contact us

1730 State Street Extension
Bridgeport, CT, 06605
United States

2038104041

Simply Smiles provides bright futures for children, families, and communities. The organization partners with populations in need to create physical and emotional environments where suffering is alleviated and from which local leaders can emerge.

BB77BE15-9684-4D10-9843-B26A6E61CCF3.jpg

Children's Village, Reservation, USA

Reservation children’s village

We are incredibly pleased to announce the successful transfer of the Simply Smiles Children’s Village to the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe.

Pictured above, Simply Smiles President & Founder Bryan Nurnberger marking the village’s transfer with CRST Chairman Ryman LeBeau.

A guiding principle of Simply Smiles is to provide bright futures by empowering the communities we are privileged to work with. The transfer of ownership and operations of our children’s village to the Lakota people exemplifies our dedication to that commitment and aligns with our values of sustainability, self-determination, and respect for Indigenous sovereignty.

The Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe is now positioned to be one of the few tribal nations with their own Native child welfare program.

Transferring a “turnkey” child welfare facility to the Tribe marks the pinnacle in our 15-year partnership. We want to express our deepest gratitude to everyone who supported the monumental effort to create our first-of-its-kind children’s village on the Reservation. Your time, hard work, unwavering dedication, and incredible generosity have made this leap forward possible for the Cheyenne River Sioux community.

“We’re excited for the Tribe and optimistic about the future of the village. Chairman LeBeau’s drive and commitment to Native youth is inspiring. A Native-owned and operated children’s village will provide unique, culturally centered care that will serve as a model for other tribes and organizations to follow.” Bryan Nurnberger, President, Simply Smiles, Inc

The journey to create the Reservation Children’s Village took us into uncharted territory, challenged us, and demonstrated the power of genuine partnership with a community in need. While this marks the successful end of one chapter, it also is the beginning of the next one for Simply Smiles. We will carry forward the strength gained and lessons learned as we continue to provide bright futures and redefine how society’s most vulnerable children are cared for.

More insights into this historic event:

  • The tribal government has been a core partner in building our children’s village on the Reservation. The Tribal Council unanimously and formally endorsed the village’s creation, adopted the Foster Home Safe Zone law, and offered support throughout the building and launch.

    In May 2023, the CRST Tribal Council approached Simply Smiles with an offer to assume ownership and operational responsibility of the children’s village in order to pursue their long-held and deep desire to have an independent, tribally owned and operated, child welfare initiative on the Reservation. Because Simply Smiles had created a beautiful facility and initiated a foster care program on their Reservation, this vision was now, finally, within the Tribe’s reach.

    Over the next year, our staff and board of directors worked collaboratively and tirelessly with the Tribe on the details of the transfer of ownership. We wanted to be sure that this was done in a manner that put the Tribe in a position of strength, ready to continue further down the path of this first-of-its-kind effort to care for Native children. After achieving that goal, we look forward to seeing how tribal ownership can positively impact generations of Native children.

  • Supporting Native nations to exercise their sovereignty (their independence) is the right thing to do.

    The right way for Simply Smiles to support the Tribe is to acknowledge and trust that they know what is best for their community, especially when it comes to strengthening their child welfare system. Not doing so, most often with justifications of lack of capacity, is the common denominator for so many failed government, church, and charitable programs. Simply Smiles is determined to not repeat these mistakes.

    How Native children are raised, and by whom, is one of the most important and sensitive issues for Native people. There is even a Federal law (the Indian Child Welfare Act, or “ICWA”) that codifies a preference for Native children to be raised by Natives and in their own communities. Simply Smiles was invited by the Tribe and tribal elders to facilitate caring for Lakota children via creating our village on the Cheyenne River Reservation. While the guidance of our Native partners and the letter and spirit of ICWA were central in what we built, the reality was always that Simply Smiles is a non-Native organization and for various reasons we required partnerships with both the Tribe and with the State of South Dakota Department of Social Services to run the village.

    Several decades before Simply Smiles began our work on the Reservation, the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, out of necessity, reluctantly outsourced the day-to-day operations of their child welfare needs to the state of South Dakota. This relinquishing of sovereignty and direct control over the future of their most vulnerable children was an anathema to the Cheyenne River community. In practice, it often resulted in Native children being placed outside of Native communities and with non-Native families. The Simply Smiles Children’s Village was designed to be, and successfully became, a huge step toward improving this situation by providing a child welfare program on the Reservation far more in line with Lakota desires and values.

    During our time caring for Native foster children at the village, Simply Smiles employed Native people as foster parents, as the village’s director, and as the village’s clinical coordinator, as well as in other roles. With the approval of our Native partners and advisors, we also employed non-Native persons as foster parents and in management positions. State of South Dakota Child Protective Services provided oversight, required compliance with state and federal laws, and assigned a caseworker for each child living at the village.

    Thanks to the Simply Smiles Children’s Village, the Tribe now has a path toward their vision of a tribal child welfare program run independently of non-Native entities, including the state of South Dakota’s oversight and control.

    For Native people, this is more than a matter of practice or preference. Assuming full control and responsibility for their children's future is a matter of surviving in the world as a Lakota people. For Simply Smiles, respecting and supporting the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe to do so is a tremendous success we can all be proud of.

  • The Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe intends to continue the fundamental vision for the village by using it to provide care for children who have been removed from their homes. How that shared vision is executed will surely be different and will take some time to develop and implement. There are many ways to define success and we look forward to seeing how the Tribe charts their course forward.

    Independent tribal ownership and management will also give the Tribe the option to offer services in addition to family foster care such as emergency shelter care and whole-family restoration efforts. The Tribe is committed to using the village to address the varied needs of the community’s children. And we are excited that they will be able to do so out of the beautiful facility that Simply Smiles built.

  • With the keys to the children’s village in hand, the Tribe is incredibly motivated to provide a fully Native-operated child welfare program on their Reservation.

    We hope that, with a modified operational model and the village being Native-owned and managed, tribal members who were previously unable to commit to becoming a state-licensed foster parent or relief caregiver, as well as those who were uncomfortable engaging with the state of South Dakota, will serve as village staff persons.

    In terms of operational funding, as a tribal nation, the Tribe has access to government funding sources beyond what Simply Smiles was able to access as a not-for-profit organization. While the tribe will determine their own funding sources, they will likely use TITLE IV-E funding, which is federal funding for government child welfare programs. They may also choose to access “638” Medicaid reimbursement rates, which provide expanded funding for offering services in underserved areas. Simply Smiles does not intend to provide further financial support for the village under tribal ownership.

  • Yes. But the transfer to the Lakota people was possible sooner than we anticipated. That’s a good thing!

    When we partnered with the Cheyenne River community in 2009, our tactic was to combine the knowledge and capacity of the Lakota people with the resources that Simply Smiles brought to the equation. The ultimate goal was that this chemistry would strengthen the community to be able to address their needs without, or with reduced, ongoing support from Simply Smiles.

    When we broke ground on the children’s village, one of our objectives was that children in our care would emerge from the village to become future leaders of the Lakota people. We were so pleased to see that the village inspired and positioned the current Reservation leadership to pursue a brighter future for the community’s children through the acquisition of the children’s village facility and the creation of an independent tribal child welfare program.

  • The Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe has assumed full ownership and operational responsibility for the children’s village facility. This includes the 99-year land lease being reassigned to the Tribe. Simply Smiles has not retained any ownership stake or operational rights or obligations. The village has been completely transferred to the Tribe to support their creation of an independent tribal child welfare program.

    It should be noted that Simply Smiles did not seek or receive any financial profit in transferring village ownership to the Tribe. Part of the deal did include the Tribe assuming the responsibility for “forgivable” financing from the South Dakota Housing Development Authority (financing that doesn’t need to be paid back if certain criteria are met for a term) and also satisfying financing that represented a small fraction of the village’s construction costs.

    We wanted to be sure that the transfer of the village to the Tribe was done in a manner that put the Tribe in a position of strength, ready to provide care for Native children, while also ensuring that Simply Smiles had no further financial obligation or liabilities. We believe we succeeded in that goal.

  • The day-to-day operations of the village are now the sole responsibility of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe. While we have offered our guidance and availability to support the passing of the village facility to the Tribe, Simply Smiles does not intend to engage in the ongoing operations of, or vision for, the village.

    Too often tribal nations or Native entities receive responsibility, ownership, possession of land or property, etc., only nominally. It is extremely important to the success of the Tribe’s child welfare efforts at the village that Simply Smiles does not appear to be, or actually be, “behind the scenes” in any way, as this would dilute the impact, opportunities, and possibilities that come with Native ownership and autonomy.

  • Not at this time.

    We are honored to have been welcomed into the Lakota community and able to engage in meaningful, equitable, partnerships that, for 15 years, made life better for the children and families of the Reservation. We believe that our actions have built the capacity of our friends and partners. Now is the time to step back and allow Cheyenne River to take our shared vision for the tribe’s children forward and further.

  • While a step back from our previous level of engagement on the Reservation is necessary, Simply Smiles has developed many meaningful and committed relationships among the Lakota people and the challenges of life in that environment of course persist.

    The Simply Smiles Reservation Emergency Fund will be used to respond to emergency needs on the Cheyenne River Reservation at the discretion of Simply Smiles. Examples include support after natural disasters such as blizzards and emergency medical expenses.

  • Thank you for your generosity! Donations designated to the Reservation dated March 18, 2024 and after are being applied to the Simply Smiles Reservation Emergency Fund.

    Donations designated to the children’s village on the Reservation that were received previously were allocated to village-related expenses.

  • More providing bright futures for children in need via our village model!

    For the immediate future, we will be focusing our efforts on our incredible Simply Smiles Children’s Village in Oaxaca, Mexico.

    Since 2003, Simply Smiles has partnered with communities to build and support “Casa Hogar” homes for children, construct dozens of houses for families, provide emergency aid, perform large-scale public health interventions, run countless youth programs, build schools, create two first-of-their-kind children’s villages…and so much more.

    The next community Simply Smiles supports will receive the same level of commitment, equitable partnership, and positive impact. And we know that you, the incredible Simply Smiles team, will be there to offer the support, sweat, and generosity that make our work possible. You have our deepest thanks.

 

The village campus

Three beautiful foster homes on eight acres. A counseling and office space. A 5,000-square-foot garage and warehouse. A concrete driveway & outdoor living space. A true oasis for Native youth. All of this—and much more—was made possible because of the Simply Smiles community:

The creation & evolution of the Simply Smiles Children’s Village

We built the Simply Smiles Children’s Village to offer a child placement option on the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Reservation that fulfills the spirit of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) by ensuring that Native children who have been removed from their homes can remain with “kin and community” and be raised within their Lakota culture. 

We now look forward to seeing how tribal ownership will take our shared vision for Lakota youth forward and further, positively impacting generations of Native children.  

We invite you to explore the significant milestones - and immense challenges - in creating this first-of-its-kind initiative on the Reservation:

 

Patience & partnership

We worked for a decade on the Cheyenne River Reservation before breaking ground on the children’s village

  • Simply Smiles has provided care for indigenous children in Mexico since our founding in 2003. When we began working on the Reservation in 2009, it was our intention to bring our successful childcare approach to Indian Country to address the foster care crisis for Native children.

    However, Indian Country’s unique challenges and history dictated that, in order to provide for Native children correctly and respectfully, Simply Smiles (and our incredible teams of volunteers and supporters) needed to learn, listen, and build trust.

    A decade of learning, earning that trust, and creating a partnership with the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe community was the first step in building the Simply Smiles Children's Village.

 

Land for the village

In 2018, Simply Smiles entered into an extended property lease for the children’s village that successfully kept the land Native-owned.

 

Tribal Council approval

In 2019, the Tribal Council of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe voted unanimously to adopt a formal resolution of support that authorized the creation of the Simply Smiles Children’s Village.

  • The trust and partnerships Simply Smiles built over our first decade working on the Reservation made this vital step possible. Our pro-bono Native attorneys at Kilpatrick & Townsend drafted the detailed resolution and the Waśagiya Najin (Standing Strong) Grandmothers’ Group of Native elders guided the resolution of support through the tribal government to unanimous approval and adoption.

    This agreement allowed us to build and run the Simply Smiles Children's Village and solidified our shared commitment to provide a child placement option that fulfills the spirit of the Indian Child Welfare Act by ensuring that Native children who have been removed from their homes can remain with kin and community.

 

Licensed Foster Care Agency

Simply Smiles was licensed by the State of South Dakota as a therapeutic foster care placement agency. This partnership also provided financial support from the South Dakota Department of Social Services.

  • The Simply Smiles Children’s Village was the only licensed foster care agency in South Dakota dedicated to providing Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) compliant foster care. Our partnership with the state was a recognition of the village’s unique, progressive, and vital function.

 

Our volunteers: Thank you!

Since 2009, hundreds of Simply Smiles volunteers helped to shape our work on the Reservation. Volunteer engagement was integral in creating and opening our Reservation Children’s Village

  • Over the course of a decade, Simply Smiles volunteers traveled to the Reservation to help implement dozens of community and youth programs, including annual summer camps, home repairs and & home construction, the creation of the La Plant Community Center, healthy food and gardening programs, cultural affirmation and appreciation efforts, arts & music, basketball clinics, nationwide travel for teens, educational support, scholarships, emergency responses, job training, and much more.

    When we pivoted to the children’s village initiative and broke ground on the campus, our volunteers jumped into action with their enthusiasm, hard work, advocacy, and generosity. We couldn’t have done it without you! Thank you!

 

Click through the gallery to see select photos of the village construction process.

Building the foster homes

To build the village, Simply Smiles had to figure out how to build homes in a remote location with extreme weather conditions.

  • The village campus is located in a tiny and remote town on the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Reservation in South Dakota. Seasonal temperatures range from well below zero to well over 100 degrees. High winds are the norm. There is no city sewer system. And the nearest big-box hardware store is 75 miles away.

    To say the least, building homes that are appropriate for this environment and doing so efficiently and cost-effectively was a major challenge. These challenges were greatly exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on labor and supply chains.

    But, thanks to our partnership with a Native-owned, Minnesota-based builder Dynamic Homes, our pro-bono architects and advisors, and local contractors, Simply Smiles developed a custom home design that meets the unique demands of the Reservation environment and needs of a foster care setting.

 

The Pandemic

Tough timing to develop, build, and launch an endeavor on the scale of the Simply Smiles Children’s Village…but the unwavering commitment of our supporters made it possible.

  • The Simply Smiles team faced the same challenges and uncertainties as everyone during the COVID-19 pandemic: Restricted travel, supply chain problems, and difficulty hiring for open positions.

 

Click on the image to read the full text of the Safe Zone legislation.

New Foster Home Safe Zone Law

Simply Smiles spearheaded a successful effort to write, lobby for, and enact legislation that will keep foster children, who live in Indian Country, safe.

  • The children’s village on the Reservation was built to serve as a safe and stable environment where Native children can heal and thrive. When we realized that existing tribal law was not sufficient to protect the foster homes, Simply Smiles engaged the Waśagiya Najin (Standing Strong) Elders’ Group and our pro-bono partners in the Native Law group at Kilpatrick & Townsend to take action.

    In 2022, the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribal Council, via unanimous vote, adopted into law our extensive Foster Home Safe Zone Ordinance. Modeled after school zone laws, the new law protects any foster home on the Reservation, including, of course, the children’s village. Some key provisions include:

    • A firearm or dangerous weapon cannot be discharged within a half-mile of a foster home.

    • Access to foster homes is restricted to authorized persons only.

    • A host of protections to ensure that foster homes can operate without interruption, distraction, or harassment.

    While the need for this law and the effort to enact it were unexpected, it demonstrates the challenges in creating the Simply Smiles Children’s Village and that Simply Smiles can do what is necessary to blaze a new path forward to fulfill our mission of redefining how foster care is delivered.

 

Extremely remote location

One of our biggest challenges to foster parent recruitment and staff retention was the incredibly remote location of the Simply Smiles Children’s Village. But our location on the Reservation was also central to our mission.

  • The Simply Smiles Children’s Village is located in a small town on the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Reservation in South Dakota.

    The nearest “big box” stores like Walmart and Menard’s Hardware are 80 miles away in Pierre. The state’s two major cities are Rapid City (200 miles) and Sioux Falls (300 miles).

    While the geographic location poses a daily challenge, being located on the Cheyenne River Reservation was a foundational component of the Simply Smiles Children’s Village. By building the village on the Reservation, children placed at the village could be raised with their “kin and community” and within their Lakota culture. A core principle of the village was to facilitate access to biological family and fulfill the steps toward reunification.

 

The sun setting behind the counseling building at the Simply Smiles Children’s Village.

Creating a Simply Smiles mental health practice

Simply Smiles created our own on-site, mental health practice at the Simply Smiles Children’s Village.

  • Simply Smiles provided therapeutic foster care. A core tenet of our children’s village was that every Native child in foster care needs and deserves culturally appropriate mental health care to heal and thrive. To provide this care in a remote location, Simply Smiles created our own mental health practice.

    Located on the village property and managed by clinical staff, Simply Smiles provided mental health services for the foster children and village staff. To create our mental health practice, Simply Smiles built a counseling space at the vllage, hired clinical staff, and became licensed as a Medicaid provider.

 

Professionalizing foster care

Our foster parents were highly trained employees whose full-time job is being a foster parent. Building this novel operational model and employment structure was paramount to the creation of the village…and challenging.

  • With foster parents at the center of the care we provided, we needed to create a structure where foster parents could apply their focus, energies, and talents where they are needed most: on being foster parents. To do so, Simply Smiles worked closely with our team of pro-bono attorneys at Shipman & Goodwin to professionalize foster care. This was an undertaking without a roadmap and with many possible labor law compliance pitfalls. Led by attorney Sarah Westby who worked tirelessly for months, a “Professional Foster Parent” employment structure was created that complies with state, federal, and tribal labor laws.

    Simply Smiles worked to recruit both foster parents and relief caregiving positions through an extensive multi-year, multi-state, multi-platform recruitment campaign.

 

Opening the village & providing foster care

More than a decade of learning, working, and earning trust in Indian Country was necessary to envision, build, and launch the first-of-its-kind Simply Smiles Children's Village.

  • In partnership with the Reservation community, Native activists, elders, child welfare professionals, and the state of South Dakota Child Protective Services, Simply Smiles built the Simply Smiles Children’s Village: a community of foster families offering a child placement option that fulfills the spirit of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) by ensuring that Native children who have been removed from their homes can remain with kin and community.

    In 2019, Simply Smiles broke ground on the village campus and began building its foster homes. By 2022, the children’s village boasted three beautiful four-bedroom homes, a dedicated counseling building, and a 5,200-square-foot garage and storage building. And, upon hiring staff, including foster parents, we welcomed children into our care.

    The remote location and continued difficulties in fully staffing the village with long-term foster parents, mental health professionals, and support staff made operations challenging. In response, we paused our foster care operations in Spring 2023, as we worked with the Cheyenne River Tribe to transfer ownership and operations of the village to the tribe.

 

Pictured above, Simply Smiles President & Founder, Bryan Nurnberger marking the village’s transfer with CRST Chairman, Ryman Lebeau.

Village transfer to the Tribe

Transferring a “turnkey” child welfare facility to the Tribe marks the pinnacle in our 16-year partnership. We want to express our deepest gratitude to everyone who supported the monumental effort to create our first-of-its-kind children’s village on the Reservation. Your time, hard work, unwavering dedication, and incredible generosity have made this leap forward possible for the Cheyenne River community.

  • The journey to create the Reservation Children’s Village took us into uncharted territory, challenged us, and demonstrated the power of genuine partnership with a community in need. While this marks the successful end of one chapter, it also is the beginning of the next one for Simply Smiles. We will carry forward the strength gained and lessons learned as we continue to provide bright futures and redefine how society’s most vulnerable children are cared for.

    Read more here.

special acknowledgments

The Simply Smiles Children’s Village was made possible because of the generosity and enthusiasm of our donors; the passion of our volunteers; the insights and expertise of child welfare advocates, construction professionals, legal experts, and the many, many stakeholders who helped to build our beautiful village, design a supportive model of foster parenting, and allowed us to accept children into our care. Thank you!

In addition, we want to extend special recognition to:

  • Former foster parents and staff who helped to build the village

  • Chairman Ryman LeBeau and Cheyenne River Tribal Council

  • Waśagiya Najin (Standing Strong) Grandmothers’ Group

  • Louie Blue Coat and the Dakota Association

  • South Dakota Housing Development Authority

  • DSS/CPS/State of South Dakota

Press highlights from our children’s village on the Reservation

Reservation Emergency Fund

The Simply Smiles Reservation Emergency Fund will be used to respond to emergency needs on the Cheyenne River Reservation at the discretion of Simply Smiles. Examples include support after natural disasters such as blizzards and emergency medical expenses. 

Simply Smiles has developed many meaningful and committed relationships among the Lakota people and the challenges of life in that environment of course persist. This fund allows Simply Smiles to offer emergency aid to those living on the Reservation.

Note: Donations designated to the Reservation dated March 18, 2024 and after are being applied to the Reservation Emergency Fund. Donations designated to the children’s village on the Reservation that were received previously were allocated to village-related expenses.


Beyond the village

Over the course of 15 years, Simply Smiles volunteers, supporters, and partners helped to implement many important and impactful programs on the Cheyenne River Reservation, including:

Summer Camp & Youth Programs

Food, Garden & Healthy Living

Community Building

Educational Support & Opportunities

Annual Christmas Party

New Homes

Emergency Aid

Oral History Project

Cultural Enrichment

Stay tuned for an overview of our work over 15 years on the Reservation!


Thank you!