Dog days of summer

After a morning at the desk and computer, I spent the afternoon walking around campus. The heat wave has let up for a few days, and it felt good to be out and about and see what staff members have been up to. When I’m on foot I always find out about projects that don’t make it into reports.

The Rec Center fixed up space in the activity room and now has an exercise station with 3 different computer activity systems – Connect, Wi Fi and Play Station. Like most young people, our students get immersed in gaming. We want to channel that interest in activities that help students both educationally and physically instead of allowing them to become couch potatoes. Watching some of the home computer activities last year, I know these games will be well used and prompt some healthy movement, jumping and dancing and building hand-eye coordination, all while also having some fun.

At the school, the Residential Coordinators were lined up in front of two long tables filled with pages and pages of paperwork. They were putting together packets to be handed out to houseparents and teachers for next week’s orientation. These include student handbooks, forms, guidelines, schedules and lists everyone will need.  We try to do as much as we can via computer, but there are some things that you just need in a file at your fingertips.

Tipi Press was producing stacks of the brochures that we will send out over the year: Planned Giving’s charitable gift annuity program, powwow materials, book marks and newsletters.

In the dog days of summer, before school actually starts, the incoming mail to Donor Services is lighter than other times of the year. Right now, we are actually able to respond to all the letters that come in the same day. But the staff is busy updating people’s files, weeding out duplicate addresses and cleaning out the nooks and crannies around the office. They found some Chuck E Cheese gift certificates tucked away in the recesses of the safe, so we’ll have to figure out which home gets dibs on those (although the closest such restaurant is 135 miles away in Sioux Falls, South Dakota and will have to wait for a home trip).

St. Joseph’s Indian School’s “Shop for a Cause” event

It was 18 months ago when I went for the recommended turn-50-get-a-colonoscopy-check-up, that the Doctor discovered the Sarcoma. Now that I’m back in good health, it was time to go ahead with that procedure, so I spend yesterday drinking all the fluids and wearing a path to the bathroom.

Today the tests went quickly and well, and they found no problems, praise God.

Since I’ve had cancer, any trip to the doctor brings with it a bit of anxiety; worried about what they might find next. It’s reassuring to get a clean bill of health. I still get notes that many people are praying for me and my prognosis continues to look good.

You can help St. Joseph's Indian School by shopping!
You can help the Native American children in need by shopping!

Clothes shopping for me isn’t all that complicated, since I mostly wear black slacks and a clergy shirt. But for those of you who shop at Macy’s, they have partnered with St. Joseph in a “Shop for a Cause” campaign. If a donor purchases a $5 Macy’s coupon, available on our website, they receive 25% off at Macy’s stores and macys.com on Saturday, August 27th!

The great news is that St. Joseph’s gets to keep 100% of the proceeds!

You can learn more about it on St. Joseph’s Indian School’s website!

Pursuing God’s dreams for our Lakota youth

We have five brand new staff members who just started working here last week, but have several others who have been hired since last fall in various roles ranging from custodians to the print shop to creative technicians.

One thing we’re very good about at St. Joseph’s Indian School is eating! We hosted lunch at our house today so that all of these newer staff could come together and get to know one another better. Some parts of campus get lots of traffic, while others are off the beaten path and don’t get to interact with other staff or students as much.

But as we prepare students to develop their talents and pursue God’s dreams for them, each staff member here has an important role to play.

 

Training at St. Joseph’s Indian School

Our new staff at St. Joseph’s Indian School began orientation today. They are learning everything from child services philosophy and Lakota (Sioux) culture, to which keys they need and how to file paperwork; I stopped in to say hello and wish them well. It will take most of the week to get the basic orientation, but there’s so much on the job training. It’s important to have good supervisors who can walk alongside new staff and help them make the adjustment, and bring their own gifts and strengths to the table.

I had some training as well. We’ve been doing more videoconferencing lately, and I needed help to learn how to Skype and talk with a staff member in Nebraska. We’re also going paperless in our Personnel Action Forms, so requests for vacation and sick days will all be handled over the computer. I needed a few pointers on how to do that.

As I walked around campus, several projects are getting wrapped up. Fresh coats of paint have improved the looks of a few buildings, and all the parking spaces on campus are clearly marked with a new coat of bright yellow paint.  New flooring between the chapel and school should better weather the mud tracked in by hundreds of feet each day. The Stevens and Matthias home renovations are well under way, and I stopped to check on progress there.

Shay, one of our High School graduates worked this summer in Planned Giving. I hope the business office experience gives her more insight into the classes she will take when she begins college in a few weeks. Today was her last day, which meant treats in the break room to see her off and wish her all the best.

Summers also bring in kind donations as members of our tiyospayeextended family pass through the area. I met one couple from Florida who had clothing and toiletries to drop off before their visit to the Akta Lakota Museum & Cultural Center. Another group from a school in Nebraska has a huge load of children’s books. What we don’t use here we can share with the Indian Reservation communities and make sure they get into the hands of children who are hungry to read and learn.