Difference between revisions of "Consequences for Code of Conduct Offenses"

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== Three-Step Process for Consequences for Offenders of the Code of Conduct ==
 
== Three-Step Process for Consequences for Offenders of the Code of Conduct ==
==== Step One - After First Offense ====
+
==== First Offense ====
 
The camp director will have a one-on-one talk with the offender. If the camp director is a young adult, he/she together with an older co-director, education director, or other parent will talk with them.
 
The camp director will have a one-on-one talk with the offender. If the camp director is a young adult, he/she together with an older co-director, education director, or other parent will talk with them.
  
==== Step Two - After Second Offense ====
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==== Second Offense ====
The camp director and, if applicable, a parent will have a talk with the child and the child's parents. If the child is adopted, the adopted parents will be included in the talk. In addition the parents will be called on the phone. The child will be told to sleep in the parents'/adopted parents' cabin the next night. If the child's offense was during the last night of camp, they will have to sleep in the parent's cabin the first night of the next program they participate. They will be told that a 3rd offense will have the consequence of having to leave camp or not be allowed to camp for 1 year.
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* The camp director and, if applicable, a parent will have a talk with the child and the child's parents. If the child is adopted, parents will be called on the phone and the adopted parents will be included in the talk.
 +
* The child will be told to sleep in the parents'/adopted parents' cabin the next night.
 +
* If the child's offense was during the last night of camp, they will have to sleep in the parent's cabin the first night of the next program they participate.
 +
* They will not be allowed to be a group leader or main staff member for 1-2 years. Exact time to be decided by the program director, based on the severity of the offense.
 +
* They will be told that a 3rd offense will have the consequence of having to leave camp or not be allowed to camp for 1 year.
  
==== Step Three - After Third Offense ====
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==== Third Offense ====
* If the child acts in defiance or has another incident, the child will be asked to leave camp. The unused portion of the camp fee for any accompanying family member can be refunded. The fee for the offending person will not be refunded. If the 3rd offense happens during the last night of camp, their registrations will be blocked for 1 year unless there is an apology and promise to follow the camp rules.
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* The offender will be asked to leave camp. The unused portion of the camp fee for any accompanying family member can be refunded. The fee for the offending person will not be refunded.
* If the offending people are 18 or older and the parents are not at camp, they will have to stay in the cabin with an older staff member or parent. All other consequences will be the same. If the incident was during the last night, next time they can only come with a parent or other responsible older adult or, if they violate the rules again, they will be asked to leave camp and not be allowed back for 1 year.
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* If the 3rd offense happens during the last night of camp, their registrations will be blocked for 1 year unless there is a written apology and promise to follow the camp rules.
* Anyone with 2 or more offenses will not be allowed to be a group leader or main staff member for 1-2 years. Exact time to be decided by the program director, based on the severity of the offense.
 
  
 
== Guidelines for Enforcing Curfew ==
 
== Guidelines for Enforcing Curfew ==
  
* It is recommended that the program director assign a few reliable people to do night patrol duty on some nights, and especially on the last night. This role is not an official volunteer assignment, and in order for everyone to get enough rest at least some nights, the night patrol people should not be the same people every night. One male and one female person, with one being a young adult and one a parent, would be optimal so they can enter the boys and girls lodges and because of possible authority issues.
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It is recommended that the program director assign a reliable person to do a night patrol check on some nights, and especially on the last night. This role is not an official volunteer assignment. The night patrol person must know the faces and names of each person in the assigned teen lodge and have parent contact information on hand.
  
* 12:00 am is lights-out time, the latest time when everyone is supposed to go to sleep, and 12:30 am is lodge/cabin curfew. Camp directors can change the lights-out time. (Example: 11:00 pm during a week with younger families.) If the night patrol finds activities after 12:30 am:
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=== Curfew and Cabin Checks ===
# They record the names of the offenders. The night patrol has the authority to ask everybody for their names.
 
# They tell them to go to their lodge or cabin to sleep and ask them to report to the camp director in the morning.
 
# The night patrol reports the names to the camp director the next morning and explains the incident.
 
  
* The night patrol will check any time after ½ hour after the dining hall is officially closed for missing people in the lodges. The number of people in each building should match the number of people on the list. The list of who is sleeping where can be viewed in the dining hall or can be received from the registrar. This list should be accurate, since participants are asked during registration to report any changes of their sleeping arrangement.
+
12:00 am is lights-out time, the latest time when everyone is supposed to go to sleep. Camp directors can change the lights-out time (example: 11:00 pm during a week with younger families). Rather than continuously patrolling all of camp, the night patrol conducts a random cabin check at an unannounced time between lights-out and 5:00 am. The number of people in each building should match the number on the list and notes the names of the people missing.
* If there are missing people, the night patrol looks for them. The meadow, the sports field, the dining hall, empty staff buildings and cabins, the pool area, the waterfall just outside of Shehaqua are places where people were hanging out in previous years.
 
  
* If the missing people can’t be found, the number of missing people is reported to the camp director the next morning.
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=== If someone is not in their assigned lodge ===
* Being caught outside the cabin or lodge after curfew counts as one offense. Being caught a second time later that same night (after having been told to go to bed when caught the first time) counts as a second offense.
+
 
* In the past, the park rangers have patrolled the park at night, and they got very upset when they found campers wandering around outside of the camp after midnight.
+
# The night patrol calls the missing person's parents (or adopted parents), or knocks on the parents' cabin door — regardless of the hour.
 +
# The parents are responsible for finding their child.
 +
# The night patrol reports the names and incident to the camp director the next morning.
 +
# '''Consequence:''' The person must sleep in their parents' (or adopted parents') cabin for the remainder of the week and this counts as a first offence. If it's the last day of camp they will have to sleep in their parents' cabin next year.
 +
 
 +
=== Locating Missing People ===
 +
 
 +
If the missing person cannot be found right away, the meadow, the sports field, the dining hall, empty staff buildings and cabins, the pool area, and the waterfall just outside of Shehaqua are places where people have been found in previous years.
 +
 
 +
=== Park Rangers ===
 +
 
 +
In the past, the park rangers have patrolled the park at night, and they got very upset when they found campers wandering around outside of camp after midnight.
  
 
== Guidelines for Enforcing Other Offenses ==
 
== Guidelines for Enforcing Other Offenses ==
  
 
For offenses other than violation of curfew, such as inappropriate clothing, inappropriate language, or flirting, the camp director and, if applicable, a parent should also have a talk with the offending person and their parents. The [[#Three-Step_Process_for_Consequences_for_Offenders_of_the_Code_of_Conduct|Three-Step Process for Consequences for Offenders of the Code of Conduct]] applies for such offenses, too.
 
For offenses other than violation of curfew, such as inappropriate clothing, inappropriate language, or flirting, the camp director and, if applicable, a parent should also have a talk with the offending person and their parents. The [[#Three-Step_Process_for_Consequences_for_Offenders_of_the_Code_of_Conduct|Three-Step Process for Consequences for Offenders of the Code of Conduct]] applies for such offenses, too.

Latest revision as of 21:33, 15 April 2026

Illegal or Dangerous Activities

If a person is caught doing illegal activities or actions that pose immediate danger to other campers or themselves, the Three-Step Process for Consequences for Offenders of the Code of Conduct below does not apply. The offender will be asked to leave camp immediately without getting a refund. For a partial list of illegal activities, see PA State Park Regulations.

Incident Report

  • We have an ongoing incident report shared document with the date, type of offense, and the names of people involved. This document is accessible to program directors and main staff. Each offense needs to be added to the incident report by the program director. The offenders and their parents should be informed at the time of the offense.
  • If someone has a consequence in the incident report that occurred in a previous program, then a new offense will be counted as the second offense, even if it is the first offense in that particular program. Records stay in the report for two years.

Three-Step Process for Consequences for Offenders of the Code of Conduct

First Offense

The camp director will have a one-on-one talk with the offender. If the camp director is a young adult, he/she together with an older co-director, education director, or other parent will talk with them.

Second Offense

  • The camp director and, if applicable, a parent will have a talk with the child and the child's parents. If the child is adopted, parents will be called on the phone and the adopted parents will be included in the talk.
  • The child will be told to sleep in the parents'/adopted parents' cabin the next night.
  • If the child's offense was during the last night of camp, they will have to sleep in the parent's cabin the first night of the next program they participate.
  • They will not be allowed to be a group leader or main staff member for 1-2 years. Exact time to be decided by the program director, based on the severity of the offense.
  • They will be told that a 3rd offense will have the consequence of having to leave camp or not be allowed to camp for 1 year.

Third Offense

  • The offender will be asked to leave camp. The unused portion of the camp fee for any accompanying family member can be refunded. The fee for the offending person will not be refunded.
  • If the 3rd offense happens during the last night of camp, their registrations will be blocked for 1 year unless there is a written apology and promise to follow the camp rules.

Guidelines for Enforcing Curfew

It is recommended that the program director assign a reliable person to do a night patrol check on some nights, and especially on the last night. This role is not an official volunteer assignment. The night patrol person must know the faces and names of each person in the assigned teen lodge and have parent contact information on hand.

Curfew and Cabin Checks

12:00 am is lights-out time, the latest time when everyone is supposed to go to sleep. Camp directors can change the lights-out time (example: 11:00 pm during a week with younger families). Rather than continuously patrolling all of camp, the night patrol conducts a random cabin check at an unannounced time between lights-out and 5:00 am. The number of people in each building should match the number on the list and notes the names of the people missing.

If someone is not in their assigned lodge

  1. The night patrol calls the missing person's parents (or adopted parents), or knocks on the parents' cabin door — regardless of the hour.
  2. The parents are responsible for finding their child.
  3. The night patrol reports the names and incident to the camp director the next morning.
  4. Consequence: The person must sleep in their parents' (or adopted parents') cabin for the remainder of the week and this counts as a first offence. If it's the last day of camp they will have to sleep in their parents' cabin next year.

Locating Missing People

If the missing person cannot be found right away, the meadow, the sports field, the dining hall, empty staff buildings and cabins, the pool area, and the waterfall just outside of Shehaqua are places where people have been found in previous years.

Park Rangers

In the past, the park rangers have patrolled the park at night, and they got very upset when they found campers wandering around outside of camp after midnight.

Guidelines for Enforcing Other Offenses

For offenses other than violation of curfew, such as inappropriate clothing, inappropriate language, or flirting, the camp director and, if applicable, a parent should also have a talk with the offending person and their parents. The Three-Step Process for Consequences for Offenders of the Code of Conduct applies for such offenses, too.