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Dear Andy,
I was going through my old Scout equipment the other day with my
grandson. Even though I'll be 58 this year I still have everything I
used when Scouting was a big part of my life. My grandson, who’s just
6, was full of questions about everything. While we were taking my mess
kit apart and putting it back together, he asked me a question I
couldn't answer. Maybe you can help. What were the holes in the frying
pan handle used for? I just drew a blank, but promised to find out for
him. Did they actually have a use? I know this may be a stupid
question, but I need to know. Thanks! (David Kane)
That’s not a stupid question at all! In fact, your grandson has pretty
sharp and inquisitive eyes! The small round hole at what would be the
rear of the handle (when reversed and screwed tightly, for making the
handle) would have a piece of twine through it, so the pan could be hung
on a twig to dry after washing. The oval hole was simply to reduce the
amount of aluminum needed and to strengthen that angled portion of the
handle/clamp.
Now that these mysteries are solved, I hope you'll take him out in the
back yard and do some cooking with it, just like you did as a Scout!
(Do you remember how we'd make a soapy paste to coat the outside of the
pan and pot, to make them easier to clean later?) Have fun!
Hi Andy,
Thanks for your terrific columns!
I ran into a
strange situation… I was informed at the council's Scout shop that the
oval Webelos badge has been discontinued for 2010 (actually, the person
behind the counter said that the oval badge orders will not be shipped
out at all in this centennial year), so that Webelos Scouts with tan
shirts will have to use the blue, diamond-shaped Webelos badge or the
centennial diamond-shaped Webelos badge instead. Why temporarily
discontinue the oval badge only to bring it back next year? I would
think most would have preferred the option to select either current
badge or the centennial badge, in either oval or diamond format. (Kirk
Sumida, Aloha Council, HI)
I just happened to be at my local council service center earlier today
and dropped by the Scout shop. Guess what... There, in a bin, plain as
the nose on my face, were the 2010 oval Webelos badges! So, I'd have to
say at this point that whomever you spoke with was pretty uninformed!
But the good news is that your Webelos Scouts definitely have an oval
badge for their tan shirts—and it’s a Centennial badge, to boot!
Dear Andy,
I’m trying
to locate an updated version of BSA bylaws and I can't seem to find it
on any of the scout sites I looked at. The question is, when a
volunteer is removed from a district committee position, how is that
position filled again? Does it have to follow the same rules as when
nominating a new committee and its members at the start of each charter
year? (Tina Mitchell, South Florida Council)
Short
answer: Yup.
Hi Andy,
We have two
Webelos II and three Webelos I Scouts, and need to know if we can start
our own Boy Scout troop. How many youth members do we need, to do this?
(Glenda Kohli, Black Swamp Area Council, OH)
Check with your local council, particularly your District Executive, but
as I recall it takes a minimum of five boys to start a troop. There's
also a minimum number of adult volunteers needed, so be sure to check.
Do you have a sponsor? A place to meet?
With all of this, is there some reason why these boys wouldn't be
joining a nearby troop that’s already established?
Hi
Andy,
I’m helping
our latest Eagle Scout’s mom with her son's court of honor. I'm looking
for the list of people to write to, for requesting letters of
congratulations (e.g., the President, State Governor, Senators, and so
on). I found one online last year, but for the life of me I can't find
it now. Any information you can send my way would be appreciated. (Julie
Monser, Los Padres Council, CA)
Just Google "eagle congratulations letter" or simply go right here:
http://www.usscouts.org/eagle/eaglecongrats.asp
Dear Andy,
My son’s
been a Den Chief since December 2009. He still needs Den Chief
training, but there are no such courses available in our area. I’ve seen
them offered at University of Scouting Pow Wows in the past, but,
unfortunately, last year none was offered. Then, he was scheduled to
take this training at a nearby merit badge college, but due to the
weather, this event had to be rescheduled and the Den Chief training was
dropped. I recently saw that Den Chief training can be completed
on-line. Can my son take the on-line version to fulfill his
requirement, or is that just a kind of “fast-start”-type training to
inform a Scout of what he can expect to do as a Den Chief, so that he’ll
still need to attend a formal Den Chief training course? (Robye Delaney)
If your son's been a Den Chief for some 3-1/2 months (and he's
presumably being trained, OJT-style, by his Den Leader), what does he
"need" a further Den Chief training course for? Even the Den Chief
Service Award can be earned (see req. 2) without attending a formal
training course, when the Scout is trained by either the Den Leader or
an Assistant Cubmaster.
Dear Andy,
Can new Boy
Scouts (recently bridged from Webelos) carry a pocket knife, if they’ve
previously earned their Whittlin’ Chip, but haven’t yet earned their
Totin’ Chip yet? (Lisa Stephens)
A Webelos Scout recently bridged to a troop and Boy Scouting would do
himself well to show his Whittlin' Chip to his Scoutmaster and state
that he'd like to earn his Totin' Chip. The Totin' Chip is for Boy
Scouts (the Whittlin' Chip's for Cubs), so it's a natural thing to want
to earn this as quickly as possible! Of course, until he's earned his
Totin' Chip, he'd be well-advised to leave his knife safe at home.
Hi Andy,
I’m in the
middle of an "issue" with one of the units in our district... It
revolves around the first requirement for Eagle Palms as set forth by
the BSA, and I can’t find any BSA policy or definition of "active." It
appears as if this is left up to local unit policy. Can you point me in
any direction for an answer? (John Erickson, DC, Northern Lights
Council, MN)
It’s absolutely incorrect for any individual, unit, district, or
council to attempt to define "active." The BSA national standard on
active may be found in the current (2010) edition of Boy Scout
Requirements, together with the policy about no messin' with it.
Thank you,
Andy! I’m very aware that if the BSA sets a policy there ain't no
messin' with it—no more; no less—and most of our Scouters don’t have a
problem with that. The problem has been wading through the mountains of
paper to find the policy. I’ve been looking for the written words and
you showed me the light! Thanks again. (John Erickson)
Glad I could
help!
Hi Andy,
We have an
issue in our pack that we’d like to get your take on. The grandmother
of one of our Cubs advertised “patch sewing services” and our previous
Committee Chair sent out a pack-wide e-mail “blast.” A parent hired
her, at $2 a patch and a total of 25 patches for her son’s shirt and red
patch vest. But when this mom went to pick up the completed work, the
grandmother charged her $99, claiming that “It took a lot of gas to go
all over the place finding the exact color thread for each patch.” I
asked the boy’s mom if she’d ever been contacted by grandma, letting her
know that the cost had changed, and the answer was that this hadn’t
happened. So, do we, the pack committee, get Grandma’s side of the
story and request restitution for the verbal contract of $2 a patch?
One committee member thinks it’s not our business, another feels that
this was a personal transaction and nothing more, but the rest of us
feel it was a pack-related transaction. Any thoughts you might have
would be greatly appreciated! (Name & Council Withheld)
Oh what a lovely mess! Everybody got it wrong... The Chair would have
been better off not sending out a pack-wide "broadcast," Grandma should
have honored her original price, and that parent should have considered
that magic patch glue stuff, for a couple o' bucks at the local Scout
shop, or simply told Grandma, “You get fifty bucks, or you now own a
patch vest.” Now, no one's gonna be happy, no matter what happens.
Frankly, I'd say this is for the three of 'em to work out, and the pack
committee doesn’t touch it, not even with a ten-foot pole!
Dear Andy,
I appreciate
the guidance you’ve provided me over the past several years that I have
been an adult leader, through your columns.
We have
several adult leaders that either refuse or don’t make it a priority to
get leader-specific training. We can see it is a hindrance as the
Scouts try to advance and learn outdoor and other skills. Our
Scoutmaster is frustrated and though he wants to make it a “fish or cut
bait” situation for the adult leaders in question, he’s hesitating. I
don’t think it’s fair to the Scouts (we have five patrols and assign an
ASM to each patrol) and Patrol Leaders, who may look for guidance in a
variety of situations when the adult(s) in question aren’t trained
adequately. So, my question is whether Assistant Scoutmasters have to
complete leader-specific training to remain in that position. (Name &
Council Withheld)
First, how
about we stop mother-henning these Scouts and their patrols. Unless
we're talking about a brand-new Scout patrol (of recently crossed-over
Webelos), patrols absolutely do not need some dad hovering over 'em like
some gray-haired Big Buddy... Boy Scouting is for BOYS; its men-and-boys
connections are actually quite minimal.
Patrol Leaders learn their skills from, ideally, their Senior Patrol
Leader or another Scout who knows and can teach the skill(s), or—in
their absence—the Scoutmaster, period.
ASMs have specific sets of responsibilities, and the Scoutmaster would
do the troop well to re-read that section of his Scoutmaster Handbook!
But, just so the point's not missed: One job ASMs don't have is to
mother-hen some patrol.
So, with this as background, it's time to fish or cut bait. The ASMs
take their position-specific training by end of June this year or
they're out of that position, and they can re-register as committee
members (and take the committee training, which is a lighter load), or
de-register entirely. Here’s the fundamental principle: If adults are
unwilling to do what’s expected of them, how can they possibly expect to
be role-models for the youth they’re ostensibly there to serve?
Hi Andy,
Regarding
merit badge “blue card” management and the troop… Should the advancement
coordinator take and keep both the unit’s part of the card and
the Scout’s part as well, giving the Scout his part back only at the
next Court of Honor, along with the badge itself and the signed merit
badge certificate? (Understand that the court of honor may be weeks or
months away.) Or, should the advancement coordinator give the Scout’s
part back to him right away, after checking it over for completeness,
and only keep the unit’s copy of the card? (Tina Daly Chatroo)
Actually, it's the Scout himself who is in charge of the three segments
of the "blue card." When he's completed the merit badge's requirements,
the Merit Badge Counselor signs the unit and the applicant segments and
keeps the third segment for his or her own files (I keep mine in a
three-ring binder using plastic baseball card holders; however, a rubber
band works just as well). The Scout then takes the remaining two
segments to his Scoutmaster, and obtains the Scoutmaster's signature
indicating that this merit badge has been recorded as earned in the
troop's records, giving the Scoutmaster the unit segment and keeping the
remaining (applicant) segment for himself.
When he receives the actual signed merit badge certificate (along with
the badge), the smart Scout will staple his blue card segment to the
card, and keep both in a safe place.
Hi Andy,
I’ve been told that BSA rules stipulate that Boy Scouts aren’t allowed
to use power tools. But I see in the Guide to Safe Scouting (on
the chart) that power tools are acceptable for Boy Scouts’ use; however,
I find no reference to that in the text of this book.
My son is beginning his Eagle project and the use of power tools,
especially power drills and power screwdrivers, will be very important
in building benches. I agreed that I’d try to find an official BSA
response for him to share with our troop committee. Can you provide a
reference point that we can use, to show the committee that Scouts may
use power tools and, if there are qualifiers, what they are? (Debbie
Cross, National Capital Area Council, VA)
The reason you can't find anything in writing is that the BSA has no
policies whatsoever regarding power tools, except for chain saws (which
your son won't need, anyway). So, just ask whoever's tellin' you or
your son this stuff to produce the purported "policies" in writing, so
that you can read 'em. Meanwhile, the easiest way to avoid a big stink
and still get the job done is to use hand tools. That's right: hand
tools, like hand drills and regular screwdrivers and saws and so on...
These are perfectly fine tools, they're relatively quiet, your son needs
no "power source" except the hands and arms of his helpers, and no one
can stop him from using these, or insist on
"supervising-like-a-hovercraft" while they're in use! Go for it!
Hi
Andy,
I became an
Assistant Scoutmaster about seven years ago. In that time, another ASM
was also the troop’s advancement coordinator. Then, about two years ago,
I became the advancement coordinator. The new Scoutmaster doesn't like
me, or my wife, who is the troop’s treasurer, and wants us out of our
positions. The Chartered Organization Representative wants my wife to
stay on as treasurer, but the Scoutmaster keeps telling her that she’s
been treasurer long enough. Meanwhile, neither the parents nor the
other committee members have any sort of problem with her.
At a recent
committee meeting, I was given the choice of being either an ASM or a
committee member-and-advancement coordinator. The prior advancement
coordinator, having been an ASM as well, had never sat on a board of
review. I put the question to our District Executive and he claimed
that this is a grey area and isn’t prohibited. As an ASM, I have no
responsibilities in that position: I’m not in charge of new Scouts, a
patrol, older Scouts, or anything that would interfere with keeping
track of advancement records. Which way do we go here? (Name & Council
Withheld)
The BSA's statement is plain as the nose on yer face: Boards of review
are made up of registered members of the troop committee. The BSA also
states precisely what the responsibilities of an Assistant Scoutmaster
are, and being the troop's advancement coordinator isn't among them.
The BSA also describes the troop advancement coordinator as being a
member of the troop committee. Consequently, regardless of what
individuals in your troop may or may not have done in the past, there's
absolutely no reason why you all can't get this right, starting right
away. As for you, personally, if you're going to serve on the
committee, as advancement coordinator, then you'd absolutely want to
change your registration code from AS to MC.
Dear Andy,
The Eagle
Scout Leadership Service Project Workbook has signature lines for
"Scoutmaster/Coach/Advisor." I interpret this to mean the Unit
leader—that is, Boy Scout Troop Scoutmaster, or Varsity Team
Coach, or Venture Crew Advisor; and not Eagle Advisor.
The Eagle Advisor may sign in the Committee Member space. I’d
appreciate an official judgment from the BSA National Office. (David
Grulke, SM, Connecticut Rivers Council)
Of course, I’m Andy and not the “BSA National Office;” however, and
luckily, "judgment" or "interpretation" isn't necessary... You've read
it exactly correctly! If you need more, do contact the BSA national
service office in Irving, TX (982-580-2000) directly.
Dear Andy,
Somewhere,
there’s information about when an active Scout dies his parents can be
given a certificate in his honor. I’d hoped that I’d never have the
need for one, but I'm looking for it now. Can you help me? (Al Cresanto,
ASM, West Tennessee Area Council)
It's called the SPIRIT OF THE EAGLE award... Google that, and you'll get
a variety of links for description and application.
I'm sorry for this family's loss, and for the loss of a Scout –
Dear Andy,
What Scout ranks and leadership positions are OK for signing off on
other Scouts’ rank requirements, particularly the skill-based Scout
through First Class requirements? There seems to be an opinion in our
troop that only the SPL and ASPLs can do this. We’ve just set up Troop
Guides with new Scout patrols; the Troop Guides are all at least First
Class rank (some are Star), and if they can sign off on the rank
requirements of their patrol members, it would help spread the work
load, develop them as leaders, and help build their credibility
as leaders in the eyes of their patrol members. (Cliff Boldt, MC &
advancement coordinator, Patriots’ Path Council, NJ)
Many, many troops have an arrangement whereby any Scout of a higher rank
than the Scout working on a requirement can sign that Scout off when he
completes the requirement successfully. Most often, this is his own
Patrol Leader, which is about as appropriate as you can get! To put
this burden on the Senior Patrol Leader of even a modestly-sized troop
can be not only overwhelming for the SPL but it also slows down the rate
at which the Scouts can advance! The Senior Patrol Leader simply has
enough to do with running the troop meetings, working with the Patrol
Leaders, and receiving leadership guidance from the Scoutmaster, so that
adding this to his already full plate can cause the whole thing to come
crashing down! Moreover, ASPLs have specific responsibilities; they're
not simply "substitutes" for the SPL, so that throwing this to them
inhibits what they're supposed to be doing!
Bottom line: Let the Patrol Leaders know that they can sign off on rank
requirements, so long as it's for a rank below their own.
On Troop Guides: These Scouts are not "temporary Patrol Leaders"
for new Scout patrols or even members of the new Scout patrol for
which they’re mentoring the patrol’s elected Patrol Leader! New Scout
patrols elect their own Patrol Leaders, just as all other patrols do,
and the role of the Troop Guide is to coach and guide the new Scout
Patrol Leader; not to do his job for him. (To emphasize: Troop Guides
are members of their own patrols; they're not members of the new
Scout patrol they're assigned to on a short-term basis!) A good way to
handle advancement requirements in a new Scout patrol is for the Troop
Guide to informally “re-certify” what the Patrol Leader has stated
regarding his patrol members having completed requirements, and on the
strength of this testimony, the Scoutmaster can actually sign the book.
Finally, keep in mind that committee members don't "substitute" for
Patrol Leaders or even the Scoutmaster, in coaching Scouts or signing
off on requirements. The principle here is, as always, Never do for a
Scout what he can do for himself.
Dear Andy,
I’m a new
District Commissioner. My problem is motivating our Unit Commissioners
to do their jobs, from visitation to reporting. I’ve been able to
recruit new Commissioners well, but can't motivate them. Any ideas?
(Richard Furrow, DC, Blue Ridge Mountains Council, VA)
There's a conundrum here... If you've "recruited well," then these new
Commissioners should know that a big part of their job is to show up at
the units they serve! Heck, if they're not visiting their units, and
they're not keeping track of their units' progress and improvements in
delivering the Scouting program, then just what are they doing,
besides wearing red jackets n’ drinking their units’ coffee? So my big
question is this: What were they told they'd be doing, when they first
signed on?
OK, enough about that (you got the point!)... How about asking them
what has to happen, in order for them to get out there and do what
they're commissioned to do? What are the barriers? What do they think
might be done to overcome those barriers? How will they do this? This
becomes a true brain-storming session with them, to get them out of
their caves and get them thinking about what's really important.
Finally, do they even know that, after unit leaders, they are the
most important people in Scouting! This is what you need
to instill in them!
Now, even
though it’s described in the Commissioner Fieldbook for Unit Service,
some folks are simply shy or unsure about what to do when they walk into
a unit’s meeting. So, maybe we use The Buddy System (you’ve heard of
that, right?<wink>). That’s right… Take a new Commissioner under your
wing and you both go and visit the unit, together (ride-share, even, so
that you have pre- and post-visit talking time). While visiting,
introduce him around, and then model the behavior you’re expecting from
him, so that he gets the idea that it’s not a Daniel-in-the-lion’s-den
situation. This may be all he needs to gather the confidence to do this
by himself!
Hi Andy,
I’ve been
scouring the Internet hoping to find someone, or somewhere, to go to for
help that could possibly shed some light on how Eagle projects are
funded. My son is working toward his Eagle rank and was told by the
gentlemen who overseas this for our area (sorry, I’m not sure what his
title is) that my son can’t solicit donations for his project—that he
must do fund-raising to obtain the dollars he needs to carry out his
project. Is this true? I’m having a hard time finding any rules or
even guidelines to help us understand this. This same gentleman stated
that this is a new policy, recently established at the national level.
By way of background, this is my second son to go for his Eagle. My
first son solicited materials and cash donations from our local business
community for his project without a hitch. Can you help me understand
how and/or when this may have changed, and point me to the place to find
the rules to follow now? I’d really appreciate any insight you can
give! (Laura L. Hebert)
I'm guessing that your son will need to ask whomever has been
pontificating this malarkey just what the difference is between
"fund-raising" and "soliciting," since asking folks to
contribute—whether one-on-one or en masse—still boils down to the same
thing: obtaining donations. You need to know that the BSA makes no
distinction between the two. Your son might ask—as politely as
possible, of course, and in-person (no email!)—to be shown, in BSA
literature, where it says that one is OK and the other isn't (the reason
for asking this question is obviously because no such distinction will
be found!).
As a
personal aside, the Eagle candidates in our town who need funding and
materials go to our local Rotary Club with the project plan and its
financial needs and we always write them a check, then they go to the
local hardware store and lumber yard and, again showing the plan, obtain
many of the materials shown in the plan for free or at cost, and then
they do a car-wash or something else to capture any remaining dollars
that might still be needed, and there’s no question but that all of
these activities demonstrate leadership capabilities (and a huge scoop
of bravery and aplomb, too!).
Dear Andy,
We have a
blessed troop. We are active campers and on average have more than 14
troop campouts a year, year after year. Unfortunately our monthly
campouts are limited by travel time, to and from, so we stick pretty
closely to a maximum four hour one-way trip.
But when it
comes to summer camps of a week or more, we don’t mind traveling great
distances! Over the last several years, we’ve camped at Skymont in
Tennessee, Camp Daniel Boone in North Carolina, and we especially liked
Camp Alexander, near Lake George in Colorado (this one was the best
we’ve ever attended—Incredible program, staff, and, of course, food.
In addition
to our yearly summer camps, our we also always send a trek/expedition
group to Sea Base, Northern Tier, or Philmont (We rotate the High
Adventure camps each summer, and we’re already looking forward to that
new one that supposed to open in West Virginia in a couple of years!)
As we
continue to broaden our horizons, I sure wish there was a list of, say,
the “10 Best” or “20 Best” BSA camps of all time. I’ve searched for
such a list on the Internet without success. Would it be possible for
you to give me leads on some of the best summer camps you’re aware of
or—ideally—have first-hand experiences with?
There’s a
dilemma, of course: Since summer camps are a huge expense for the troop
and our Scouts, we can’t afford to spend the money we do and go to a
camp that has an incredible marketing program but then just doesn’t
shape up when you get there! We’d appreciate any help you can offer.
(Jeff Whitnah, SM, Sam Houston Area Council, TX)
There's a non-BSA book available through
amazon.com,
among other places, titled Scout Camps USA - A Guide to Boy Scouts of America Summer Camps , by Paul Fairbank. Check it out. As you do
this, make a list of top criteria that you're looking for, so that when
you contact selected councils, you can ask if their camps offer these!
My own personal favorites are Camp Kern, in the high Sierras of
California, on Huntington Lake, run by the Southern Sierra Council, out
of Bakersfield, with staff development, when I was there with my troop
in the early 90's, was absolutely second to none, and Camp Cherry
Valley, run by the San Gabriel Valley Council, out of Pasadena, CA—this
camp is located on the leeward side of Catalina Island, with ocean
swimming and canoeing. If you’re looking for “merit badge heaven,” take
a serious look at Ockanickan Scout Reservation, run by the Bucks County
Council, in Pennsylvania—at last count, they offered some 80+ merit
badges, with emphasis on completions, not “partials.” Finally, there’s
Sabattis Adventure Camp, located on Long Lake in the Adirondack
Wilderness of New York and run by the Patriots’ Path Council based in
Florham Park, NJ. Good hunting --
NetCommish Note:
The referenced book is out-of-print and only used versions are available
- I've linked it to Amazon for anyone interested. We maintain free
information on Scout Camps at our
ScoutCamp.org website that may be helpful.
Dear Andy,
My troop has a parent who has become a major problem. When he doesn't
get his way, he uses foul language, threats, and general intimidation
tactics, and has even come close to physical violence. We’ve tried to
reason with him, but to no avail. Before the police get involved in
front of the Scouts we’d like him out of the troop. Are there any
precedents for having a parent removed from a troop and/or its troop
meetings? (Name & Council Withheld)
I'm no attorney or peace officer, and can't provide actual legal advice,
but in this situation of abuse (verbal abuse is still abuse), I'd
immediately, go to the chartered organization and ask the head of it to
write a succinct letter to him that points out that foul language,
threatening of minors, and general emotional abuse of minors is not
permitted on the chartered organization's property, by anyone, for any
reason, and that he must immediately stop this or he will be asked to
remove himself from the property, permanently. I'd then ask the head of
the organization to mail this letter "registered," so that there’s proof
of delivery. Following this, if this inappropriate behavior is
repeated, I'd contact the local police department, show the letter, and
ask for a stay-away order (or whatever it's called in the jurisdiction).
If, among your troop parents, or among the members of the chartered
organization, you do have an attorney, seek counsel—and action. This
kind of abuse, as you correctly perceive, cannot be permitted to
continue a moment longer.
At most, he
will be permitted to drop his son off at the curb, and pick his son up
at the curb, but he is not to set foot on the sponsor’s property,
period, no exceptions.
Since these
behaviors are largely of the bullying kind, you may be confronted with
threats, such as removing his son from the troop, refusing to drive to
hikes and campouts, and so on. Should this occur, your immediate
response can only be, “We regretfully accept your son’s resignation from
the troop.” Then do the paperwork the very next day. He needs to
understand in no uncertain terms that his tactics will not wash.
Andy,
I’m an
Assistant Scoutmaster. The troop’s advancement coordinator just
announced to the entire troop that all merit badges earned prior to
obtaining the rank of First Class rank cannot counted toward advancement
to Star ranks, and that any merit badges earned prior to Star cannot be
counted toward advancement to Life rank; however, they can be used
toward the overall merit badge count for Eagle Rank. This edict is very
disturbing to many of my of our Scouts, since while at summer camp last
year they earned merit badges while they were Second Class and now none
of these will be counted toward their advancement to Star, now that
they’re First Class rank, because they didn’t earn them after becoming
First Class. This is also confusing to me, since the advancement
policies tell the Scout: "There are more than 100 merit badges for you
to choose from. You may earn any merit badge at any time, with
Scoutmaster approval. Don't wait for someone to tell you when and which
merit badge to work on. You don't need to reach a certain rank in order
to be eligible…” This seems to be in contradiction with the recent
announcement by our advancement coordinator. Can you shed some light on
this subject and the requirements as stated by the national council?
(Bill Hamilton)
The plain fact is that advancement coordinator is wrong. Yes, wrong.
What this person is stating bears no resemblance to BSA policies and
cannot be put in place (no individual, unit, district, or council can
supersede BSA national standards and policies). The Committee Chair,
Scoutmaster, and all Assistant Scoutmasters need to immediately meet
with him and tell him that what he has stated is incorrect and will not
be permitted to happen.
DON'T USE EMAIL. The Committee Chair needs to call him on the phone
immediately and tell him that he is to arrive 15 minutes ahead of the
next troop meeting, where you all together meet him and tell him that no
BSA literature—Scoutmaster Handbook, Boy Scout Handbook, Boy Scout
Requirements, BSA Advancement Policies and Procedures—supports what
he's said and it will absolutely not happen. If he tries to argue, give
him 5 minutes to find, in BSA literature, anything that supports his
position (which he won't be able to do, of course). If he continues to
argue, the Committee Chair simply and with no equivocation tells him
this: "Either this goes away immediately by your doing, or we will do it
and you will consider yourself relieved of all further responsibility
with this troop." That's right: He's fired. End of story, and no
reinstatement.
You all absolutely cannot permit this to last a moment longer. It
damages and confuses the Scouts, and it's wrong, wrong, wrong.
Andy,
As our pack’s awards chair, I always try to make the receiving of any
award a little more than just routine. Our Bear den has spent several
months working on the Emergency Preparedness award. I’ve obtained a
2'x2' vinyl poster of the Emergency Preparedness, to be placed on a
wooden easel. Is there anyone who has already done one of these
presentations? My having 54 years of continuous Scouting has made me
much aware of the needs of the boys to make presentations special.
(David Pottorff, MC, Gulf Stream Council)
For something like this, I'd sure be tempted to invite your local Fire
Captain to come and make the presentation!
Dear Andy,
I’ve been
researching flag ceremonies to find out the position of the American
flag when doing an opening ceremony. The best information I can find is
that the American flag is always on its own right. So, when doing the
opening ceremony, the American flag is carried on its own the right
(relative to the audience) and posted on its own right (relative to the
speaker, lectern, front-of-the-room). Given this, the American flag
needs to cross over the other flags to get to the speaker's right. When
crossing over, the American flag should be in front of the other flags.
I have seen the front to be in front relative to the audience (which is
part of the procession) and I have also seen the front as relative to
the speaker (posting position). Can you tell me if "in front" when
crossing over means the American flag is in front of the other flags
relative to the audience, or relative to the speaker? Since the American
flag is posted on the right of the speaker, I’ve always said that the
American flag should cross closest to the speaker, but I can’t find
anything to either support or disprove this viewpoint. (Tony Zabloudil,
Last Frontier Council, OK)
Think
direction of travel.
The American flag is always to its own right when parallel to one or
more other flags, or in front of all other flags (i.e., all others
follow behind). Therefore, the American flag is crossed by its bearer
from right to left approaching the flag stands, and the unit flag etc.
crosses from left to right, behind it. This way, when posted, the
American flag is to its own right, now facing the audience.
Thanks for
asking a pretty cool question!
Happy Scouting!
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(March 28, 2010 – Copyright © Andy McCommish 2010) |
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