Camp E-Hun-Tee gives
wayward boys a second chance
September 5,
2006
By BETHONIE BUTLER
Journal Staff Writer
EXETER - On a mercilessly hot summer
day, clusters of butterflies linger at various points on the rocky
trail leading to Camp E-Hun-Tee -- an appropriate representation of
what lies ahead.
This is where nature and circumstance
collide, where young men aim to choose metamorphosis over the rocky
trails that have brought them here.
A few hours within the camp's wooded
trails, and it is clear that there are many representations at camp.
"Everything we do here, it's always
got a meaning to it," said Nicholas, an outgoing 17-year-old, who
landed at camp in January, after several run-ins with the law and
stays at the state Training School for Youth.
"Every little thing in here has
something to do with out there," agreed Camp Director Richard
Boshwitz.
There are tents and colored camp
T-shirts. There are mealtimes and letters home. But Camp E-Hun-Tee
isn't your average overnight camp.
A center for growth
E-Hun-Tee is one of more than 18
youth wilderness therapy camps across the nation and one of 3 in New
England, under Eckerd Youth Alternatives, which was founded in 1968
by Jack and Ruth Eckerd of Eckerd Drug Stores.
The 275-acre Camp E-Hun-Tee, which
means "his growth" in the Moskokee Native American language,
straddles the Exeter-West Greenwich line in the woodsy Arcadia
Management Area.
Boshwitz said the outdoors is part of
the "Eckerd model" -- "using this kind of environment to help treat
kids . . . help them work through difficult psychological or
emotional issues."
Like Nicholas, many of the young men
at E-Hun-Tee have found themselves in Family Court or Training
School cells.
"Most of [the campers] have some sort
of criminal charges against them," Boshwitz noted. Their offenses
range from truancy to robbery to drug dealing.
Children at E-Hun-Tee are typically
between the ages of 12 and 17. They can be referred by the state
Department of Children, Youth and Families or ordered to attend by a
Family Court judge.
Boshwitz also makes weekly trips to
the Training School and does interviews with children and their
families to determine if the camp is a good option for them.
E-Hun-Tee is not equipped to deal
with sexual predator issues or serious substance abuse, though
Eckerd Youth Alternatives does run programs in other states that
address those issues. Boshwitz also weighs whether the level of
violence is more than camp officials will be equipped to deal with.
Increasing gang involvement and
aggression among youth are also issues that Eckerd officials have
had to adjust to, say Boshwitz and Michael Strauch, regional
director for Eckerd Youth Alternatives. In addition to Rhode
Island's E-Hun-Tee, Strauch oversees camps in Vermont and New
Hampshire.
The fact that children are more
likely to have been adjudicated before entering the program, may
also be because the perception of the Eckerd program has changed
over the years.
Programs like E-Hun-Tee were
originally viewed as an alternative to training school for children
who had just started to have behavioral problems, Strauch said.
Today, E-Hun-Tee is viewed more as a place for children that have
made progress at training school or in other programs.
"The child that comes to us now, the
needs that they present are greater than maybe the kids that came
back when E-Hun-Tee started 15 years ago."
"I just think a lot of people, not
just kids, don't take the time to think about the impact of their
actions and quite often don't realize that there are better ways to
solve problems rather than moving right to a physical confrontation
with somebody," Strauch said.
Problem solving
Strauch said the benefit of the
"Eckerd model" is that children learn to think of other ways.
"That's really what we try to teach
at camp -- learning how to talk things out," Strauch said.
Those alternatives are then applied
to a child's previous environment.
"We really try to process what's
going on with the child and talk about what could be different,"
Strauch said. "If this weren't at camp, if you were in the
community, how would this affect your family?"
In addition to classes and
activities, campers meet with social workers on a weekly basis to go
over their goals, both long-term and short-term. When campers first
arrive at E-Hun-Tee, camp officials use information from family
members and Family Court files for a specialized treatment plan.
Leaving camp is contingent upon
significant progress toward those goals, which for many campers
include anger management and respecting authority. Campers receive
aftercare for one year, with a social worker assisting the child in
getting settled back into school and the community.
Campers also make daily goals for
themselves, which help them put their issues and needs into
perspective.
Before coming to camp, Nicholas said,
"I didn't want to listen to anybody. I was mad disrespectful."
He is "in transition," which means
that he has about two months left at camp and can go home once a
week. Campers who are not in transition go home just once a month.
Typical distractions are not a part of the camp environment. Campers
are not allowed to bring CD players or iPods. They communicate with
their families through letters.
Boshwitz said the only time campers
are allowed to use the phone is if there is "a therapeutic reason"
for them to be on the phone, such as a need to communicate with a
parent about an issue in the home.
There is no such thing as a typical
day at camp. Each day starts at 7 a.m. But anything from class to
daily chores can be interrupted, because, as Boshwitz puts it, at
camp "we deal with problems when they come up."
Camp E-Hun-Tee has about 30 children
at any given time and they are divided into four groups, which bear
the names of Native American tribes such as the Lakotas. E-Hun-Tee's
program is for boys only, but Eckerd runs programs for girls in
several other states.
Each group has two camp counselors --
one female and one male -- who live alongside the groups in their
own tents and, like Boshwitz, are known as chiefs.
A family environment
Eckerd recruits nationwide for camp
counselors, who are generally young, 20-somethings, interested in
helping kids, Strauch said.
"[Counselors] come from a wide
variety of backgrounds," Strauch said. "The thing that would sort of
bind them together . . . is a desire to work with kids and help kids
straighten out their lives."
Both Strauch, who has worked for
Eckerd for 20 years, and Boshwitz, who has been with the company
since 1990, started as camp counselors.
Everything a camper does is done with
their group. If a camper uses profanity or doesn't want to do the
task at hand, his group stops whatever they are doing and addresses
the problem. This is known as "the huddle."
"It's a discussion of why we're in
there and what you can do to prevent it," said 14-year-old Eugene,
who has a knack for drawing, and likes to write rap songs and sing
in his spare time.
Campers stay in their groups for
their entire time at the camp, which is generally for 11 months.
Because children enter camp at different times, group rosters vary.
Over the course of their stay, campers find that they go to each
other for support and veteran campers often assume leadership roles
in their groups.
"[The group] becomes your family,"
said Eugene, who has been at E-Hun-Tee since April.
For Nicholas, having to eat every
meal, discuss every problem and do every activity within a group has
helped him to do things he wasn't able to do at home.
"I learned how to communicate my
feelings without being disruptive or negative," Nicholas said.
"Sometimes your parents will give up
on you, like, ~'I don't want him to come home,' " Eugene said. "Camp
will help you find ways to get better at home and at camp, with
yourself."
Nicholas and Eugene agree that living
in a group has helped them, but that is the hardest thing about
camp, Boshwitz said.
"We purposely put kids in a stressful
environment," said Boshwitz. "We purposely put them in the kind of
environment when problems are going to come out."
Boshwitz emphasized that E-Hun-Tee is
not a boot camp. The physical challenges of hiking and building,
pale in comparison to the emotional challenges that kids experience
at camp, Boshwitz said.
"It's such an overwhelming experience
for a young person to have to come to camp," Boshwitz said. "We do
the best we can in helping that young person just get accustomed."
The adjustment can be even more
difficult for children coming from the Training School, Boshwitz
said.
"They unhook the handcuffs and
they're here," Boshwitz said. "They don't even get the luxury of
coming from home, so that's harder."
But the group system is an integral
part of Eckerd programs.
"Kids have to learn how to be
accountable to each other instead of learning how to work the
system," Boshwitz said.
Working the system is something that
many campers know about. At the Training School, there isn't time to
address every little problem.
But as Eugene and Nicholas have
learned, problems can linger and worsen.
It's only the second day at camp for
Kevin, 13. His wide-eyes and dimpled cheeks give him a look of
innocence and it's surprising to hear him speak of the Training
School culture -- a lot of spare time, inside alliances -- with
familiarity.
He talks excitedly about why he
prefers camp and the innocence is back.
"You get to go swimming, build tents,
go fishing -- eat better meals here," he says. "And you get a
pull-up bar in your room."
The wooden pull-up bars that hang
near some of the campers' beds add a tiny flare to the outside
wooden shelters, which campers refer to as tents.
The terminology may be misleading.
Boshwitz is quick to point out that building a tent isn't easy.
Under the supervision of their chiefs, campers spend months building
their living spaces. Camp runs year-round and the shelters are made
to adjust to temperature changes. Heaters are put into every
structure to fend off winter's harsh cold.
Relishing a second chance
E-Hun-Tee is an accredited school and
classes include both traditional and experiential teaching methods.
"They do more than seven hours of
school," Boshwitz said. "They just don't do it [all] in a
classroom."
A daily siesta gives campers time to
reflect on the day, write letters or poetry or read books.
Each night, groups sit on makeshift
benches around a fire and go over the events of the day.
"The fire signifies problems going up
in smoke," Boshwitz said -- something camp officials hope will also
transfer to home life. "Hopefully when they go home -- they're not
talking over a fire with their families -- but they're communicating
with their families."
Thinking about the prospect of
returning home soon, Nicholas said, "I feel happy. When I first got
here, I was doing alright. I almost got sent back to the Training
School, but I switched up. I started doing really good."
Nicholas looks at camp as a last
chance. "If I mess up it's a wrap," he said. With his 18th birthday
approaching, the Training School won't be an option anymore. Getting
into trouble with the law could mean a stint at the Adult
Correctional Institutions.
"And my judge don't like me,"
Nicholas says. "So that's probably exactly where I'd be going."
But he doesn't seem to be worried
about that. Instead, he focuses on his goals of getting a car,
graduating from high school, going to college and getting a job in
landscaping or construction.
What has E-Hun-Tee changed the most?
"My attitude toward life, I guess,"
Nicholas says. "I barely had a chance to come here. Some people"--
he grins at Boshwitz --"believed in me."