Eastern Panhandle Youth Camp Reaches Out To Children Of Families Affected By Substance Use Disorder

The Boys and Girls Club of the Eastern Panhandle is opening registration for a year-round youth camp for children from families affected by substance use disorder.

The Boys and Girls Club of the Eastern Panhandle is opening registration for a year-round youth camp for children from families affected by substance use disorder.

Camp Mariposa operates around one weekend a month and combines traditional outdoor camp activities like campfires, hiking and archery with educational sessions on mental and emotional health, substance use prevention and yoga.

The camp is free, with the club providing transportation, meals, bed linens and hygiene items to the participants. A mental health professional is also on staff to help teach prevention lessons.

“It’s not therapy, but it does teach kids how to say no to peer pressure, how to make good decisions so that they don’t fall into this cycle of addiction,” said Camp Director Kait McKay.

McKay also said it’s a way for caregivers in active recovery to help provide an extra support system for their children.

“A lot of our families, the one who signs these children up for the camp, is oftentimes a caregiver that’s in active recovery themselves,” McKay said. “And so they see the value in building up a support system for their youth.”

The camp is open to children ages 9 through 12.

Interested families in the Eastern Panhandle can register or ask for information by emailing kmckay@bgcepwv.org or by calling 304-279-3186.

More Than $6 Million Federal Loan To Fund W.Va. Hospital Expansion, Kids Club

West Virginia will receive $6.5 million in federal loans for a youth facility and the expansion of a hospital.

The financing from the U.S. Department of Agriculture is meant for rural development. It will fund a $5,700,000 expansion and renovation of Pocahontas Memorial Hospital in Marlinton, according to a news release from Republican U.S. Sen. Shelley Moore Capito’s office.

It will also provide $800,000 to purchase a facility in Berkeley Springs for the Boys & Girls Club of the Eastern Panhandle.

“The additional support for the Boys and Girls club in the Eastern Panhandle provides childcare services our families rely on, while the expansion of the Pocahontas Memorial Hospital will lead to increased access to vital health services for the entire county,” Capito said in a statement.

Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin said investing in “rural communities is essential to growing our state’s economy and workforce, as well as enriching the lives of West Virginians.”

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