Summer Camp"–a tuition-free "campership" program offered to the children of the 111th by American Camp Association (ACA)-accredited camps from ACA, Keystone Regional. With Sgt. Findley was a special surprise for the Mowers boys–their mother, Tech. Sgt. Maureen Mowers, 32, who was taking advantage of the press tour to say one last goodbye to her boys. She was leaving the next day for training.
Looking up from his arrow, Ryan Mowers saw some adults walking toward him. Then he saw the camouflage uniform of Sgt. Findley, who was leading the group. When a child with a parent serving in the military sees a stranger in uniform, his heart skips a beat. Ryan's sunny face went dark, fear setting in, until–in the blink of an eye–an enormous smile lit up his face as he saw his mom and ran into her arms.
In January/February 2003, Camping Magazine featured stories about the different ways in which the organized camp community responded to help children who had lost a parent on September 11, 2001. Thoughtful and generous, these programs all helped children grieve in a safe place and get back to the business of being a child. But in the aftermath of 9/11, as America mobilized to fight terrorism, the ripples of those horrific attacks created a new group of children with unique emotional needs — the children of deployed parents; children living with the daily fear that comes with having a parent off fighting a war.
Reaching Families in Need
Stephen Taylor, director of Camp Neumann, learned about the hardships families endured when a parent was suddenly deployed from one of his camp counselors, who was also serving in the 111th Fighter Wing at the Willow Grove Air Reserve Station. As a National Guardsman, Patrick Trauger was a crew chief in the 111th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron. He told Taylor about the families of the men and women he served with in the 111th–families whose lives were turned upside down when a parent's income plummeted from a good-paying job to military pay. Faced with less money to pay the bills, the spouse at home was often forced to take extra work, which then created child care problems and transportation problems and even more financial burdens. Compounding their worry for the welfare of their soldiers, families left behind coped with the stress of "holding the fort" at home.
Taylor immediately decided to provide tuition-free "camperships" to the children of the 111th Fighter Wing, but he wanted to do more. He took the idea to Bob Miner, ACA Keystone Regional president, and Michael Chauveau, executive director of ACA, Keystone Regional. Both jumped on board and agreed to help promote the idea throughout the ACA, Keystone local office. That was the easy part.
Challenges
The challenge was in figuring out how to create a manageable program. Who would be eligible for the camperships? How would ACA Keystone connect camps with families in need? Trauger introduced Taylor to Nicholas Monatesti, a former airman who now serves as the family readiness coordinator for the 111th Air Wing. The Family Readiness Group (FRG) is the Air Force's one-stop family assistance services office, which is established in times of contingency call-up, mobilization, and large-scale deployment to provide support and assistance to Service members and their families. Family readiness coordinators help military families access needed services and cut through "red tape" when a parent is called to active duty for an extended period of time. Monatesti says the primary mission of any FRG is to inform and emotionally support families so the military member can perform his or her mission. On any day, his job might include providing youth development and counseling information to parents, preventing a bank from foreclosing on a military family's home while a parent is on active duty, finding child care, or helping in emergency situations.
In May 2003, Monatesti met with an ACA, Keystone committee to explain the organizational structure and protocol of the military and the role of the Family Program. The committee learned that unlike regular Army families, which are accustomed to living a military life on a base with other military families, Guard and Reserve families are often unprepared for a sudden deployment. Besides the sudden change in income and parental responsibilities, the children of guardsmen and reservists may not have any other friends who are living with the same experience of having a parent serving overseas, so it's hard for them to share their feelings with friends. Monatesti offered his services to coordinate the camp program through his office. As a model program, working with the Guard's 111th seemed a good place to start. By the end of the meeting, Operation Summer Camp was born.
For camps used to running their own programs and handling their own registrations, Operation Summer Camp posed some new problems. With the camp season opening just weeks away, quick mobilization was required. But because of the military's security regulations, initial contact with prospective families occurred only through the family readiness coordinator. ACA, Keystone Regional camps who wished to participate by offering camperships provided session availability information, brochures, and videos to Monatesti. Through mailings, e-mails, meetings, and phone calls, he disseminated the camps' offers to the families of the 111th. As parents responded, Monatesti helped them review the camp material to find the best camp match for their child.
Thanks to the generosity of the camp community, families could pick sessions from one week to eight weeks at day and overnight camps, camps with various religious orientations, camps for special interests, and camps for children with special needs. Once a family selected a camp, Monatesti helped them complete the registration information and insured that all of the necessary paperwork was provided to the camp. In 2003, the first year of the program, 32 children ages six to 14 went to camp–many for the first time, but certainly not the last. In 2004, forty-five children enjoyed time at over forty ACA Keystone member camps.
Rewards
Monatesti said that when a parent is called to active duty, children are often called to take on added responsibilities at home. At camp, a child can just be a child. And for the spouse left behind, Operation Summer Camp also provides a much-needed break from the logistics of daily parenting.
For everyone involved in Operation Summer Camp, the rewards were great. At Camp Neumann, which provided the most camperships in 2003 and again in 2004, Steve Taylor said that helping the military children was a natural outgrowth of the philosophy of the camp–which is operated by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese and his own lifelong commitment to helping children in need. At Camp Setebaid, which serves children with diabetes, a child who attended through Operation Summer Camp returned the following summer as a counselor. The father of a Camp Netimus camper presented the camp with an American flag he had flown over Iraq. Many children and parents wrote to Monatesti to tell him how much the program meant to them. And in a special ceremony at the Pentagon, Nick Monatesti accepted the Outstanding Family Readiness Group Award on behalf of the 111th Air Wing and its Operation Summer Camp program. Of the ninety-three Wings in the United States, the 111th was the only one to receive this prestigious award.
"For every family who participated in the program," said Monatesti, "the camps were a godsend." Tech. Sgt. Mowers added that because her husband, from whom she is divorced, goes overseas almost every time the 111th is called, her children live with constant worry–and she is worried for them. "Thankfully, there's family support," Mowers said. "It's very generous of the camps to do this. I'm glad the children have had the opportunity to experience it."
Ellen Warren writes for the American Camp Association and coordinates Operation Summer Camp.
How-To's for Setting Up Military Camperships
ACA, Keystone would like to help other ACA local offices and camps replicate the Operation Summer Camp in their region. These tips should help jumpstart the process and ease it along the way:
* Understand the chain of command. (The Guard reports to state governors and is administered at the state level; the U.S. Army Reserve reports to the president.)
* Make first contact with your local family readiness coordinator (see "Military Contacts" sidebar on page 51), who can introduce you, if necessary, to the state family program administrator.
* Always respect and use military titles, unless you are given permission to use first names in conversation or communications.
* Recognize that, with the exception of administrative personnel, guardsmen are volunteers. Thus, when not called to active duty, a guardsman (e.g., the public affairs officer) may only be "on duty" on select weekends. During the week, he or she will likely be at a "regular" job and may be unavailable for Guard-related work. Ask if it's OK to call or e-mail during the week, and be patient if you don't get an immediate response. You may need to work with certain people on weekends.
* Never publicize the full (first and last) name of a military child at your camp without the prior permission of the family readiness coordinator. First names are always OK; last names may be OK, but only when approved.
* Provide plenty of information about the participating camps to your family readiness coordinator. A spreadsheet summarizing camp availability dates and camp specialties may make life easier for everyone.
* Try to be flexible. Unexpected deployments place unscheduled demands on military families.
* Get camp information to the family readiness coordinator as early in the year as possible.
* Relax parent visitation rules for the military kids at your camp.
* As appropriate, consider inviting military parents to lead or participate in a special program at your camp or have the child's bunk send a "care package" with a camp T-shirt that they all signed, or perhaps made-at-camp stationery, to the parent of a military child. Most parents are very willing to share stories around a campfire or send a photo to the camp from overseas.
As a national program, Operation Summer Camp has the potential to help thousands of children and their families cope with the uncertainties of an uncertain war. Camp does give kids a world of good. And through philanthropic programs like Project Heal the Children, America's Camp, Camp Haze, and Operation Summer Camp, camps also do good in the world.
Military Contacts and Resources
* State Joint Force Headquarters Program
The National Guard Family Program Office in each state joint force headquarters (JFHQ) is designed to assist family members of all service members, regardless of military organization or status, with information and/or referrals. For a list of contact information for the Family Program Offices at the state level, please visit: www.guardfamily.org.
* Local Family Program Office
Each Air National Guard Wing headquarters also maintains a Family Program Office with a family readiness coordinator to provide assistance at the local level. These offices also assist family members of all service members, regardless of the military organization or status, with information and/or referrals. Family readiness coordinator contact information for fifty-four states and territories can be found at: www.guardfamily.org
These program office links can also be found on the home page of the National Guard Family Program Web site at www.guardfamily.org.
For more information about Operation Summer Camp at ACA Keystone, please e-mail executive@ACAKeystone.org.
Ellen F. Warren is president of Levy Warren Marketing Media, a marketing and public relations firm that provides consulting services to ACA Keystone. You can contact Ellen at ellen@levywarren.com or 215-886-1666.
APA
Warren, Ellen F.. "Operation summer camp: children of national guardsmen experience camp tuition-free.(Air National Guard)." Camping Magazine. 2005. Retrieved October 21, 2009 from accessmylibrary: http://www.accessmylibrary.com/article-1G1-132264130/operation-summer-camp-children.html
MLA
Warren, Ellen F.. "Operation summer camp: children of national guardsmen experience camp tuition-free.(Air National Guard)." Camping Magazine. American Camping Association. 2005. AccessMyLibrary. 21 Oct. 2009 <http://www.accessmylibrary.com>.
Chicago
Warren, Ellen F.. "Operation summer camp: children of national guardsmen experience camp tuition-free.(Air National Guard)." Camping Magazine. 2005. accessmylibrary. (October 21, 2009). http://www.accessmylibrary.com/article-1G1-132264130/operation-summer-camp-children.html
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