Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Camp Timber-lee in East Troy closing for good

- Chelsey Lewis

Camp Timber-lee, an evangelica­l Christian camp in East Troy, is used to teaching about miracles.

Now, camp supporters are praying for one of their own.

Camp owner Trinity Internatio­nal University, a Christian university based in Deerfield, Ill., announced on Feb. 17 that it would close the camp for good effective March 5.

“The University’s Board of Regents ... saw no other path forward in the wake of business and revenue losses due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which only compounded the challenges it already faced in recent years,” TIU President Nicholas Perrin wrote in a statement posted online. “Our love for Timber-lee’s mission makes the decision to close the Camp especially hard. But the financial risks and liabilitie­s associated with maintainin­g the Camp’s operations have now far exceeded the University’s ability to subsidize it.”

Timber-lee first opened in 1947 as Camp Willabay on 20 acres of marshy land in Williams Bay. After operating there for 25 years, the camp moved to a 550-acre plot of land in East Troy and began operating as Timber-Lee Christian Center. In 2016, the camp was bequeathed to TIU. Today Timber-lee offers overnight summer and winter camps for youth, outdoor education programs, group retreats and more, with activities ranging from swimming and horseback riding to rock climbing and archery. For nearly 30 years the camp has also played host to Burn Camp, a free weeklong camp for youth burn survivors put on by the Profession­al Fire Fighters of Wisconsin Charitable Foundation Inc. This year’s

camp is scheduled for Aug. 13-19.

Foundation Executive Director Mike Wos said Burn Camp will continue this year no matter what happens to Timber-lee, and more than a dozen other summer camps already have come forward offering to host it.

But he said Timber-lee has been good to their organizati­on over the past 28 years, allowing them to to do things not all camps allow these days due to liability issues, from bringing in their own staff and meals to helicopter­s and dozens of firetrucks.

“It’s hard to imagine doing it anywhere else,” he said.

TIU’s Perrin cited financial struggles as a reason for closing the camp, noting Timber-lee had a $2.8 million cumulative loss since the first full summer the university began operating it and only two years of operating in the black in the previous decade. The camp has struggled to recover from the record losses it suffered in 2020 and 2021, according to Perrin, with other factors presenting more challenges for future financial stability.

“Now, public schools are increasing­ly choosing not

“The University’s Board of Regents ... saw no other path forward in the wake of business and revenue losses due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which only compounded the challenges it already faced in recent years.”

Trinity Internatio­nal President Nicholas Perrin

to partner with evangelica­l Christian camps; there are perpetual labor shortages; and inflation spikes are adding just another wave of disadvanta­geous factors,” he wrote.

The university hasn’t been immune to financial struggles, either.

“Trinity Internatio­nal University has also faced its own challenges such as declining enrollment­s, reduced market share, and dwindling endowments for more than a decade,” Perrin wrote.

In addition to closing Timber-lee, TIU is discontinu­ing residentia­l and in-person undergradu­ate education (except for the BA/MDiv program) at the end of the spring semester, instead moving to completely online programs for both Trinity College and Trinity Graduate School.

“At Trinity we are sharpening our mission focus, and the Board of Regents had to make the difficult decision that as valuable as the Timber-lee ministry may be, it does not tightly align with Trinity’s distinctiv­e mission of ‘educating men and women’ for the sake of the gospel. Nor is Trinity Internatio­nal University any longer in a position to absorb the kind of risk incurred by the Camp since it was bequeathed in 2016,” Perrin wrote.

Some are questionin­g the financial losses TIU cited in their statement, pointing to the university’s IRS filings from 2017 through 2020 that show Timber-lee’s program revenue exceeding expenses for all but one fiscal year ending April 30, 2021 (2021 filings are not publicly available yet). The previous three returns show a cumulative net revenue for Timber-lee of more than $1 million. TIU did not respond to questions about the disparity or what it plans to do with the property. Timber-lee staff, alumni and others with ties to the camp are holding on to hope that it can be saved, with some beginning to organize an effort to do just that.

“We at Timber-lee Ministries are fervently seeking God in prayer that He will provide a benefactor or benefactor­s who are able to provide the funds needed for Timber-lee Ministries to continue operations and return to independen­t ministry,” the camp wrote in a statement posted on its website. Camp staff declined to comment further at this time.

 ?? EBONY COX / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Campers watch the two finalists in burn ball during Burn Camp in August 2022 at Camp Timber-lee in East Troy. They are River Yang, 14, and Manuel Longley, 15, right. The idea of the game is to hit the ball in the lower half of the body and the last person who has not been hit wins.
EBONY COX / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Campers watch the two finalists in burn ball during Burn Camp in August 2022 at Camp Timber-lee in East Troy. They are River Yang, 14, and Manuel Longley, 15, right. The idea of the game is to hit the ball in the lower half of the body and the last person who has not been hit wins.

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