Neighbor News
T.E.A.M. Asset Program in New Lenox Provides Toys and Gift Cards to Children with Cancer
Lincoln-Way Central Student Activities Coordinator Dustin Waddell and Instructional Technology Coordinator Chris Fetherling unload a truck.

Students at District #210 Lincoln-Way high schools are participating in a program designed to make their local community a better environment in which to live, work and learn. T.E.A.M. Asset, an acronym for Teaching Everyone Assets Matter, provides an outlet for both children and adults who strive to improve their community. The Lincoln-Way students recently joined forces in New Lenox with Liberty Jr. High School, Lincoln-Way Central High School, Lincoln-Way West High School, Mackay Education Center, Martino Jr. High, New Lenox Chamber of Commerce, New Lenox Park District, New Lenox School District 122, Peace Lutheran Church, Manhattan Community Park District and Manhattan School District 114 and raised more than 2,200 toys and $280 in gift cards for the Pediatric Oncology Treasure Chest Foundation.
The program=s framework identifies the basic assets that all young people need to grow up healthy, caring and responsible, and then emphasizes each asset in a unified campaign for a better community.
Dustin Waddell, Lincoln-Way Central Student Activities Coordinator said, “The school is helping in the community. I have four small boys and three have spent extensive time at the hospital. A toy drive like this is great for the kids.” Instructional Technology Coordinator Chris Fetherling added, “We have great kids in our district and they understand helping out in the nation.”
Find out what's happening in Orland Parkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
The recent toy drive successfully met the T.E.A.M. Asset objectives by providing comfort and distraction from painful procedures to children and teens battling cancer, prompting Treasure Chest Foundation founder and CEO Colleen Kisel to express her gratitude for the program=s efforts. AI want all of the groups who worked so hard to know what a tremendous impact this toy drive will have. Their compassion and generosity will help put smiles on the faces of more than 10,000 children and teens each month who are struggling with the adversity of battling childhood cancer. What a blessing this partnership has been for the clients served by the Treasure Chest Foundation.”
The not-for-profit Treasure Chest Foundation now supports more than 10,000 children and teens each month who are diagnosed with cancer by providing a toy or gift card in 50 hospitals nationwide. Nowhere else in the nation does such a program exist. CEO Colleen Kisel founded the organization in 1996 after her then seven-year-old son Martin had been diagnosed with leukemia in 1993. Colleen discovered that giving her son a toy after each procedure provided a calming distraction from his pain. Martin celebrated his 24th anniversary of remission from the disease earlier this year.
Find out what's happening in Orland Parkfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
If you would like further information about the Treasure Chest Foundation, please contact Colleen Kisel at 708-687-TOYS (8697) or visit the Foundation’s web site at www.treasurechest.org.