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  • 15 Apr 2026 8:31 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)

    Since 2017, the Solomon Cramer Fund has been sending young people to camp by granting scholarship funds to United Methodist conference camp/retreat ministries. Through these grants, camps have developed innovative programs that reach new people in new places, widening the circle of leadership and campership.


    Scholarship grants from the Solomon Cramer Fund encourage UMC camps to consider the breadth of our ministries by focusing on the following four priorities:

    • Experiences that minister with youth living in poverty.

    • The intentional development of young people for spiritual leadership.

    • Camp experiences that collaborate with local churches and agencies in processes of faith formation. 

    • Opportunities for increasing racial/ethnic diversity within ministry participation and leadership. 

    This year UMCRM received 40 grant applications with stated need totaling nearly $280K! $34.9K in funding was available to distribute based on a 5-year average of fund earnings. Sixteen programs that most closely aligned with grant priorities were selected. The UMCRM Association is pleased to announce the 16 recipients of 2026 Solomon Cramer Grant awards:


    The Camp Connect Initiative - Mount Shepherd Retreat Center (Western NC)

    Camp Connect focuses on removing financial obstacles for youth connected to the Asheboro Housing Authority by providing scholarships for summer camp. This year, the program is achieving a significant milestone by transitioning participants from day camp into a more immersive overnight experience to foster deeper personal growth. Beyond the camp activities, the organization provides financial literacy resources to families to build long-term community sustainability rather than dependency.


    Ashley Youth Campers - Camp Lakewood (IN)

    This initiative establishes a strategic partnership with a local church in Ashley, Indiana, to bring children from rural, under-resourced backgrounds to a week of summer camp. By coordinating transportation and providing full scholarships, the program ensures that logistics and finances do not prevent local students from experiencing outdoor adventures and spiritual mentorship. Campers participate in a wide range of activities, including ziplining and archery, while being discipled by trained counselors in a Christ-centered environment.


    The ABLE Initiative - Camp in the Community (Holston) 

    The ABLE Initiative focuses on providing inclusive, community-based day camps for children on the autism spectrum who live in poverty. The program equips staff and high school junior counselors with trauma-informed and neurodiversity-affirming training to ensure every child feels a sense of belonging. By offering specialized sensory tools and calming supports to all participants, the organization fosters a welcoming environment where accommodations are normalized and no child is singled out.


    Traveling Day Camp - Camp Chestnut Ridge (NC)

    The Traveling Day Camp is a mobile program that brings the camp experience directly to local United Methodist churches to overcome transportation and language barriers for underserved populations. The initiative specifically targets children from Hispanic communities and families experiencing homelessness, providing them with activities like archery, team building, and worship. This year, the program is expanding to include specific leadership development roles for older campers who have aged out of the traditional participant roles.


    The Spirit Community Day Camp - Gretna Glen Camp & Retreat Center (Eastern PA)

    The Spirit Community Day Camp serves the diverse and growing urban population of Lebanon, Pennsylvania, through a partnership with Covenant United Methodist Church. The curriculum is centered on the Wesleyan "The Three Simple Rules" and incorporates daily character traits to help children grow in their faith and personal identity. Additionally, the program supports participants by providing necessary camping supplies to those who wish to transition from this day camp into an overnight experience.


    Innabah Day Camp  - Camp Innabah (Eastern PA)

    This project provides campership assistance for elementary and middle school students from the Pottstown area who face economic hardships. Participants engage in a safe, welcoming community where they build resilience through daily swimming, nature exploration, and team challenges. By partnering with local school personnel and community leaders, the organization identifies youth who will most benefit from these transformational, faith-centered experiences.


    Mission Service Camp - Little Grassy Camp and Retreat Center (Illinois Great Rivers)

    The Mission Service Camp Scholarships provide opportunities for youth groups to participate in week-long missions focused on home repair and environmental stewardship. These experiences combine hands-on service with intentional spiritual formation and peer-led leadership training to help participants put their faith into action. The program specifically seeks to empower underserved youth, equipping them with the confidence to return to their home congregations as motivated leaders.


    Glisson First Camper Grant Scholarship Fund - North Georgia Camp and Retreat Ministries

    The Glisson First Camper Grant Scholarship Fund is designed to build trust and increase diversity by supporting first-time overnight campers from racial- and ethnic-minority backgrounds. By reserving specific registration blocks and partnering with local minority ministry organizations, the program ensures accessibility during the most popular weeks of the summer. The initiative creates a unique faith environment where young people can build meaningful relationships that transcend racial and ethnic differences.


    Leadership Opportunity Through Camp Experiences for Migrant Youth - Ocean Park Camp and Retreat Center (Pacific Northwest)

    This pilot program offers a culturally responsive summer camp experience specifically designed for migrant youth from Latino and other underrepresented communities. The initiative features a youth leadership track that includes bilingual orientation, stewardship projects, and outdoor skills workshops to build confidence and identity. Participants engage in hands-on environmental education and practice public speaking by leading peer discussions in both English and Spanish.


    Native Roots Camp Initiative - Oklahoma United Methodist Camp & Retreat Ministry

    The Native Roots Camp Initiative is a new project aimed at expanding camp access for Native American youth representing the various tribal nations in Oklahoma. Through partnerships with indigenous congregations, the program offers culturally attentive and faith-rooted experiences tailored to the participants' backgrounds. The project seeks to foster spiritual leadership and build a lasting community among a population that has historically been underrepresented in traditional camp settings.


    Faithful Foundations - Suttle Lake Camp (OR-ID) 

    Faithful Foundations is a youth-led retreat program at Suttle Lake Camp that empowers middle and high school students to plan and execute their own spiritual gatherings. The initiative brings together young people from diverse denominations to create a unique ecumenical faith community in an area with low church engagement. By expanding to multiple yearly sessions, the program helps participants grow as Christian leaders while discovering their place in the modern church.


    The Bridge Project - Shoal Creek Camp (AR) 

    The Bridge Project collaborates with university programs and local churches to offer an enriching outdoor camp experience for children living in poverty. College students and youth serve as trained mentors, guiding campers through activities like swimming, fishing, and Bible study focused on faith development. The initiative removes financial barriers for both the young participants and the student volunteers, fostering a safe environment for personal growth and leadership.


    Counselor-in-Training Program - Camp Connect at Epworth By the Sea (South GA)

    The Counselor-in-Training Program is a leadership development initiative for graduating high school seniors, particularly those from rural areas with limited access to ministry formation. Participants engage in virtual community building followed by an immersive hands-on residency where they mentor elementary campers and explore their own vocational callings. This bridge program is designed to equip the next generation of staff and church leaders with the practical and spiritual skills needed for lifelong service.


    Urban Methodist Youth Camp - United Methodist Urban Youth Alliance (MI)

    The Urban Methodist Youth Camp provides a week-long, faith-based experience for urban youth from underserved and low-income neighborhoods. Campers participate in intensive skill tracks, such as arts or wellness, alongside leadership workshops and spiritual formation activities like daily worship and small groups. This flagship program serves as a gateway to year-round engagement, connecting young people to ongoing Bible studies and community service projects.


    Care & Connect  - Westview on the James (VA)

    The Care & Connect initiative provides supplemental funds to families from urban and rural areas who need financial assistance to enroll their children in summer camp. The program specifically reaches out to families who learn about the camp outside of traditional church networks and ensures that all recipients receive an identical experience to their peers. By maintaining privacy regarding who receives funding, the organization ensures that children from lower-income households are fully integrated into the camp community without stigma.



  • 15 Apr 2026 6:51 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)


    If you’ve felt like there have been more surveys than usual this spring, you’re right. And it’s not by accident.


    This is a season of listening. Across UMCRM, we are paying close attention to what leaders are experiencing, where ministry is thriving, and where there are real challenges. We are gathering insight that will shape how we support you, how we advocate for camp and retreat ministry, and how we move forward together in the years ahead. But none of that happens without your voice.


    Every survey you complete is more than a data point. It’s a way of strengthening your leadership and contributing to something that reaches far beyond your own site. The information we gather becomes the benchmarks you can use in conversations with boards and conference leaders. It becomes the foundation for new tools, training, and resources that are grounded in real experience. It becomes the story we tell about the impact of camp and retreat ministry when we are seeking support, building partnerships, and advocating for this work across the denomination.


    This spring, each survey has been focused on a different part of that shared story. The Character at Camp work is helping us better understand how formation is actually taking shape in our settings and how we can be more intentional in nurturing it. The Salary & Compensation Survey is giving us a clearer picture of sustainability, equity, and what it takes to support healthy leadership over time. As we move into the summer, the Effective Camp Project will invite campers at 36 sites to share their experiences, offering us one of the most meaningful ways to articulate the impact of what happens at camp.


    Taken together, this is not random. It’s a coordinated effort to see more clearly, speak more confidently, and lead more effectively. This particular moment matters. We are in the middle of new research initiatives, strengthened partnerships, and a strategic planning process that will guide UMCRM’s direction for the next several years. The insights gathered right now will directly influence what is prioritized, what is developed, and where resources are invested. Your perspective helps ensure that what comes next is grounded in reality, not assumption.


    That’s why we want to give you a heads up about what’s coming next.


    On Monday, you will receive the UMCRM Strategic Planning Survey. This is one of the most important opportunities to shape the future of our work together. The direction we take over the next three to four years will be informed by what you and other leaders across the network share in this moment.


    We know your time is limited. We also know that requests like this can feel like just one more thing in an already full season. But even a few minutes of thoughtful input makes a meaningful difference. In many cases, these surveys can be completed quickly, and some may be appropriate to share with others on your team. All responses are used in ways that help us see the bigger picture so that what we build reflects the collective experience of the whole community. Just as importantly, we are committed to sharing what we learn and how it shapes what we do.


    Thank you for the ways you continue to show up not only in your own ministry, but in your willingness to contribute to something larger. This is one of the ways we lead together, and your voice truly matters.


  • 10 Apr 2026 4:36 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)


    Like so many of you, I have found myself glued to the updates from the Artemis II mission and the crew aboard the Integrity. There’s something magnetic about space. It's that curiosity and unknown that spark childlike wonder. I’ve felt like a kid again eagerly awaiting new pictures and updates: seeing the excitement of the crew as they orbited the moon, glimpsing a perspective of the universe we can't see from Earth, and venturing further than humans have gone before. 


    I’ve been struck this week by the crew’s presence in each moment. They look ahead on their journey, yet fully savor the “moonjoy” along the way. Space travel has a way of showing us what it’s like to encounter something vast and unfamiliar, to see differently, and to return changed. 


    We may not have zero-gravity fun or cool space suits, but isn’t this process exactly what we aim to provide at our camps? The chance to explore the unfamiliar, reshape our perspective, and return transformed.


    When our team sat down to contemplate our theme and vision for our next National Gathering, we spent time trying to describe this. That shifting from where you are to where you want to go. We wondered if a conference can give you all of the answers to make that shift for you. Plot twist- it can't. But what CAN happen is time in community, contemplating what’s to come, celebrating where we’ve been and what we’ve been through, and stepping into something new. This something new isn't fully defined or mapped- we are on our journey to see what’s on the far side of our metaphorical moon, and we hope that in taking time to wonder and experience awe together, this shift starts to happen within us all. 


    You're invited to Uplift with us next January at Zephyr Point, to look across Lake Tahoe to the surrounding mountains and take it all in. Mountains themselves carry the story of transformation: triangular peaks shaped over time by forces above and below, revealing change in visible form. There’s a rhythm and pattern to it. A mountain’s triangular peak even resembles a delta—the symbol for change. How poetic is that? Standing in awe of the mountains, we are lifted spiritually and reminded that change is forward momentum, upward movement.


    Plan to Uplift and explore the shape of change as our UMCRM community makes space for curiosity, to dream about what’s next, and to launch toward the unknown.


    More to come,

    Audrey




    Audrey LeSage’s camp story began as a Glisson (North GA) camper, then summer staffer (2014-18) and Intern (2018-19) and has grown into a full-circle career in camp ministry. Audrey holds a Bachelor’s in Outdoor Recreation from Central Michigan University and a Master’s in Organizational Leadership from Southern New Hampshire University. After a few years working with a disability services nonprofit in Atlanta, she returned to the Glisson year-round team in 2021 where she currently serves as Outpost & Sparrowwood Program Director. When she’s not at camp, Audrey can be found hiking the trails of North Georgia, playing trumpet in her community band, coaching adaptive swim team, or getting very invested in the current season of Survivor. Audrey is one of the nine illustrious Design Team volunteers who are planning the 2027 UMCRM National Gathering.


  • 25 Mar 2026 5:50 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)


    Across our network, there’s a shared awareness that this is a meaningful moment in the life of camp and retreat ministry.


    Leaders are navigating changing participation patterns, evolving expectations around faith formation, and ongoing questions about staffing, sustainability, and connection to the broader Church. At the same time, we continue to see the deep and lasting impact of this ministry. Lives are being shaped, leaders are being formed, and communities are being strengthened.


    It’s also a natural moment for us to pause and look ahead. UMCRM’s current strategic initiatives will conclude at the beginning of 2027. This gives us a timely opportunity to listen, discern, and set a direction that reflects where our ministries are today and where we believe God is leading us next.


    A Process Grounded in Listening


    This new strategic planning effort for UMCRM is rooted in a simple but important commitment: to listen well. We began our work by paying close attention to the small group conversations that took place during the Association Meeting at the Great Gathering. Many of you shared thoughtful reflections, challenges, and hopes for the future of our ministries. That feedback is already helping to ground this process in the lived realities of our network.


    From there, we have moved into a season of deeper listening. Right now, we are conducting interviews with a diverse group of members, partners, and constituents, ensuring that a wide range of voices and experiences are shaping what comes next. In April, we will invite the full UMCRM community to participate in an online feedback survey. This will be an important opportunity for everyone to contribute perspective, insight, and hope for the future.


    At every step, this work will be guided by what we are hearing. The data will not simply inform the process—it will drive the direction of UMCRM’s work over the next three to four years. This effort is being guided by Mitzie Schafer (UMCRM Board of Directors & GSB Fundraising), who is bringing both expertise and deep understanding of our ministry context to the process. She is working alongside a Strategic Planning Team made up of UMCRM volunteers, as well as the Board. Together, this group is helping to create a process that is thoughtful, inclusive, and grounded in the real experiences of camp and retreat ministry. At the same time, this is not simply a board-level initiative. It is a shared effort across the entire UMCRM community. The future we are shaping belongs to all of us.


    What to Expect in the Months Ahead


    As we move forward, the process will continue to unfold in a clear and intentional way:

    • Now through spring: Listening through interviews and broad community input

    • April: Full-network survey launches

    • Summer: Continued reflection and preparation by the Strategic Planning Team

    • August: Deep analysis of what we’ve heard and development of recommendations

    • Early November: Adoption of a new strategic plan by the Board

    We are still early in the process. While the Board has begun exploring feedback from the Association Meeting, the deeper work of identifying themes and shaping recommendations will take place later this summer as all of the data comes together.


    This process is not just about organizational direction; it’s about strengthening the ministries you lead every day. The insights gathered through this effort will help shape how UMCRM:

    • Supports leadership development

    • Creates meaningful connections across the network

    • Develops resources that meet today’s needs

    • Advocates for the value and impact of camp and retreat ministry

    In short, this work will help ensure that UMCRM continues to serve as a strong, relevant, and forward-looking partner in your ministry.


    An Invitation to Be Part of What’s Next


    You will have opportunities in the coming months to share your voice, reflect on your experiences, and help shape what comes next for UMCRM. When those invitations come we hope you will engage fully. Your perspective matters, and it will help shape the direction of this shared ministry.


    This is a meaningful moment for UMCRM. Not just to plan, but to listen, to discern, and to move forward together with clarity and purpose. We’re grateful to be on this journey with you.



  • 18 Mar 2026 8:14 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)


    Camp and water games – the perfect combination. I love the smiles on the faces and the joyous laughter as campers play games to get each other and themselves soaking wet. But I dreaded the hours filling up and tying disposable water balloons. No matter how you stored them after filling them up, a good portion of them would pop before they were even used. Then when it was time, the balloons were used once and over with. Finally, of course, there was the clean-up.  Disposable water balloons are a massive pain to clean up. You have to pick up a gazillion pieces afterwards, and inevitably, some always get left on the ground. Not great for program flow and definitely not great for the environment.


    I had heard of and researched “reusable water balloons” a bit; but I just wasn’t totally sold. However, after using the reusable water balloons that Neena Selfridge, Summer Program Director at Camp Penn, brought along with her last summer at camp; I saw the light!


    Here's Neena's take:


    I have used two different kinds of "reusable water balloons" for my Pre-K - 2nd Grade Day Camp (about 50 campers) for the last two summers at Camp Penn, and I have also been involved in leading/setting up water games programming for elementary age sleepaway camps for the last two years. I have used the more popular kind, which is the silicone/soft rubber ones with magnet closure that you fill with water. I also tried a less common variety off of Amazon which is like a very large. dense cotton pom pom. I would say both have their pros and cons.


    PROS: 

    • Both varieties of reusable balloons require very minimal clean up (just picking up the items and leaving them out to dry or running the pom pom variety through a dryer). 

    • Both kinds can be used over and over, not just year-to-year or event to event, but also many times within the same activity.

    • Both kinds are easy to store, most varieties coming with some sort of a mesh bag to keep them in.

    • Both kinds can be dropped into buckets or (preferably) kiddy pools full of water right before the activity and kids can self-fill/wet them over and over again.

    • Both kinds are more sturdy than the typical single use water balloon, so are easier for little kids or children with poor motor skills to use without breaking them immediately.

    • Both kinds are a major cost saver because bunch-a-balloons (the best disposable option) are pricey even when they're purchased on sale.

    • Activities or free play with reusable water balloons lasts a LOT longer than with the disposable variety.


    CONS:

    • If you do not let either variety fully dry out before storing them, they smell kind of smelly/gross.

    • With the silicone magnet kind of reusable water balloons, if they are thrown at someone's face or thrown too hard at anyone, the magnet can hurt or even bruise someone.

    • The easiest and most effective way to set up either kind of reusable water balloon is to fill one or more small pools and then dump them on in there, but this does take time to fill with a hose.


    Overall, I definitely have come to prefer reusable water balloons over disposable ones and I actually prefer the large pom-pom variety to the silicone ones for little kids. They don't mind the difference, and no danger of anyone getting a magnet to the face!



    Think about all the time you will save having the campers refill their own water balloons!  The fun will be part of the filling up process!  And not having to pick up all the balloon pieces is a huge time saver and blessing to the environment!



    The opinions shared here are from Kelley Price, Dean at Wesley Forest Camp, and Neena Selfridge, Summer Program Director at Camp Penn and volunteer at Wesley Forest (Susquehanna Conference Camps, PA). They are for the benefit of fellow UMCRM members and friends and are not an endorsement of any specific product, nor does this reflect an official position of the UMCRM Association, although we appreciate the commitments to thrift, safety, maximum fun, and Creation care!


  • 25 Feb 2026 11:03 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)

    In granting the American Camp Association $40 million, the Lilly Foundation determined that character and its formation among campers and staff is a crucial matter for study and implementation. The UMCRM Association was one of 14 camp networks to receive a 2026 planning grant to strategize for implementation in 2027-29.

     

    So, what is character? Philosopher Lao Tzu said: “Watch your thoughts, they become your words; watch your words, they become your actions; watch your actions, they become your habits; watch your habits, they become your character; watch your character, it becomes your destiny.”

     

    Given this, character as a concept is value-neutral. It is what we think, say, do, repeat, and become as humans in this world. In the "Tale of Two Wolves," a Cherokee parable, an elder teaches his grandson that an internal battle rages within everyone, imagined as two wolves: one evil (anger, envy, greed, ego) and one good (joy, peace, love, kindness). Which of the wolves will prevail? The one we feed the most.

     

    As United Methodist followers of Jesus in camp and retreat ministry, we are in the business of character formation as we lead discipleship programs. And those of us who lead are characters, too! How can we help our campers and staff to spend more time and effort feeding the good wolf within? How do we set about a disciplined life to feed the good wolf within ourselves?

     

    The UMCRM grant from ACA focuses on three aspects of character: Spirituality, Integrity, and Leadership. We believe that spiritual practices help form the integrity of our leaders as disciples. Over the next few months, we will be developing a strategy to implement a targeted character/discipleship effort for camp and retreat leaders at every level: volunteers, executives, board members, seasonal and year-round staff.

     

    We need your help in responding to surveys and participating in focus groups to assess where we are now, where we need to go, and what we need to do to get there.  Please pray that this wonderful opportunity may bear fruit in all of our shared ministries. Stay tuned for updates and ways to engage in our Character At Camp Initiative in the coming weeks and months.

    Meet the UMCRM Character At Camp Initiative Co-Coordinators:


    Dr. Gabby McHarg serves as the Director of Children and Family Ministries at Fuquay-Varina United Methodist Church (NC). After graduating from UNC Chapel Hill and the University of Cambridge with degrees in developmental psychology, Gabby taught preschool and was a postdoctoral researcher and later the Assistant Director of Children and Screens: Institute of Digital Media and Child Development. In 2022, Gabby followed God's call to combine her education and skills in child development with her passion for ministry with children of all ages and abilities by joining the staff at FVUMC full time, and is excited to continue to blend all of her gifts and experiences together with UMCRM. She brings United-Methodist-grounded faith, research skills, and expertise in children's faith development to her leadership in the Character At Camp Initiative.


    Rev. David Berkey has been a United Methodist Conference-level camp and retreat executive for 31 years in Eastern PA, Florida, Cal-Pac, and Michigan, and recently retired from that role. He served as a pastor, youth and camp leader in the NY Conference for 15 years before entering camp ministry full-time. David has served on the national boards of the American Camp Association, the National Council of Churches Outdoor Ministries Committee, and the UMCRM Board of Directors/National Camp & Retreat Committee. He is an ACA accreditation visitor, has taught faith formation in the UM Camp and Retreat Certification program, and is a regular workshop leader at regional and national events. After having served in a volunteer capacity on the design team for the Inside Out ecumenical summer camp curriculum for 25 years, David has now stepped into the role of Project Manager. David brings deep knowledge and experience of the UMCRM context and a passion for Christian spiritual leadership to his role with UMCRM's Character at Camp Initiative. 

  • 13 Feb 2026 12:55 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)


    Every summer begins the same way. Cars pull in. Luggage is unloaded. Nervous laughter mixes with anticipation. Young adults step onto camp property carrying excitement, uncertainty, hope, and more than a few invisible burdens. They arrive with resumes half-written, faith still forming, leadership they don’t yet recognize, and questions they’re not always ready to say out loud.


    Over the past several months, this blog series has explored what the 2025 UMCRM Summer Staff Impact Study reveals about these young adults who serve at our camps, and about the environments we create for them. We’ve looked closely at what motivates today’s staff, how support and agency shape their growth, why burnout is not inevitable, where training makes the biggest difference, and how leadership emerges in the lived experience of camp. This final post draws those threads together, returning us to the people at the heart of the data: the young adults who arrive at camp each summer and the leaders they are becoming through the experience.


    Who Shows Up at Camp


    Nearly 800 summer staff from 47 UMCRM camps participated in this study, offering one of the clearest snapshots we’ve ever had of the people saying “yes” to this work.

    • The median age was 20.
    • More than half (56%) were returning staff, many coming back to the same camp.
    • Only 41% identified as United Methodist, meaning most arrived from other Christian traditions or backgrounds.
    • 16% identified as LGBTQIA+.
    • 18% identified as people of color.
    • 11% were international staff.

    Our camps are welcoming young people with diverse backgrounds and stories. Faithful stories. Questioning stories. Joyful stories. Heavy stories. And all of them matter.


    What They Carry With Them


    Most staff arrived with some connection to faith. Nearly three-quarters grew up as regular church participants, many with experience in camp, mission trips, or youth ministry. And yet, the study reminds us that faith formation doesn’t end with familiarity.


    By the end of the summer:

    • 93% said their personal faith was strengthened
    • 91% said camp gave them greater clarity about their life direction or calling

    At the same time, many staff reported feeling unsure about leading faith conversations or offering spiritual guidance, especially in unplanned, vulnerable moments. This isn’t disinterest; it’s faith still taking shape.

    Camp doesn’t meet young adults after formation is complete. It meets them in the middle of it.


    The Weight They Don’t Always Name


    The data also reveals something we can’t afford to ignore.

    At the beginning of the summer:

    • 40% of staff had no mental health indicators
    • 41% had one or two indicators
    • 19% had three or four indicators

    In other words, nearly 60% arrived carrying at least one mental health concernAnxiety. Overwhelm. Trouble sleeping. Feeling very down or hopeless. Thoughts of self-harm. Questions about identity and worth.


    These staff weren’t less capable. But they were more vulnerable to burnout, to exhaustion, and to environments where support was inconsistent. And yet, many still grew. They grew because camp didn’t ask them to be perfect. It asked them to show up.


    Belonging Is Not Experienced the Same Way


    One of the most sobering findings emerged when researchers looked at support and agency across demographics.


    While 18% of respondents identified as people of color, only 9% of staff in high-support/agency environments were people of color. In contrast, 20% of staff in low-support/agency environments identified as people of color.


    The data doesn’t explain why people of color are feeling less supported, but it does invite reflection on ways camps could adapt and improve systems of support. Because the research findings clearly show that support and agency impact growth, faith outcomes, leadership confidence, and burnout, camp leaders must take seriously our commitment to equity in this area.


    Belonging must be designed. Support must be intentional. Agency must be shared.


    Who They Become by Summer’s End


    Despite everything staff carry (and sometimes because of it,) the transformation is real.


    By the end of the summer:

    • 98% said they grew in their leadership abilities
    • 97% said the camp experience had a significant positive impact on their life
    • 98% said they had a positive impact on specific young people
    • 94% said they felt more confident in themselves

    Last summer, leadership wasn’t taught in theory. It was formed in cabins, kitchens, chapels, and quiet moments of responsibility. Last summer, camp didn’t remove challenge. It paired challenge with meaning. This is where the truest value of a United Methodist summer staff experience is found.


    The Heart of the Matter


    This series has never been about perfect programs or flawless summers. It’s been about designing experiences that meet young adults where they are and walk with them toward who they are becoming.



    The data has shown us:

    Most of all, it has shown us that camp remains one of the church’s most powerful formation spaces, precisely because it holds complexity with care. Each of these insights drawn from the research inspires possible action items, shifts in policy or practice, and new ways to bring intentionality to helping summer camp staff thrive.


    A Closing Word


    Every summer, young adults trust us with a season of their lives. They bring their questions. They bring their faith. They bring their whole selves. What they become next is shaped, in part, by what they experience with us. Thank you for the faithful, demanding, holy work of raising leaders—often before they know they are ready.


    This concludes Raising Leaders: New Data Every Camp Director Should Know. To explore the full research behind this series, you’re invited to read the complete 2025 UMCRM Summer Staff Impact Study Findings Report.


  • 11 Feb 2026 8:18 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)

    Since 2017, the Solomon Cramer Fund has supported sending young people to United Methodist camps. The annual grants have helped camps to develop innovative programs and reach new people in new places, widening the circle of leadership and campership.


    Scholarship grants from the Solomon Cramer Fund encourage UMC camps to consider the breadth of our ministries by focusing on the following four priorities:

    • Experiences that minister with youth living in poverty

    • The intentional development of young people for spiritual leadership and/or leadership with Camp & Retreat Ministries

    • Camp experiences that collaborate with local churches and agencies in processes of faith formation 

    • Opportunities for increasing racial/ethnic diversity within ministry participation and leadership.

    Twenty-one programs received Solomon Cramer Fund grants in 2025, the most that have been funded in a single year. This week, the UMCRM Association is celebrating a second installment of completed programs. Every year we are inspired by the ways grant recipient camps are extending God’s love to young people who might not otherwise have an opportunity to experience camp. 



    Grow Day Camps/Experiential Leadership Institute - North GA Conference

    Camperships were funded for 10 day campers from low-income and racially diverse families in metro Atlanta, hosted by Impact Church. Grow Day Camp provides access to camp experiences for families previously untouched by NGCRM overnight camps. The mobile camp program includes faith-based learning and youth mentorship, and supports leadership development through the Experiential Leadership Institute (ELI) for high schoolers. It aims to foster community, spiritual formation, and self-confidence.


    Joaquin, a rising 5th grader, started the week apprehensively, but it was clear after the first day that he was going to have a wonderful week. Every day, Joaquin looked forward to Grow Day Camp. At Grow, Joaquin was able to participate in worship, field games, archery, crafts, and so many fun activities. More than anything, Joaquin looked forward to spending time with his counselors and the other campers in his living group. "It feels like the group actually cares about me," Joaquin shared, "I already know I really want to come back to Grow Camp next year, and I want to tell my friends to 'Come to Camp,' too!"


    Each week, Grow campers spend one day out of their camp session going to Glisson Camp and Retreat Center, a sister ministry in North Georgia. This day trip provides an opportunity for Grow campers to see some of the overnight camping opportunities available to them. Plus, this provides an opportunity for sites even in the heart of the city to spend intentional time in nature. On this day trip, campers go on creek hikes, play at the pool, and have lunch at Cane Creek Falls. This adventure to Glisson was the high point of Joaquin's week. "I love swimming at the waterfall!" Joaquin yelled, "It feels just like Disney World!"



    Mental Health At Camp - Pecometh (MD)

    This project introduced a part-time mental health support role into summer camp programming to enhance camper and staff well-being. The position provided training on inclusivity and mental wellness, allowing more campers and staff—especially those from diverse backgrounds—to thrive. The goal was to retain staff and provide spiritual and emotional safety that encourages return campers and future leaders.


    Diego, a returning staff member, was initially apprehensive about serving at camp without his cousin and was unsure about his ability to stay on and succeed. Extra mental health support enabled him to excel. He quickly stepped into leadership roles and was a trusted member of the staff. He overcame his adversity and was able to impact hundreds of our campers. 



    New Neighbors Become New Leaders - Potosi Pines (NV)

    This initiative revives a leadership training program for teens, specifically reaching out to the Pacific Islander church community in Las Vegas. Youth from this underserved group receive year-round mentorship and are trained to become camp counselors and spiritual leaders at Potosi Pines.


    Cooperative Parish Camp Initiative - Camp Quinipet (NY)

    The grant funded 5 scholarships for children of formerly incarcerated women, in partnership with the New Hour nonprofit. Through a week of overnight camp, the children experience healing, fun, and spiritual nurturing in a supportive environment. The project addresses poverty and emotional trauma related to incarceration. The collaboration involves local UMC churches and the NYAC Church and Society committee.


    On the way to camp for the first time from the New Hour Brentwood location, the campers were incredibly nervous, asking lots of questions about how camp works and how they will make friends here. The car ride home at the end of the week was a completely different conversation. The hesitation and worry were all gone. They felt comfortable at camp, they made friends, and they had gotten involved in new activities they hadn’t tried before. The girls in the program really came out of their shells, finding the confidence to perform for the whole camp. They had worked incredibly hard all week during their dance elective and it was an absolute pleasure to see smiles on their faces when they were performing. The boys’ cabin bonded together throughout the week and really grew as a group. As we watched them all say goodbye to each other, we could see the true friendship and connections they had made in just a week. During the drive home, the campers were exclaiming how they want to come back every year and would like to be counselors when they grow up. Seeing this passion for summer camp grow in these children and seeing their outlook change throughout the week was remarkable.



    Beloved Community Day Camp Program - Susquehanna Conference (PA)

    The grant supported camperships for new campers as part of a new strategic plan to help congregations connect in new ways with young people and their families. We had 4 great Beloved Community Pilots with 4 different local community settings this Fall. The goal was for the congregations to build relationships with new families in their communities through a collaborative Camp experience in the communities where the youth live. Some of the events were hosted by single churches and others were groups of churches coming together with Susquehanna Conference Camping Leaders to plan and lead the events. Close to 125 children participated, most of whom had never been to camp before. It was especially exciting to see a much higher participation among children of color in this model of camping.




    Native American Culture & Faith Camp - Camp Norwesca (NE)

    This initiative offers outdoor Christian camping to youth in rural western Nebraska, many from economically disadvantaged, Native American families. Activities promote environmental stewardship, spiritual formation, and leadership. Campers explore faith through devotions, peer relationships, and nature immersion.


    On the final evening, during campfire worship under the stars, one camper volunteered to share a reflection, expressing gratitude for learning how faith, culture, and nature connect. They shared that the week helped them feel more confident, more curious, and more connected—to God, to others, and to the world around them. This moment reflected the heart of the week: building understanding, faith, and community through shared experiences made possible by this grant.



    Helene Scholarship Fund - Camp Tekoa (NC)

    This new fund provides camperships for children whose families were severely impacted by Hurricane Helene. Two campers had the opportunity for a time away from the devastation and heartbreak they are living through. While at camp they experienced God in nature, through the written and spoken Word, through caring staff and fun, meaningful activities.


    One camper said it was like a breath of fresh air to get away from the destruction she sees everyday at home and be in a place where she felt safe and loved. She went on to say that she would be able to go home and tell her parents that with God, they would be able to arise from the destruction of Hurricane Helene.



    Campers in Leadership Training - Pocono Plateau (PA)

    This program fills a gap for up to 3 young teens (13–15) who have aged out of the day camp but are too young to stay home unsupervised. It provides a leadership training track where CILTs assist with Bible lessons and activities and are mentored by camp chaplains and staff. Camp serves a growing, underserved population in rural Pennsylvania that migrated from NYC post-COVID.


    Kaeden’s mother was grateful that he spent his days outdoors, in Bible study, unplugged, and in community with others. If it was not for our program, he would have been home alone Monday through Friday while his mother worked. Kaeden stepped up quickly and showed a passion for helping younger children play games and participate in activities, even singing and dancing! It was beautiful to witness him grow in his abilities and confidence throughout the course of the summer season.




    Summer Camp Fee Assistance - Camp Uskichitto (LA)

    30 campers were able to attend camp through this support. Already, the camp partners with churches which fund 50% of camp fees for campers in need. This new fund covered the remaining cost for families that would not otherwise be able to pay the rest.


    One mom of 7 was delighted by the inclusion of her neurodivergent children in Camp Angel Tree, for kids with an incarcerated parent. She reflected: “They accepted ALL of my kids, regardless of their background and difficulties. For the duration of my children's time at Uskichitto, they were just kids, just siblings! My over-watched and judged autistic child got to go swimming, throw axes, shoot a BB gun, use a bow and arrow! All of these things I knew he was capable of, but society doesn't always see, they see a high risk. Abel not only got to just be 12, he got to be included and not judged. He truly broke out of his shell and immersed himself in living his best life. Normally his communication is very limited; he is considered nonverbal. He spoke up during chapel and expressed his own religious views, saying, "God is good; He has a plan." 


    The UMCRM Association is blessed to steward this grant in Rev. Cramer's memory. He would be amazed to see how God multiplies these gifts to transform lives, strengthening individuals, churches, and communities. The application for 2026 Solomon Cramer Grants will open on February 20th.

  • 11 Feb 2026 6:25 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)


    We’re excited to introduce you to the Design Team and the roles they’ll be serving in:


    Co-Chairs: Hope Montgomery (Camp Magruder, OR)

    and Jeff Wilson (Camp Lake Stephens, MS)


    UMCRM Staff: Jessica Gamache (Director, PA)

    and Jen Burch (Communications & Registrar, CO)


    UMCRM Board Liaison: Nick Coenen (Pine Lake, WI)




    Worship Chair: Rev. Amanda Crice (TWK Conference, TN)

    Marketing/Communications Chair: Audrey LeSage (Camp Glisson, GA)

    Main Stage/Keynote Chair: Gillian Mager (Lazy W Ranch, CA)

    Exhibitor Chair: Erik Bengston (Lake Michigan Campground, MI)

    Hospitality Chair: Ryan Siver (Camp Fontanelle, NE)

    Workshops Chair: Stephen Ward (Camp Lookout, GA)



    We cannot wait to share more as plans continue to take shape! Stay tuned for updates on our theme, speakers, workshops and more. Be sure to save the dates: January 24-28, 2027!


  • 04 Feb 2026 10:58 PM | Jen Burch (Administrator)




    Many summer staff don’t arrive at camp calling themselves leaders. They come to camp because a friend invited them; because they loved camp once; because they wanted to help kids have a good week; because they weren’t sure what was next, but camp felt like a place to figure that out. And then, sometimes without realizing it, they begin to lead.


    The 2025 UMCRM Summer Staff Impact Study names this reality clearly and consistently: Camp is one of the most effective leadership formation environments young adults experience.


    Leadership Growth Was Nearly Universal


    When staff were asked to reflect on their growth at the end of the summer, one outcome stood above all others. 98% of staff agreed they grew in their leadership abilities.


    It wasn’t just a feeling. It showed up in multiple ways across the data:

    • Leadership confidence was the strongest area of growth measured from pre-summer to post-summer
    • Growth in leadership appeared regardless of role, experience level, or camp size
    • Even staff who struggled in other areas still reported leadership growth

    This wasn’t accidental. It was embedded in the experience itself. Unlike classrooms or workshops, camp doesn’t teach leadership by talking about it.

    It teaches leadership by asking young adults to:

    • Care for others when they’re tired
    • Make decisions in real time
    • Navigate conflict with compassion
    • Hold responsibility that actually matters
    • Learn from mistakes (quickly and publicly)

    The study’s findings reflect that experiential model. At the end of the summer:

    • 94% of staff agreed they felt more confident in themselves
    • 98% agreed they had a significant positive impact on specific young people
    • 91% agreed camp gave them greater clarity about their life direction and career

    Leadership wasn’t abstract. It was lived.


    Confidence Grows When Support  Is Present


    One of the most powerful insights emerges when leadership growth is viewed alongside support and agency. Staff who experienced high support and agency reported the strongest leadership outcomes:

    • 99% of high-support staff agreed they felt more confident in themselves

    • 98% said the camp experience had a significant positive impact on their life

    • 95% reported greater clarity around vocation and calling

    Leadership didn’t grow in isolation. It grew in community with others. It grew when staff felt trusted, supported, and connected to the mission.


    However, it’s important to name something honestly. Leadership growth often occurred alongside exhaustion.

    • 40% of staff finished the summer feeling exhausted or burned out

    This doesn’t negate leadership formation, but it does shape how it’s remembered. Staff who experienced burnout showed weaker overall outcomes, even when leadership growth was present. The data suggests a simple truth: Leadership formation is strongest when challenge is paired with care.


    What Camp Teaches That Other Spaces Don’t


    Many staff named camp as the first place they:

    • Were trusted with real responsibility

    • Felt accountable to a community

    • Saw their actions visibly affect others

    • Practiced leadership rooted in values rather than performance

    This is why leadership growth appeared so consistently across the data. Camp doesn’t just train leaders, it treats young adults like leaders. And they rise to that trust.


    Why This Story Matters Beyond Camp


    These leadership outcomes aren’t just internal wins. They are stories camp leaders can and should share with:

    • Boards and conference leaders

    • Donors and supporters

    • Parents and churches

    • Young adults discerning what comes next

    Camp isn’t just staffing a summer. It’s shaping leaders who carry these skills into congregations, workplaces, and communities long after the season ends.


    Try This This Month


    Reach out to one former staff member, not to recruit them, but to listen. Ask them how camp shaped their leadership, confidence, or sense of calling. Then write down their words.


    Those stories, paired with the data, are some of the most compelling evidence we have of why camp matters and why investing in staff formation changes lives.


    Up Next in the Series


    In the final post of this series, we’ll look closely at who today’s summer staff are (their faith backgrounds, mental health realities, and expectations) and what the data invites us to do differently as we care for emerging leaders.


    Until then, thank you for the ways you continue to call young adults into leadership—often before they know they’re ready. Want to explore the full research behind these findings? You’re invited to dig into the complete 2025 UMCRM Summer Staff Impact Study Findings Report.



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