Using the scissors from a special Pine
Tree Council camp’s pocket knife, invited guests, donors and members of the
military cut a red, white and blue ribbon to officially open the new Camp
William Hinds dining facility.
“We have the most beautiful outdoor
learning center in the country,” said Scout Executive Eric Tarbox.
Four years into the Innovative Readiness
Training (IRT) project, developments at all four of the Pine Tree Council Boy
Scout camps (Raymond, Belgrade, Sabattus and Acton) have been completed or are
almost complete. There are still projects on the schedule however the dining
facility in Raymond is by far the largest. The over 21,000 square foot building
provides room for 500 people at a time, and the walk out basement has
classrooms used by the RSU14 Katahdin School during the school year and houses
the STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math) program during the
summer.
“We look forward to staying here until
it no longer makes sense,” said Katahdin School principal Rich Meserve.
IRT started back during the Clinton
“Rebuild America” days. The military was tasked with “finding innovative ways
to help the US by giving them real world opportunities servicing the
communities we serve,” said Chief Master Sergeant Todd Jones. Having the IRT
program in communities gives people, who don’t have exposure to the military or
the IRT, a chance to experience military life, he said.
Mid-April the military began the buildup
in Raymond, putting up a tent city to be ready when the troops were deployed on
April 22. This year over 250 military members from the Air Force Reserve, Air
National Guard and United States Marine Corps have worked on projects at the
camps. This year alone the military is completing work on the dining facility,
made road improvements, did ditch grading, upgraded a staff cabin with plumbing
and electrical, did camp maintenance and will complete a fire pond that will
benefit Camp Hinds, Kingsley Pines and all homes on Plains Road.
“We’ll be hitting it hard moving some
dirt,” said Jones, discussing the fire pond work. The pond, which was breached
in 2005 during the Patriot’s Day Storm, will be six to eight feet deep when
completed and will have a fire hydrant on Plains Road.
“This is a win/win for the community and
the military members,” said Jones.
On the camp property, the Scout Community
has stepped in to help fill in any gaps not provided by the military.
“This is truly a civilian/military
experience,” said Tarbox. The work has all been done by service members who
serve on a “brand new crew every two weeks. The crew has never met or worked
together and all of this happened over a period of years,” he added. The troops
have come from Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Royal Marines from England and Maine for
their two weeks a year training in their field of service.
“Over $5 million of construction value
was added to our camps,” said Tarbox.
The new dining hall has a new kitchen
thanks to the “scrappiness and pluck of the Messers”, who saved ovens, serving
lines and refrigerators from UNUM, when that company remodeled years ago.
President of Pine Tree Council, Jeff Messer, stored the items in trailers until
they were needed, on the thought that someday there would be a new dining hall,
Tarbox told the group.
“I’m very impressed with what they’ve
done here with the resources they’ve been given,” said Air Force Chief Master
Sergeant, Cathy Dugas, the highest ranking Air Force member in attendance. It
was her first time at Camp Hinds.
The driving force behind the IRT project
has been past Pine Tree Council President and Eagle Scout, Horace Horton.
“When we started the IRT there was
nothing on this site. We’re just so proud,” Horton told the guests. “What a
transformation this has made.”
Each family and business that was a
major contributor to the project was recognized during the ceremony; from the
design work and construction material donations, to the old dining hall and the
naming of the health lodge, to the Ellen K. Stinston Health Lodge.
“I was a little taken a back,” said
former school nurse Ellen Stinston, who the health lodge was named for. “It was
totally unexpected. I suggested helping the health lodge. It didn’t know it
would be named after me. I probably would never have done it if I’d known.”
The ceremonies renaming other properties
at Camp Hinds will take place on June 24 starting at noon. Pine Tree Council
Vice President of Properties, Walt Stinson has his signature on many projects
in the council. Bill and Jackie Thornton gave money for the STEAM center and so
many more contributed to the projects. From Internet hardware to electrical
design and window donations, to monetary donations, the project will serve a
large number of scouts for many, many years.
The one person holding everything together
for the council is camp ranger Scott Martin, who has worked with the IRT,
collaborated with other property owners and has done much of the finish work on
the various projects at camp.
With a strategic vision the key players
in the projects, especially the dining facility have upgraded Camp Hinds to a
destination summer camp, where scouts from all over the region and even the
world come to experience Maine. This year 40 scouts from Egypt will attend Camp
Hinds, adding to the 10.6 percent increase in Boy Scouts and Venture Scouts
attending camp this summer.
“It’s amazing all of the contributions
and coordination,” said former scout and retired Navy man Tim Gallant, Maine
Staff Assistant to Rep. Bruce Poliquin. “This shows that Scouting is alive and
well. All these Scoutmasters are unbelievably amazing,” he added.
For more information about Pine Tree
Council, visit www.PineTree BSA.org or to find out more about the IRT, visit IRT.Defense.Gov.