Chattanooga Times Free Press

Summer camps offer scaled-back programs

Smaller groups, social distancing among protocols

- BY EMILY CRISMAN STAFF WRITER

Many Chattanoog­a area day camps are now in operation, with the majority that chose to open amid the COVID19 pandemic starting their programs in late June or early July.

Rather than shut down for the season, those camps that opened opted to scale back their operations, such as decreasing the number of available slots and eliminatin­g activities and canceling programs that make social distancing difficult, in order to prevent spread of the virus.

Kyrstin Hill, Creative Discovery Museum marketing and communicat­ions manager, said the museum typically holds at least 10 camps per summer, but has reduced its offerings to six camps this year.

Some camps were canceled due to their timing at the beginning of the summer while the museum was still closed. Programs for which creating physical distance among participan­ts would be more difficult — such as cooking camps, and two sessions of its inclusive camp for school-aged children with disabiliti­es and their mainstream peers — also were eliminated.

Spots are still available in two of the five remaining camps scheduled for this summer, which would be unusual for a typical summer, Hill said. The inclusive camps have always sold out in previous years, and the other programs have usually filled up as well, she said.

The capacity of the camps offered was reduced by half to bring the number of campers in each down to 10, she said.

“We’re very happy with the turnout, and we’re happy that families are able to come send their kids to camp with us,” Hill said.

Most camps focused on close-contact sports such as soccer and basketball have been canceled by local program directors, and programs that are happening may look a bit different.

For example, kids are often kept in smaller groups that stay together throughout the day, with less time spent intermingl­ing in common areas. Pickup and dropoff protocols have been changed, now occurring outside camp facilities in order to reduce exposure to the virus from parents, with times staggered to encourage social distancing.

Since Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee’s Economic Recovery Group waited to announce its summer day camp guidelines until May 28, after many programs were originally scheduled to begin, camps that decided to open this summer were forced to push back their start dates or reschedule their earliest sessions later in the summer.

Among them is McCallie School’s summer program, which canceled or reschedule­d camps originally scheduled for dates before its delayed start date of June 22.

In addition to following guidelines set forth by local, state and national health authoritie­s and camping organizati­ons to prevent spread of the virus, McCallie also asks campers to selfquaran­tine for seven days before attending camp, recording their temperatur­es each of those days on a waiver form that all campers must submit. Anyone with a fever or COVID-19 contact history is told to stay home.

“We’ve been very deliberate about it,” said Bill Steverson, communicat­ions officer for McCallie School, on the school’s decision to hold camps this summer. “It’s gone extremely smoothly.”

For other camps, including the Cumberland Youth Foundation’s Dayplayers Summer Camp, the uncertaint­y of whether they would be allowed to open this summer led leadership to move ahead with canceling the 2020 season regardless of what health authoritie­s decided.

Camp Director Bess Williams said she decided to cancel Dayplayers shortly after the Hamilton County Health Department’s announceme­nt in early May that it would not allow day camps to operate until further notice. Other camp leaders were left in limbo as to whether programs would be allowed to operate until late May.

“We would have already had to order supplies and have a full staff trained and ready for our usual Tuesdayaft­er-Memorial Day camp start date,” Williams said. “There simply wasn’t a way to know that we would have been able to open safely and what our capacity would have been able to be. Once we got word that we could open, we had already decided to cancel and had refunded camp tuition to families so they could make other arrangemen­ts with as much time to spare as possible.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Ten-year-old Jenna Weaver weaves a bowl during the Arts Experience­s Every Day Summer Camp on Tuesday at the Creative Discovery Museum in Chattanoog­a.
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Ten-year-old Jenna Weaver weaves a bowl during the Arts Experience­s Every Day Summer Camp on Tuesday at the Creative Discovery Museum in Chattanoog­a.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER ?? Six-year-old Oakley Hendrickso­n, seated left, and 7-year-old Cole Fowler, standing right, make figures out of pipe cleaners during the Arts Experience­s Every Day Summer Camp at the Creative Discovery Museum on Tuesday,
STAFF PHOTO BY C.B. SCHMELTER Six-year-old Oakley Hendrickso­n, seated left, and 7-year-old Cole Fowler, standing right, make figures out of pipe cleaners during the Arts Experience­s Every Day Summer Camp at the Creative Discovery Museum on Tuesday,

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