Sends us your email and ideas

We have more than 300 emails for camp alumni, but over the last couple of years some of you have moved or changed your email accounts.

Please send your new email and emails of other alumni to campstephensalumni@gmail.com so that we can update our list of camp alumni.

If you have an idea for a blog entry or wish to contribute other material like letters, recipes, diary entries, trip maps. . .send them my way.

If any links are broken, please tell me.

And don't be bashful. It's OK to comment. Really. It's OK.


Monday, December 16, 2019

NEWS RELEASE: Nature Conservancy of Canada calls on Kenora politicians to support conservation efforts for Town Island




● Local residents, cottagers and area youth camps establish Friends of Town Island to
launch grassroots public awareness campaign

● More than 4,000 concerned community members have already signed the online petition

KENORA, December 16, 2019 - The Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) is joining with local residents and concerned stakeholders to oppose the City of Kenora’s plan to develop Town Island on Ontario’s Lake of the Woods.

In its recent letter to the City, NCC highlights its concerns for the future of Town Island and the City’s Request for Proposals for its development. NCC’s letter supports conservation of the land, noting that the island “is unique in the sense that it is a large, mostly undeveloped island in an area of Lake of the Woods that is heavily developed” and that the island may “provide habitat for bald eagles, a variety of song birds and plant communities that are rare in this part of Ontario.” 

In its letter, NCC asks that the City consider conservation and indicates that it is willing to work with stakeholders to assist in the process.

With growing support from the public and organizations like the Nature Conservancy of Canada, local residents, cottagers and area youth camps have come together to form the Friends of Town Island to lead a grassroots campaign to raise awareness of Kenora politicians’ plans to develop Town Island and impact the environment. 

The association’s website encourages visitors to get informed, sign the online petition and contact Kenora politicians. The campaign has generated more than 4,000 petition signatures and earned widespread interest from media and stakeholders.

“By developing Town Island, Kenora politicians are putting the interests of big business ahead of kids and the environment,” said Aaron London, spokesperson for the Friends of Town Island and former Chair of the BB Camp Board of Directors. “We are working hard to bring Kenora politicians to the negotiating table in order to find a commercially viable conservation solution for the City, the Friends of Town Island and the public who will all benefit from placing the land in Trust.”

“Protecting Lake of the Woods for future generations is everyone’s responsibility,” said Kenora resident David Nelson. “By opening up Town Island to development, Kenora City Council is jeopardizing the area.

"This lake has been such an important part of my family’s life for close to 100 years and it’s devastating that politicians are being so short-sighted by selling off an historic public asset that has served the community and area youth camps for development. The fact is that the City has had a conservation objective on Town Island for ten years and public support for that remains strong. We can help make that happen.”

“Area youth camps on Lake of the Woods including BB Camp and YMCA-YWCA Camp Stephens play such an important role in connecting kids with their communities, the wilderness and the core values of caring, equality, inclusiveness, respect and responsibility,” said Kent Paterson, President and Chief Executive Officer, YMCA-YWCA of Winnipeg. 

“We have been part of the Lake of the Woods community for more than 125 years and are proud of our history of service. Protecting the area from unchecked development is a critical concern for our community and we call on Kenora politicians to stop their plans for developing Town Island.”

Other testimonials from concerned members of the public can be viewed here.

About Friends of Town Island

The Friends of Town Island is a grassroots group of Kenora residents, cottagers, youth camps and concerned stakeholders working together to conserve Town Island on Ontario’s Lake of the Woods and keep it free from development for the benefit of the public. By bringing together diverse communities of nature lovers, environmentalists, wilderness enthusiasts and youth advocates, the group is working to raise awareness of the risks related to the City of Kenora’s recent Request for Proposals for development of the island and has launched a public awareness campaign featuring a website, online petition and a Facebook Group. For more information visit: www.townisland.ca.

Saturday, December 14, 2019

Town Island - what you can do





You may have heard that the City of Kenora has sent out a request for proposals for the development of Town Island (home of the campsites known as Big Mosquito, Ants, etc, not to mention the home of our friends at B'nai Brith.), a move that no doubt puts private business interests ahead of the environment and our campers.

Read https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/group-fights-sale-town-island-kenora-lake-of-the-woods-1.5391458 for more about it.

In response, we have teamed up with B’nai Brith Camp, residents, cottagers and others to form the Friends of Town Island committee. Our request to the city is simple – reconsider this process and meet with the committee before Town Island is overtaken by big development.

As a former Camp Stephens camper, you know first-hand the profound impact our camp program has on children and youth. The life lessons are invaluable, the friendships are everlasting an'd the connection to nature are imperative for the sustainability of our planet.

Town Island represents different things to different people, but to our alumni, particularly those with tripping experience, the Island represents tradition. It’s a destination rooted so deeply in our tripping history that to be without it would be a huge loss. Future campers will never get to share stories around the same campsite that previous generations of campers did. They will never get to explore the Island in the ways that so many of us, or our children, have explored it. The tales of lore that surround the Island will slowly be erased from our history because the Island itself will never be the same.

We need your voice!

We are asking all Camp
alumni to submit a testimonial for the Friends of Town Island website, highlighting the importance of camp programs for youth, the risks of unchecked development on Lake of the Woods and the importance of environmental responsibility. Testimonials can be sent to [friendsoftownisland@gmail.com](mailto:friendsoftownisland@gmail.com)

See https://www.townisland.ca/ for what you can do.

Thank you,

Kent Paterson, President & CEO, YMCA-YWCA of Winnipeg