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LDS Dropping Senior Youth Scouting


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The LDS church has not cut its ties with the BSA.  They have pulled out of the two smallest traditional Scouting programs.  There is no logical reason why your districts would not be able to meet where they meet now.

 

But there is no guarantee that they will either. This will be a slow pull back, but I expect it to be a complete pull pack at some point. It is only a matter of time before they replace the 11-13 LDS Boy Scout program with something else. At that point, what incentive does the local LDS Church have in hosting district meetings?

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I am likely a lone voice with my opinion, but I would rather see more civic orgs, and other "friends of" orgs as COs instead of religious groups using bsa as a tool to recruit for their congregation o

A few more points to help you all understand WHY Varsity and Venturing have struggled in many LDS units:   - LDS units are organized geographically, and are run by a lay clergy, meaning all leadersh

I haven't seen any of that. What I have seen: A concern that the potential for 200,000+ kids and adults leaving an organization will have a real (and felt) financial impact on the rest of us.  Co

I think we'll continue to see changes like the LDS because BSA has played a grey area trying to be all things to everyone.  Open but filtering membership.  Faith based but recruiting from public schools.  Boy only but needing adult female mom help.  

 

IMHO, BSA will always have a faith based component at the heart of the program.  It will always have citizenship.  Always have outdoors.  Always promote skills and responsibility.  

 

Getting to a more consistent core program is important.  

 

The rest is noise and BSA will survive it.  A hundred years from now BSA will look very much like BSA.  Even with girls.  Even with irrational liberal democrats. 

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But there is no guarantee that they will either. This will be a slow pull back, but I expect it to be a complete pull pack at some point. It is only a matter of time before they replace the 11-13 LDS Boy Scout program with something else. At that point, what incentive does the local LDS Church have in hosting district meetings?

 

I'm not so sure on this.  Camp fires and ceremonies and new experiences is the perfect environment for a young faith based program.  Perhaps it's Varsity and Venturing that did not serve well as a youth faith program.

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But there is no guarantee that they will either. This will be a slow pull back, but I expect it to be a complete pull pack at some point. It is only a matter of time before they replace the 11-13 LDS Boy Scout program with something else. At that point, what incentive does the local LDS Church have in hosting district meetings?

 

Guarantee?  There is no guarantee that when I go to sleep tonight, I will ever wake up.  Or of anything else, really.

 

If your district has to find a new place to meet, they will find a new place to meet.  My district was meeting in the facility of a company that decided to donate its space for evening use every two weeks by the district, until they decided not to.  So now the district meets in two different places, a school and an American Legion hall.  It happens.

 

You will have to excuse me if I do not join the sky-is-falling crowd on this issue. The sky, and the BSA, will remain where they are.

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I do think the Varsity "program" will disappear as a result of this.  It is my understanding that virtually all Varsity teams are LDS units, so if they are not using it anymore, there really is no need for it.  They can "re-purpose" the "blaze" shoulder loops for Venture Patrols in troops, which is how some troops near me use them now anyway.  I think Venturing will survive.  

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LOL, not one scouting organization in North America increased membership after it switched to include the other genders, lifestyle and non religious (3Gs). Accepting girls will make progressives happy, but it will not fix the membership or revenue struggles. In fact it will likely exacerbate the problems for the near future until National adjust the program to fit a more urban lifestyle.

 

As for civic organization vs. religious institutions, the political environment is discouraging civic organizations from getting into the outdoor youth programs. They will likely decrease their support instead of increase.

 

Ironically the religious institutions took on the BSA because their missions are similar for youth. The religious institutions, more than most civic COs, have the most motivation for a Scouting program simply because of the the BSA mission.

 

I think what the progressives really want is to change the BSA Mission so that religion isn't a critical element of the program. But going that direction will only add to the heated cultural tension, so it won't increase membership or funding either.

 

What scouting is today is as good as it will ever be. The future is less boy run (youth run), less outdoors, and less personal decision making. 

 

Barry

 

this. 

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We need to refocus and get Scouting back in the hands of the volunteers, the unit level volunteers.  Too many paid scouters are completely out of touch with the units and the non LDS chartered units. 

 

A FREAKIN MEN!

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You will have to excuse me if I do not join the sky-is-falling crowd on this issue. The sky, and the BSA, will remain where they are.

 

I haven't seen any of that. What I have seen:

  • A concern that the potential for 200,000+ kids and adults leaving an organization will have a real (and felt) financial impact on the rest of us.

     

  • Concern that this is Step 1 of a multi-step process of the LDS leaving BSA entirely. This would mean over 500,000+ kids and adults leaving the program.

     

  • Discussion around how BSA will (over) react to this news and make further poor choices with regard to 1) program tinkering, and 2) membership policy changes (read: allowing girls in Boy Scouts).

No one sitting at their dinner table of New Year's Eve 2012 would have guessed in just five years that there would be two major policy changes and the loss of 200,000+ members. We keep hearing about how positive these changes have been, but the bottom line has been a loss of members, volunteers, charter orgs, units and money. 

 

Imagine what BSA will look like in 5 years at THIS rate? Sure BSA will be around...but will it even be a shadow of what it was in 2012?

Edited by Col. Flagg
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Benjamin Franklin said "It is better to be silent and thought a fool, rather than to speak up and remove all doubt."  That has been one of my guiding principles, but this one time I will not follow it.

 

I saw the news about the change on TV, and realize that it will be a hard loss to accommodate.  But counter-intuitively, it might in the long run benefit BSA:

 

1.  Sometimes getting smaller helps an organization to re-focus on its mission.  Such as a football team getting rid of fancy plays and going back to "three yards and a cloud of dust" type play.

 

2.  Being smaller and more cohesive may make decision making more straightforward, and

 

3.  It has been my observation that organizations do not change because they SHOULD, but that organizations change because they MUST.  Maybe this change will force leadership to make changes and improvements that hurt, but in the long term are beneficial.

 

A smaller better BSA (even with all the pain involved), might be better than a larger lower quality organization.

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When I was in college back in the early 70's in one of my business classes it was noted that "General Motors is too big to fail.."  It would be a disaster to the world economy.  Well, 40 years later we have GM collapsing and the taxpayer has to bail them out....yet in my lifetime!  Well, the world didn't come to an end, the streetlights came on that evening and they held school the next day.  Still had to go to work.  Life went on.  It was kinda like the Y2K hype that we all heard about for 10 years before....NOTHING HAPPENED.

 

BSA has palmed one too many cards in this game of poker and how now to play out it's hand.  They might think they have the winning hand, but so far, everyone's playing it close to the vest.  I guess we'll find out right quick on this whole thing.

 

I'm not a bettin' man, but I'm willing to lay out 2-cents that says this is gonna hurt for a while until BSA gets its head out of the sand.  Quicker the better.

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Benjamin Franklin said "It is better to be silent and thought a fool, rather than to speak up and remove all doubt."  That has been one of my guiding principles, but this one time I will not follow it.

 

I saw the news about the change on TV, and realize that it will be a hard loss to accommodate.  But counter-intuitively, it might in the long run benefit BSA:

 

1.  Sometimes getting smaller helps an organization to re-focus on its mission.  Such as a football team getting rid of fancy plays and going back to "three yards and a cloud of dust" type play.

 

2.  Being smaller and more cohesive may make decision making more straightforward, and

 

3.  It has been my observation that organizations do not change because they SHOULD, but that organizations change because they MUST.  Maybe this change will force leadership to make changes and improvements that hurt, but in the long term are beneficial.

 

A smaller better BSA (even with all the pain involved), might be better than a larger lower quality organization.

 

Agreed!

 

The BSA needs to dump a bunch of stuff, and get re-focused on outdoors and high adventure.

 

The problem is there are too many leaders in positions of influence that don't think much of the outdoors. 

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