However, the camp is equipped with water, toilets, lighted parking, stove, fridge, clothes dryers, and gas furnace.
[5] In March 2009 the decision was made by the Saskatchewan Council to close the camp, because of the high demolition and replacement cost for the main lodge that is now structurally unsafe, and the highway and railway crossing risk that exists at the camp location.
[6] Following his service in the North-West Rebellion until 1904, the area was the home to Maurice Macdonald Seymour, Commissioner of Public Health, Government of Saskatchewan[7][8] The home was donated to the local Boy Scouts becoming a kitchen and meeting area of Camp Gilwell.
The house was converted to a large open area, as the walls and entire top floor were removed.
In 2005, Alberta's Chinook Council hosted a joint Alberta-Saskatchewan Brotherhood Jamboree at Camp Impeesa, celebrating the common centennial of the two provinces.
Girl Guides previously owned Camp Can-ta-ka-ye on Lake Diefenbaker, near Birsay, but it has been sold.