Mark Dibble, left, CEO of YMCA Camp Ockanickon, Inc. in Medford, was recently presented with a $3,500 donation to camp by Jim Robinson, president of the Medford Sunrise Rotary. Rotarians raised the money for the nonprofit camp at a coin toss event this past spring. Mark was recently the featured speaker at the Rotary’s weekly breakfast meeting.

Mark Dibble, left, CEO of YMCA Camp Ockanickon, Inc. in Medford, was recently presented with a $3,500 donation to camp by Jim Robinson, president of the Medford Sunrise Rotary. Rotarians raised the money for the nonprofit camp at a coin toss event this past spring. Mark was recently the featured speaker at the Rotary’s weekly breakfast meeting.

Our CEO, Mark Dibble, was recently the featured speaker at the Sept. 7 breakfast meeting of the Medford Sunrise Rotary. Mark talked about how our 110-year-old organization has evolved over the years into so much more than a summer camp.

In addition to the summer camp programs – Ockanickon, the boys overnight camp, Matollionequay, the girls overnight camp and Lake Stockwell, the co-ed day camp – Mark explained how camp also runs School’s Out, a before- and after-school care program provided on-site at several local school, and the Outdoor Center, which provides environmental education, school trips, retreats, teambuilding, hiking, swimming, boating, archery and a host of other year-round activities.

Ockanickon, he explained, also holds family-focused programs and community events throughout the year, including various family camp weekends, Breakfast with Santa, Coach Bingo and memberships for year-round hiking, biking, swimming and boating. And he boasted that our 800-acre property features an observatory for night-sky gazing and a state-of-the-art ropes course and climbing wall, among other amenities.

Mark talked about the specialty camps run annually by YMCA Camp Ockanickon, Inc., including Camp Bright Feathers (for children infected or affected by HIV/AIDS), Camp Little Rock (for children who are blind or visually impaired), Camp Kesem (for children whose parents have or have had cancer) and Camp Firefly (a bereavement camp for children who have lost a loved one).

He also talked about the recently developed “Strategic Roadmap,” which will help camp better serve the community at large, addressing issues such as youth development, healthy living and social responsibility. “The aim is to promote community by strengthening families and improving the health and well-being of children and teens,” he said.

 

Mark said that some of the issues that Ockanickon is committed to addressing through its strategic plan are summer learning loss, the childhood obesity epidemic, drug awareness and prevention, and serving diverse populations. “Besides providing a safe place for kids, we’re trying to serve the community in any way we can,” he told the Rotarians.

Our chief executive officer, who started with the camp in the spring of 2015, said that Ockanickon recently implemented the YMCA organization’s HEPA (Healthy Eating and Physical Activity) standards, by cutting out sugary drinks and fried foods, providing healthier snack options, limiting screen time and promoting physical activities at both the summer camps and the School’s Out programs run by camp. “It’s all about moderation,” he said.

He talked about how Ockanickon is also planning to expand programs aimed at the teenage population, offering relevant activities and events in an effort to give young people worthwhile things to do. “Families just have trouble being families these days, so we’re expanding our programs to help teens.”

“These are exciting times at camp,” he added. “We’re on the tipping point of doing a lot of good things for the community.”

The camp, he said, is also committed to serving needy communities such as nearby Camden, Trenton and Atlantic City by partnering with Urban Promise and other organizations committed to helping disenfranchised youth. Some school trips are subsidized in order to accommodate students who otherwise wouldn’t be able to experience the beautiful camp property in the pines. “This is the first year that we turned nobody away from camp,” Mark explained.

Last year, he said, the camp provided over $500,000 in scholarships and financial assistance, benefitting more than 700 children and teens.

“For some kids, it’s the first time they ever got to swim in a lake,” Mark said. “Some of the kids have never even been out of the city before. It’s a culture shock, but in a good way. When you have diversity, everybody wins.”

“We’re also partnering with organizations dealing with mental health issues and suicide prevention,” he added.

During the Rotary meeting, Mark was presented with a $3,500 check from Rotary to support the various camp programs at Ockanickon. Rotarians raised the funds by holding a coin toss in the spring, and through a matching grant.

“Thank you for supporting what we do,” he said. “We’re doing our best to get out there and serve the community.”