Jump to content

Scout Commish

Members
  • Content Count

    21
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Scout Commish

  1. Commissioner Service appears to be on the upswing. Change is usually an evolution, not a revolution. If you read the last couple of Commissioner Newsletters, you will find many improvements outlined. Our National Commissioner has been busy. http://www.scouting.org/filestore/pdf/522-975_09_SpringSummerP2.pdf http://www.scouting.org/filestore/pdf/522-975_FallWinter09_web.pdf These include: An increasing focus on unit visits and the gradually improving UTVS. A volunteer driven national support staff for Commissioners. Increased communication. These support staf
  2. I've got my new uniform. Nearly everything is good about it. The cargo pockets are useable. The regular pockets are still not as deep as I would like. The Boy Scouts of America above the right pocket is not embroidered. I'm not sure what it is and wonder how it will hold up. The flags are also a different material. I got the short sleeve and it seems to have room for the Commissioner Arrowhead. They seem to run a little on the large size.
  3. By Googling Quality Unit Patches, you get The Quality Unit Patch site. From the site: 4. Q: Help! I'm a new Cubmaster who's confused. Isn't the award earned for the calendar year? A: Earning the National Quality Unit Award is based upon the past charter year achievements. It is earned by the unit during the month following charter renewal. For example, a unit that rechartered in December, 2002 (Dec. 31) earns the award in January, 2003 (Jan. 1). They would wear the 2003 emblem. On the form, the unit's leaders make a commitment for the new charter year. This is meant to be use
  4. Try this website for "The Scout Patch Auctions". http://tspa.com/Forum/greymatter/archives/YIR2005.pdf The record patch price at auction was $71,000 for a 1947 World Jamboree patch. They say that the previous record was $28,000 for a lodge 4 chenille.
  5. This was first envisioned at the OA Adviser training at Philmont in 2000. In BSA terms, this was accomplished relatively quickly.
  6. And the next department that needs shaking up is Public Relations. The current group needs to be renamed "Damage Control". When is the last time that you read a positive piece in the paper or on TV that was generated by national? It appears that National is suffering from inbreeding. When you have a troubled department or area of responsibility, it is sometimes a smart thing to hire from the outside and gain some new ideas and processes. Restructuring is also a way to get rid of the fifedoms that develop over time. National is overdue for a shake up. Scout C
  7. If I were to go in to my boss and tell him that I will exceed budget by cutting back on salespeople, reducing inventory, start charging people to enter the store, and reducing store hours; he would look at me like I was from Mars and then tell me that my talents might be better utilized elsewhere. Yet, this is essentially what happens when a Council gets into trouble. The Scout Executive cuts back on DEs, reduces Scout Shop inventory, trys to make money on events, and reduces the service center hours. Usually the board allows this because it is meant to be a "temporary" measure. The re
  8. I had a Tiger jump up on the lap of the DE at a Pack Meeting. He asked what he did and was told that he was in charge of Scouting in the area. After a moment of sizing up the DE, the Tiger says, "My brother has more patches than you. He should be in charge." We later visited the USS Kidd (Destroyer) in Shreveport for an overnight. The Kidd had been hit by a kamikaze plane in WWII. We told the boys that they could look around and this boy swept his arms back in his best imitation of a plane and yelled "I'm a karaoke pilot!"
  9. There is a bin item called "Selecting A Council Commissioner". I can't place my hands on it right now but will look around for the number. What kind of Council Commissioner is you council looking for? There are those that are leaders in the council, have an interest in Commissioner service, and are experienced Scouters. This is the person that is the head cheerleader for the units and a very visible part of the key three. Then you have the Council Commish that is a figurehead and can give or influence the giving of FOS dollars. Believe it or not, which one you have may be se
  10. Do not be so sure that the Area folks would be concerned. I am familiar with one situation where the Area/Region folks stood by and watched because their agenda included merging the council. The local volunteers were clueless up until the end. A provisional charter was never given. Unfortunately, the SE did alot of damage during his time in the job. I agree that in the long run, the Area Director will get involved, but that is only after several years. And most volunteers will find something else to do while waiting. You and I are also experienced enough to know that the qualit
  11. I had suggested the dinner. It worked for us. What it produced was experienced Scouters that had temporarily dropped out and decided to drop back in. I had to laugh because one of these people said that when they first met me at a meeting, he wondered how I was still alive considering some of the past experiences in our district with Commissioners. Having moved in recently, I had no knowledge of what had happened 5 -6 years previous. He believed in the Commissioner work, but only signed up when he knew for sure that the existing staff was dedicated and knew what they were doing.
  12. Region patches are one of my pet peeves. The insignia guide (03-05 version) states "This insignia is reserved for regional officers, regional committee emembers, local council professional Scouters, and national staff with a regional responsibility..." "Adult regional world and national jamboree contingent staff and leaders may wear the insignia only during their assignment at the jamboree. The same rule applies to specifically designed regional insignia for a national event." I figure that about 90% of the people that I see wearing this patch, should not be.
  13. I've had success with Woolite. I add Woolite to water. Let the patch soak for five minutes. If dirty, I will lightly rub the patch with my fingers. Take it out and blot it with paper towels. Then I lay out three paper towels and place the patch on it. On top of that I will put another 3 paper towels. On top of that I will place a heavy book. Let it dry for several hours that way. Then I take the book and top paper towels off and let it air dry. I've done this with 40 year old patches and they come out great. The Woolite improves the colors by cleaning them (you can tell by the dirty wa
  14. You are correct that the field was asked for input on JLTC. I also hope that people listened. But when you say "national", remember that national is us also. We have more input than many people realize. Most of the really great ideas in Scouting began with volunteers in the field. Totin' Chit, Whittling Chip, Pinewood Derby, and Webelos Dens come to mind quickly. When you are sitting around the campfire as leaders grumble about national, ask for a show of hands of how many have written letters to communicate their ideas to the national committees. The internet is making
  15. The Leadership Corps replaced Senior Scouts as an outgrowth of the "new improved Scouting program" in 1972. Venture crews (now patrols) replaced the Leadership Corps in 1989. All of these programs were a way of dealing with older boys in the troop. The Leadership Corps was exactly that. A group of older scouts to be called upon to provide leadership when needed and to serve as an example of an ideal patrol. The Venture program was introduced as a way of dealing with the older scouts by giving them an opportunity to participate in a high adventure program (or sports through t
  16. I'll share some recruiting success. We had some recent recruiting success with a simple Spaghetti supper. We invited all members of the Troop or Pack committee other than the CC and Unit Leader. They were invited to meet their Unit Commish. We had a decent showing (including some Unit Leaders wondering what was going on). And we picked up 5-6 new Commissioners that had never been Commissioners before and were a mix of new and experienced leaders. If you had asked me prior, I would have doubted the success. We plan to try this again in a few months with the list of Adult OA me
  17. A Commissioner can not fix everything. This den falls under the "you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink". It is a problem that too many Scoutmasters and Cub Leaders follow their own brand of Scouting. It will not be fixed until someone other than you is sufficiently upset or distressed by it. So you need to address it with those that would be upset OR create disatisfaction through education and training to the affected groups: parents, CC, Cubmaster, other Den Leaders, committee, trainers, etc. It is difficult to show that it is wrong until the damage is
  18. Wow, a very well written message regarding the Commissioner role. This reminds me of when I went to Philmont for the Commish Administration program. At the first break, I asked the Council Commissioner Instructor how he had built such a great commmissioner staff and program and high commissioner ratio. He responded that it was his recent predecessor that did it and that he and his Scout Exec were there because they wanted a Philmont vacation. Needless to say, the quality of the course reflected this. At the same course, the Director of the Boy Scout Division showed us the new uni
  19. I'm still catching up. I would like to see us give up the Doctor analogy and go with more of a "coach". I agree that Commissioners need a major overhaul. It is frankly embarassing to teach Commish Basic and show the manual with the sixtie's style cartoons in it. I applaude the efforts by Rick Cronk to gain commissioner visability with the website and the identity products. I also have the impression that commissioners now get a little bit more time and attention at the professional PDL training. I don't believe that anyone ever conciously set about to do away with commis
  20. I have found that Commissioners tend to be generalists. I therefore do not feel that they should take over all training. However, I believe that a positive change would be for them to become "Unit Trainers". They would be responsible for doing an NLE, Fast Start, and YPT in each assigned unit.
  21. Finally, a topic that made me want to actually register for the forum. You guys put too much into one message for me to follow, so please excuse me if I break mine up into little bites. First, Bob White, you mention the proposed changes which I presume will be formally announced at the National Meeting. Do you have any more detail than you already provided? On the Commissioner site, it indicated that the requirements for the Arrowhead are changing. Are you referring to this? Does anyone know what the changes are?
×
×
  • Create New...