CAMP MATTERSFebruary, 2015 Read our Annual Report available online at www.cheleyfoundation.org. Table of ContentsBuffie's BlogWas Your Donation Returned in the Mail?Adopt A Camper Creates a Lasting and Impactful RelationshipGiving Opportunities through JACFVolunteerism Is Alive and WellAnnual Report UpdatesAssociate Camps
Associate CampsContact InformationMission Buffie's BlogBuffie Berger, Executive Director Over the last year, I have been communicating to our JACF community whenever possible that camp matters. You see, I have always held the belief that the institution of camp is morerelevant and necessary than compulsory school. I am not arguing that traditional schooling isunimportant--don't get me wrong; I wouldn't be able to write or produce this blog without all theexcellent schooling I had growing up and through my adult years. In a quote I have cited beforein other promotional materials, Charles Eliot, President of Harvard University for forty years in theearly 20th century, pronounced, “The organized summer camp is the greatest contributionAmerica has made to education.” It's astounding to think that someone so influential onhigher education would be advocating the benefits of camp! I have just returned from the American Camp Association (ACA) National Conference where Iattended several sessions that focused on recent brain research on learning, the need to developwithin children \"21st Century Skills\", and the benefits of experiences in nature on healthy growthand development. I attended wanting to understand with more specificity and quantifiability whyand how camp matters, not just that it matters. And, through these sessions and subsequentconversations, I have gathered emerging research and data supporting JACF's belief that summercamp programs create a unique and powerful opportunity for youth development, leading then topositive outcomes for success in the future. We have begun sharing this data with you and areworking on a new page on our website as a library for ourselves and our supporters. Further, JACF will implement, starting in the summer of 2015, outcomes-based measuresdeveloped by the ACA designed to assess a range of positive youth outcomes fostered through thecamp experience. These research-based outcomes parallel with many of the 21st Century Skillsthat have been identified as being critical for success: problem-solving, collaboration, interactingeffectively with others, and leadership and responsibility. Specifically, for us, we would like toacquire data about how our Foundation programs effectively support community living away fromhome and neighborhood in the outdoors and natural world and provide for tremendous growth forour target population of low income, underserved youth. It's the quantifiable evidence thatextended-stay, nature-based summer camp programs create a unique and powerful opportunityfor the development of productive citizens. While we have much passionate belief among oursupporters and plenty of strong annecdotal evidence that camp matters, we look forward tocommunicating the data about how and why our investment in youth does indeed matter. Was Your Donation Returned in the Mail? We have been made aware by several of our loyal donors that their year-end donations to JACFhave been returned in the mail and have not cleared their accounts. We have looked into thisextensively and believe that the problem has to do with our old P.O. Box and an issue with theforwarding instructions.
If you have not received a donation acknowledgement letter from us, please check your bankaccount to see if the check has cleared. If the check has not cleared, we advise you to stoppayment on the check written and direct the contribution to our bank lockbox which receives anddeposits contributions directly to JACF's account. The address for our donations lockbox is: John Austin Cheley FoundationC/O FirstBankP.O. Box 151663Lakewood, CO 80215-8663 Your donation matters greatly in advancing low income, underserved youth throughextended-stay, wilderness summer camp programs. Every donation, small to large, is criticalin our effort to fund the full cost of tuition, travel and equipment to 100 great kidsaround the United States. Our fiscal year ends June 30, so there is still time to give toprovide support for our 2015 campers.Please check the address you have in your contacts for JACF and update it accordingly. We knowthat as a volunteer organization for most of our 25 year history our addresses have changedfrequently as new treasurers were appointed through the Board of Trustees. Now that we have apermanent office in Denver, Colorado, we hope that frequent address changes will be a past issue. Adopt A Camper Creates a Lasting and Impactful Relationship When asked why she and husband, Phil Bickler, contributed towards the Adopt A Camper Program, Amy Blevins said, \"I strongly believe in the benefits of a multi-year camp experience; I so benefited from it myself.\" Amy went on to describe how it had been one of her life goals to adopt a child, so when the Adopt A Camper opportunity was introduced to her, it struck her as an opportunity to make good on the goal. The reward for Amy came when she was able to meet her Adopt A Camper, Soufian Khribeche, and his family at Cheley Camps last summer. While walking around the camp with Soufian and his family, one of Soufian's counselors approached and put his arm around him and gave him a big hug. It filled Amy's heart when she saw how loved and respected Soufian was in just one summer of camp. An Adopt A Camper investment of $20,000 provides a one-to-one relationship and lasting partnership with a JACFcamper for the full life-span of their camp camp experience. Campers receive the assurance thattheir camp opportunity has been financially secured and donors receive communication about theprogress of their camper throughout the year. Pledges are accepted over a three year period andcan be structured to meet the donor's cash flow needs over the term. Amy and Soufian got to catch up again at the JACF Gala held in Denver in late September.
Amy and Soufian got to catch up again at the JACF Gala held in Denver in late September. Soufian, his mother, Diana, and father, Oussama, all volunteered to help with the event. \"I reallyfeel like they are an important part of my life and I have done something truly meaningful forothers.\" Giving Opportunities through JACF Did you know that JACF offers many ways to contribute to the life-long success of the youth itserves? Our commitment is to pay the full cost for tuition,travel and equipment for our 100 campers funded annually,which on average costs approximately $5,000 per capita. The Foundation actively seeks endowedcontributions to fund a campership in perpetuity,major gifts through the Adopt A Camper program,planned giving gifts, equipment fund contributionsthrough the recently established Ellie Pryor BooherFund, and workplace giving donations. We also hold several camp-designated funds towhich donations can be directed. We are able to work with you to figure out a structure forphilanthropic giving that meets your financial situation and directs your donation to the area ofmost interest to you. It takes all of these ways to give for JACF to provide an exemplaryexperience for our campers. We are delighted that several donors have come forward to committo over $200,000 in planned giving contributions in recent months, and we are extremely humbledto see that our camper families are recognizing the value of the services we provide bycontributing themselves through $15.00 a month regular bank deductions. Volunteerism Is Alive and Well We are very grateful to a hard-working and fun-loving teamof volunteers from Wells Fargo Bank, including new trustee,Philip Sanborn Perry, for helping us make all of our camperrecords from the last 25 years electronic. Our records from2011 on are electronic, but we have over 400 additionalpaper records that need to be entered into our system. Why is the data entry important? JACF is committed totracking its alumni to provide us with information about theimpact of their camp experience on their success in life. We also want to be able to stay in great contact with ourcampers and their families to maintain their affiliation withour Foundation that has invested so deeply in their growth and development. Annual Report Updates
Annual Report Updates Our Annual Report for 2013 and Short Year 2014 is now available online at www.cheleyfoundation.org. We have taken the step this year to be more environmentallyconscious, an action that seems to fit well with the Foundation's appreciation for summer campexperiences in wilderness and natural settings. We do have some Annual Report copies availablein hard copy form, which can be obtained by calling, emailing or writing us. We will send oneright out to you at your request! Our sincere apologies to Don and Rose Reynolds whose names were left off our Contributors Listat the Patron Level in the most recent Annual Report. Don and Rose have been loyal donorssince 1997, and we want them to know we do indeed appreciate their support! Associate CampsCamp Kawanhee for Boys, Weld, ME Friendly Pines Camp, Prescott, AZwww.kawanhee.com www.friendlypines.com Cheley Colorado Camps, Estes Park, CO Sanborn Western Camps, Florissant, COwww.cheley.com www.sanbornwesterncamps.com Colvig Silver Camps, Durango, CO Camp Thunderbird, Bemidji, MNwww.colvigsilvercamps.com www.camptbird.com Contact Information MissionSend Donations to: The John Austin Cheley Foundation fundsJohn Austin Cheley Foundation need-based camperships for high potential youth toC/O FirstBank attend extended-stay wilderness summer camps thatP.O. Box 151663 have a proven track record of positively impactingLakewood, CO 80215-8663 youth development.Office: (720) 981-2532 Website: www.cheleyfoundation.org Give online: www.cogives.org Forward Camp Matters to a friend!
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