Donations flood Christian Academy
Whitefish Christian Academy headmaster
Todd Kotila has a series of chants that he uses to teach his
students about faith and life.
He says “never” and students reply
“panic.” The simple prompt and response is meant to remind that
panic is a consuming self-focus that shows a lack of faith in God
and his providence.
But last spring Kotila was having
trouble following his own lesson. Even though he believed God would
provide, he was panicked over finding funding for a new roof for
his school and much-needed technology and classroom upgrades.
Then one donation after another began
to arrive at the school.
“It has been very humbling,” he said.
“I’m on the receiving end of this.”
While donations to the school are
generous — the school needs to raise roughly a quarter million
dollars every year to help cover its expenses — donations for
things like a roof are often not as easy to obtain.
Kotila likens it to a car. Everyone
likes to wash their car, but not perform the mechanic work.
“Donors want to pay for desks and
books,” he said. “The emotional connection is not there (with a
roof).”
He understands wanting to donate for
something tangible, but still the school had a need. The roof was
full of cracks and patch repairs were only doing so much.
So he prayed and others prayed.
Then he found a check for $35,000 on
his desk. The anonymous donor had left enough to fix the roof.
For Kotila he was a child again on
Christmas morning. He would have a new roof and one that would last
50 years.
“I laughed,” he said. “I don’t believe
it, but of course that’s the way God would do it.”
The money for a roof was just one of a
number of generous gifts the school has received recently.
A technology fundraiser brought $30,000
to the school for a network, computers and software improvements.
An anonymous donor pledged to match every $1 raised with $3 and
with that the school sent out letters seeking donations.
Parents made donations, some were
rather sizable, but it was a smaller check from a stranger that
caught Kotila off guard. He’s taking a guess, but invisions a widow
on a fixed income as the writer of the check.
“What touched my heart was the very
first check,” he said. “It was $10. I didn’t even know the person.
We received some fairly big donations, but that one killed me.”
The donations gave the school the money
to install a new network system that creates the infrastructure for
future growth. A computer lab was completely redone with 10
Macintosh and 10 Dell computers. In the middle school classrooms,
workstations with two computers were created.
The Macintosh computers were donated
saving the school about $15,000, according to Kotila.
Teachers will each have a new laptop
and the administrative staff has upgraded computers as well.
Previously computers often had different operating systems and
software that made compatibility almost impossible.
A $25,000 donation to the school has
allowed for a revamp of a few classrooms. A third grade classroom
is being redone first.
New floor tiles are replacing worn
carpet. New maple cabinets and blinds will be installed. Students
will get new desks and chairs, and a new teacher’s desk will
complete the room. The room has been coordinated with mellow colors
of yellow, blue and green in the floor and walls.
“In schools everything is usually white
because it’s easy to maintain, but that’s not very fun for kids,”
Kotila said of the new color choices.
A second classroom will be redone when
possible. The plan is to complete more rooms through the
school.
“We’re taking it one bite at a time,”
Kotila said.
A combination of the technology and
room renovation donations will provide two new SMART Boards for the
school. One will go in the new third grade room. SMART Boards are
interactive whiteboards that use touch detection.
The dollar amounts are incredible, but
parents and community members have also pitched in to help at the
school. They’ve painted walls, laid tile in the bathroom and built
cabinets.
“It blessed the whole school and future
generations,” he said of all the donations.