Fr. Steve is back at St. Joseph’s Indian School

I arrived back in Chamberlain, South Dakota Friday evening. The first thing I noticed is how high the Missouri River is from the flooding – higher than anyone here has ever seen it. The road leading to the campground south of St. Joseph’s Indian School is now being used as a boat ramp, since the campground itself is completely submerged. One of our pumping stations near the campus is under water, but we are high enough up to have escaped any further damage so far.

Today, I went downtown to the parish to welcome Fr. Guy, who is the new pastor at St. James. We lived in community together years ago when I was in college and he was finishing his theological studies. I tried to treat him to brunch after mass, but when I went to pay the bill we learned that one of his parishioners already picked up the tab for both of us!  Apparently they wanted to welcome him as well. While taking care of parish duties, Fr. Guy will also be part of our local religious community, so we’ll regularly see him on St. Joseph’s campus for prayers, meals and other events.

I stopped by the Akta Lakota Museum & Cultural Center, where travelers are steadily visiting our campus. I met a retired couple on a large circular tour of the national parks, a young navy family moving from Illinois to Washington State and a Wisconsin youth group headed to the Lower Brule Indian reservation to begin a week’s service project.  I enjoy hearing of people’s connection with St. Josephs’ Indian School and what brought them out our way. Besides giving information about the campus, I sometimes also serve as a travel guide, with recommendations of what to see and do further down the road.

An intimidating part of returning from an extended time away is going through all the mail and messages waiting in the office. The past couple of days I made a solid start, yet it’s easy to get discouraged at what remains to be done. And the more I do, the more connective threads I see of things that can be done.  I’m reminded of the slogan that slow and steady wins the race, but I have many laps to go.

Today’s guest blogger: Neoma

Today's guest blogger: Neoma
Today's guest blogger: Neoma

Hello there! My name is Neoma and I am the Relationship Marketing Director at St. Joseph’s Indian School. I have a very fulfilling and exciting job, with no day being like the one before. In my role, I supervise three very important areas at St. Joseph’s.

First of all, I oversee the direct mail program. If you are on our mailing list you know we regularly send letters (and sometimes little gifts) to friends who support our programs. We are blessed that people across the country share donations with St. Joseph’s Indian School so we can provide for the educational and daily needs of the Lakota (Sioux) children we serve … all at no charge to the families. It is a great honor for me to share stories of our students with our benefactors.

As of July 1, 2011 I took over supervision of the web and online marketing efforts. This is a new and exciting area for me. We regularly send emails about our students and keep busy with updates to our website and Facebook pages. If you haven’t yet “liked” St. Joseph’s Indian School on Facebook, please do so. We also “tweet” within Twitter and have some very nice videos on YouTube. Check them out for yourself!

Please know every message you send, whether through the mail, email, Facebook … is read and acknowledged. I’m honored to work with the staff who helps in this area of relationship marketing. This department is in charge of making sure every special correspondence is handled in a professional and prompt manner. We thank you for your messages of hope and love for the kids we serve. Keep them coming!

In the summer we are also blessed to have many supporters stop on St. Joseph’s Indian School’s campus for a personal tour. Our relationship marketing staff provides these tours of the school, homes, Akta Lakota Museum & Cultural Center and other campus stops. There is nothing like meeting friends face-to-face to say thank you for their support.

Today (July 15) is St. Joseph’s 13th annual community golf tournament as well, and guess what, I oversee that too! Our community has a small golf course and we use this annual event to invite business partners and community members out for a fun day on the course to raise money for our recreation center program. In addition to golf we also have an auction and putting contest. I’ll also use this tournament to celebrate my birthday … I couldn’t think of a better way to celebrate!

Pilamayathank you – for all you do for our students! God bless you!

Today’s guest blogger: Tom

Today's guest blogger: Tom
Today's guest blogger: Tom

Hi,  my name is Tom and I am the Facilities Supervisor here at St. Joseph’s Indian School. In a few months, I will have 30 years of experience in the maintenance department. When I started, I planned to work just during the winter; but I’ve been here ever since.

St. Joseph’s is a multi-complex campus that has residential homes, a school, dining hall, maintenance garage, chapel, health care facility, museum, maintenance shop, printing shop, central receiving building and business offices. We have a geothermal system that uses the warm water from artesian wells to heat our buildings.  Over the years the cost-savings from this renewable heat source have been tremendous. We also do as much recycling as we can to save and help the environment.

We have a great maintenance staff that includes licensed electricians and plumbers. We have qualified and experienced carpenters, painters, grounds workers and custodians. We also have an electronics technician, two vehicle mechanics and a safety supervisor.

Like other departments on campus, the summer is a very busy time for the maintenance department.  We are responsible for 51 buildings and several acres of outdoor spaces that require upkeep.  In addition to these day-to-day duties, our crew also works continuously on upgrades and renovations.

This summer we are renovating the last of the Lakota homes. There are four Lakota homes which were built in 1984 and after 27 years they were in need of a face lift.  Our maintenance staff does about 90% of the renovation work and it takes about a year to complete each remodel.

There are many other projects that go on over the summer as well.  The custodians are kept busy getting the school and dining hall ready for the coming school year. With all the rain we have had the grounds department is kept busy mowing daily. They also trim trees and bushes, plant and water flowers, repair parking lots and sidewalks and keep St. Joseph’s Indian School’s campus looking beautiful.

The plumber, electronics technician, painters and electricians are busy doing daily maintenance work and repairs when they are not working in the home remodeling. The mechanics work on all of our vehicles and equipment and always have one of the vehicles or pieces of equipment in their shop for repairs or general maintenance.

With all the buildings and grounds that are within our campus you may wonder how we get all the work done and keep track of it.  We have a great facilities administrative assistant who doesn’t miss a thing!

Hope you are all having a great summer.  If you get a chance, stop at our campus and visit our Akta Lakota Museum & Cultural Center.  We’re proud of the work we do and enjoy showing it off.

From the road with Fr. Steve

I hope you’ve enjoyed hearing about campus activities from all our guest bloggers here at St. Joseph’s Indian School. I’ve enjoyed my time away – three weeks of vacation and a week for retreat. This week I will be in Milwaukee for SCJ community meetings and to celebrate the jubilees of priests and brothers who have been in vows for 50 and 60 years. I take a lot of inspiration from those men who have given so much of their life in service of others. I’ll return to St. Joseph’s campus next weekend. While a lot happens at St. Joseph’s Indian School over the summer months, I know the school has been in great hands even in my absence.

My time away has been a nice combination of visiting family and friends and seeing some sights I’ve long wanted to visit. One of my sisters now lives in upstate New York, and after a few days with Anne, I got to fulfill a long time dream and spend a day at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown. On my way to Baltimore for retreat, I stood in Independence Hall in Philadelphia and reflected on the events of our nation’s history. I wondered how we can do more to preserve life, liberty and freedom in our communities. While in the city of brotherly love, I also made it up the steps that Rocky Balboa sprinted up in the movie. As I look back over the city, I also looked back over the past year with a great deal of gratitude for the prayers and support. I’ve come a long way since surgery and I will keep running the race with faith and hope and love.

Each year I look forward to retreat week as a time of prayer and reflection. One of the reflection talks was on self-care for priests. Since surgery, I’ve been good about the physical self-care, taking time to stretch and exercise. It showed results as I walked many miles each day with few problems. I suppose what I do have to work on is self-care that avoids procrastination and tackles the hardest but most important tasks first, instead of doing the easy things first and causing stress as deadlines approach. Time along the trip spent with those I love, and quiet times with the Lord are the best self-care there is.

Today’s guest blogger: Chris

Today's guest blogger: Chris
Today's guest blogger: Chris

Hello! I work in the Clinical Services Department as the Drug and Alcohol Prevention Coordinator at St. Joseph’s Indian School. The 2011-2012 school year will be my fourth year in this position. Prior to this position, I worked on the web site in the Marketing Department for three years. Both positions have taught me so much and even though the differences between them are like night and day, I’ve realized the employees of our organization share the same mission regardless of which department you work in.

I feel very fortunate to be in the Clinical Department; I really enjoy working with and getting to know our kids, and I get to work with a wonderful, supportive group of people.

I helped with summer camp during June. We hold a two-week camp for both the Crow Creek and Lower Brule Indian Reservations. Our bus travels to the reservation every morning to pick the kids up.  When they get to campus the kids enjoy a full day of arts and crafts, recreational activities, a nutritious lunch, Lakota Studies and swimming. Snacks are handed out before the kids are bussed back to the reservation.

I have also gone on a few interviews this summer. Once parents/guardians submit an application for a child to attend St. Joseph’s Indian School, someone from the Clinical Department will travel (usually to the child’s home) and interview the parent/guardian and the child. It’s nice to meet new kids and their families. It’s pretty common for kids that are applying to have siblings or cousins that are already at St. Joseph’s, so it’s kind of neat to put the connections together.

Other tasks that are keeping me busy this summer include preparing for my 5th grade guidance class that will start when the kids come back for the school year and taking a college course.  I am working towards my State Prevention Certification and am taking the last of five courses before I can take the certification exam. I am required to complete a service learning project for the course, and I chose to visit the Lower Brule, South Dakota Boys and Girls Club for a couple of days in which one of my colleagues and I shared prevention and cultural activities with the youth.

Summer is going so fast; it’s hard to believe, but the kids will be back on campus in about 5 weeks! Once school starts I will be busy facilitating Red Path groups, serving on the FAST (Families and Schools Together) team, preparing for Red Ribbon Week, administering random drug tests and most importantly, making sure that any of our students who need drug and alcohol services will be getting the help they need.

Our mission at St. Joseph’s Indian School is only possible because of your generosity. Thank you and God Bless!

Have a great rest of the summer!

Today’s guest blogger: April

Today's guest blogger: April

Mitakuapi  translation (listen I am going to tell you something), this is what our elders would say, so anytime you are at a gathering and you hear a Native American speaker, or presenter and they say this, you will know what they mean.

Hi Everyone, my name is April  and I began working here at St. Joseph Indian School in July of 2005. I am the Family Liaison/Clinical Support. I also Coordinate the FAST program here at St. Joseph’s. I love meeting people and new families. As some of you know, I am also known as Grandma FAST or just Grandma, which is fine with me. I have the opportunity of going out and recruiting families and getting to know the families with home visits and weekly contacts. I would like to thank Fr. Steve for asking me to be a part of this. This is very interesting, and one has the opportunity to get to know others a little bit more.

A little about me: I am a Certified Chemical Dependency Counselor – I with the state,  and also International. I work with domestic violence, so therefore an advocate for the shelter, and serve on the Child Protection Team with Social Services and inter-agency in Fort Thompson, South Dakota.  I love my job, especially when it comes to the children, seeing that smile on their faces, when their parents come to campus and stay with them.

I do appreciate St. Joseph’s staff and the working relationship I am personally acquiring with everyone. I know there are still a lot that I haven’t had the chance to meet or work with, but I just want to say thank you in a good way for all your hard work.

I end with a warm hearty hand-shake.

Today’s guest blogger: Julie

Today's guest blogger: Julie
Today's guest blogger: Julie

Hello and happy summer to all!  My name is Julie, I am the Family Service Counselor here at St. Joseph’s Indian School.  I started my journey with St. Joseph’s about 10 years ago.  When I first came to St. Joseph’s I worked as a houseparent with 6th-8th grade girls.  The next year, I moved over to work with 6th-8th grade boys.  After my first two years at St. Joseph’s, I moved into the Clinical Services Department which is responsible for admissions, counseling, guidance classes and many other things.  Today, I work as a Family Service Counselor with 6th-12th grade girls.  If I didn’t think it would get me in trouble,  I’d tell you I work for the greatest department on campus.  I truly enjoy my job, my colleagues and the kids I work with! (Oh yes, and all the departments on campus are stellar … I’m just biased because I work in the Clinical Department.)

Summer is a different kind of busy for the Clinical Services Department.  We work on admissions, we visit families and we plan and prepare for the coming school year.  Yesterday, I was out and about in Fort Thompson, South Dakota visiting families and helping with admissions.  It is always great to check in with families and hear they are doing well.  It’s also nice to hear that the kids are getting excited to come back and see us!

Summers are a lot of fun for the Clinical Services Department because we get to travel to various parts of the state to see our current students/families and we also get to meet great new families who would like to have their children attend St. Joseph’s Indian School.  The hardest part of admissions is having to tell families all our spots are full and we will not be able to accept their child right away, but will keep them on the waiting list.

It’s hard to believe it is the middle of July already.  Our kids will be coming back before we know it, and we are all excited to see them and have them here with us again!  If you are ever in the area, make sure to stop in and see us!  We would love to have you and show you what a great place we have here!

Have a great, safe and happy summer!

Today’s guest blogger: Mary Jane

Today's guest blogger: Mary Jane
Today's guest blogger: Mary Jane

Hello, my name is Mary Jane.  I currently am the Outreach/Alumni Director here at St. Joseph’s Indian School. This summer I previously shared with you some of the travels of the bookmobile.  Next week will be our last week on the road in the St. Joseph’s bookmobile.  We will travel down to Pine Ridge, Rosebud, Mission, St. Francis and other small communities.  Since we started we have driven 3,146 miles, distributing over 2,500 books!  We still have many good titles for next week.

Here on campus the facilities staff are busy painting, scrubbing floors, cleaning homes, shampooing rugs, mowing the grass, inspecting vehicles and the list goes on.  All of this to get ready for the 2011-2012 school year.  We have a great, hard working  staff.

Thank you for making all of our work here at St. Joseph’s possible.   Enjoy your summer!!

Today’s guest blogger: Donna

Today's guest blogger: Donna
Today's guest blogger: Donna

Greetings!  I’m the Human Resources Director for St. Joseph’s Indian School.

As you can tell by our recent guest bloggers, St. Joseph’s Indian School is much more than simply a “school.”  It takes dedicated staff in many occupations to provide a safe, welcoming environment and experience for our Lakota (Sioux) students.

When describing St. Joseph’s to friends and family, I tell them that when you drive onto the property, it looks like a small college campus.  On St. Joseph’s Indian School’s campus, you’ll see the homes in which the children reside, the school building itself, Our Lady of the Sioux Chapel, administration buildings, the Dining Hall, Rec Center, Health Center, business offices, the Akta Lakota Museum and Cultural Center and workshops for our Facilities crew.  I mention these buildings (my list is incomplete) to give you a flavor of the variety of employees we have.

Our employees are a dedicated group.  Like most businesses we have some staff who are just starting with us.  But in many cases these personnel have worked here for 20, 30 or even 40 years.  Often a person will come to work “for a year or two” because they’re interested in working with Native American youth. But they fall in love with the children and the mission of our school and decide to make St. Joseph’s a life-long career.

The Human Resources Department is fortunate to work with extraordinary staff.  The work is hard – particularly for those who interact with the students.  Days can be long, physically demanding and both intellectually and emotionally challenging.  But our houseparents, teachers, counselors and others who work directly with the students often receive rewards commensurate with the challenges – a relationship with a child that exceeds their expectations.

In addition many employees who do not work directly with the children, find it equally rewarding to be associated with such an exceptional organization. We appreciate all of the unique skills and talents that these women and men are willing to share with St. Joseph’s.

I recognize that I may be making it sound like working for St. Joseph’s is similar to Eden or Shangri-La.  Certainly that’s not the case. We have our warts just as all businesses do.  However we are graced by many people who understand that their work here is not a job, but a mission.

Today’s guest blogger: Karen

Today's guest blogger: Karen

Hello to all.  My name is Karen and I am one of the Family Service Counselors working with 1st through 5th grade boys here at St. Joseph’s Indian School. I am beginning my 4th year here. I am new to blogging, so please take that into account.

Work here at St. Joseph’s Indian School in the summertime has a different pace than the rest of the year. It’s a time when we spend some time visiting our students in their own homes and interviewing those who are applying, which is part of the admissions process. Yesterday, I travelled to Mitchell, South Dakota to interview a 2nd grader and his mother. He really enjoyed being interviewed and asked about his favorite foods and things like that. It’s always good to see where our students live and meet other family members that we may not have had the chance to meet before.

During the summer time, I do some planning for my next year’s guidance class as well. We each are assigned a particular grade and are responsible for planning guidance lessons and activities each week for a 45 minute time period. My assigned class is 1st grade so they are students new to school and possibly, away from home for the first time. We talk about homesickness, support systems and usually take walking tours of the campus so they can begin to learn their way around. Some may have siblings that go here also.

Summertime at St. Joseph’s also means summer camp for kids from Lower Brule and Crow Creek. Those camps are two weeks long for each group. They have activities and fun lessons in the morning, eat lunch followed by some more activities and then a bus ride back home. St. Joseph’s also offers a summer break home for our students who would like to spend about 6 weeks here in the summer.  They stay here on campus with houseparents and do a lot of field trips and fun activities. The Missouri River is extremely high this year, so the park in town where kids enjoy playing is now under water!  I try often to have lunch with the students in the summer break home and they’re always excited to talk about the fun they’ve been having. One student won a bike for perfect attendance and he rides that bike all the time and absolutely loves it!  The summer break home closes in early July so that every student has about 5 weeks at home before school starts again.

I thank you for your continued support and wish each of you joyful days.