My point was that not everyone can afford $6000 x2 or more kids just for camp. If you can do that for your kids that's great, but there has to be some kind of alternative for the working class families who i am sure cannot spend $12,000 plus on child care for the summer. As long as the camp is safe, not getting to go on field trips or play on expensive toys is not going to kill the kid if mom and dad simply can't afford it. While it is nice to have somewhere to go and something to do every day, things like the rockclimbing and go carts you have mentioned are hardly necessary for adequate child care. They are luxury items you can obviously afford to give your kids. Popcorn and a rented movie would serve the same purpose at a fraction of the cost. My question was about what alternatives there were for those who cannot provide these kind of luxuries for thier kids.
I live in Brooklyn. Our camp fees range from super cheap to $5000+
The price depends on the community the camp is located in. I live in an area that is considered an inner city section of Brooklyn. The camp fees here are less than the fees in say Park Slope or Brooklyn Heights.
However, camps in all areas are ran the same. (Unless it's a special camp - drama, sports...) If it's a 4 day camp, the kids go on trips twice a week. If it's a 5 day camp, they go on trips three times a week.
The trips include everything from bowling to Dorney Park.
No matter what community, the camp is located in, sitting the kids in front of a video would not fly. Arts and crafts are great, but if you want kids to attend your camp, the number of trips better out number the art projects.
No matter how cheap the camp may be, parents expect the kids to spend a large amount of time out of the building.
One of the camps in my area is $200.00 for the whole summer. (It was free when I was a kid) The camp runs from July 1- August early August 4 days a week. Each camper receives one camp uniform (shirt, shorts, cap, back pack) that they must wear on Tuesday and Thursday.(trip days)
The trips are pretty much the same each summer
Bowling
roller skating
movies
bike a thon in Prospect Park (complete with police escort from the camp to the park for the 5th-8th graders. Younger kids load their bikes on a police van then ride the subway to the park)
Bronx Zoo
South Street Sea Port
Sesame Place
Dorney Park
Hershey Park
Great Adventure
Bear Mountain
Central Park