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The Troop/Crew 1954
Wednesday Newsletter
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Wednesday, February 1,
2006
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Hi Folks,
Thanks to all who helped with last
night's meeting. Some very impressive skate boarding going on
there!
Here's what's going on in the
troop.
It looks like there is going to be
an excellent turn out for our February 10-12 camping trip to
Lost Pines. If you did not sign up last night, you have until
11:59 PM this Thursday to contact me by email and let me know to
put you on the list. After that, you can come with us, but will
not be able to climb. We'll be planning meals and such at our
next meeting. Crew 1954 is invited to join the Troop for this
camp-out. Climbing towers are definitely high adventure.
Report to State and Scout Sunday
are happening this weekend. It looks like several scouts and
adults are going. At this point, I'm not entirely sure where
they are meeting. The Cubs are also going. If the Troop would
like to go along with the Pack, Pack members are meeting in the
parking lot at Hobby Lobby and leaving at 7:45 sharp. Ms. Patty
is coordinating our Report to State efforts. If you are
interested in going, please contact her directly at
Patricia.Derrickson@smcisd.net
Scout Sunday. We are also
participating in Scout Sunday. This involves church attendance
this Sunday. Again, contact Ms. Patty for further information.
Both Report to State and Scout Sunday count as activities for
scouts who need additional activities to advance. Scout Sunday
can also count as service hours if the scout takes an active
role in the service.
Moving the meeting night. So far,
few people have expressed very strong feelings. My sense is
that if the crew is stable on Thursday night, we might want to
move. The earliest this would happen is over the summer...more
likely it would start with the beginning of the school year next
fall.
Next week we'll plan for the
camp-out, continue to work on a variety of scout skills, and
play a team building game.
Of course our Crew meets on
Thursday so their news runs late. Here are minutes from their
last meeting from President Thomas Huston:
Last Thursday's meeting, for any
of you that were not there, we started planning for our climbing
wall. It will be six paneled, with one of those panels being an
opening to the inside. The scoring will be one point for every
foot the climber goes around the wall. Climbers will start on
the inside, where the climbing will be easier, and work their
way around to the outside, where it will become more
challenging. We will hopefully start on construction next week,
we hope! We haven't yet voted on t-shirt designs, but if you
have any, be sure to bring them next week. Speaking of design,
we also need a patch for Camporee, so if anyone would like to
make a design for a patch, please email it to Mr. Warms or
myself. I thinks that's it for this week, if you have any
questions, please ask!
Patrol Award: All units were
judged to be of equivalent on all measures. Awards to all.
As always, the Troop 1954 events
calendar, this and all back newsletters, and all sorts of other
useful information is available on our website at
www.sanmarcos1954.org The Wednesday Newsletter is the
official record of Troop 1954 and serves as minutes for all
troop and committee meetings.
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Attendance |
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SPL Tony Frediani
presiding assisted by ASPL Justin Williams |
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Chingy
Hobbits
Patrol Leader, James Wheatly |
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Daniel
John
James
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Ferocious Ferrets Patrol Leader, Perry
Henson |
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Tony
Lorenzo
Perry
Edwin
Justin |
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Mullets
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Whitey Tighties
Patrol Leaders, Mason R-K and Ace Govea
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Nathan He.
Nathan Hi.
Philip
Mason R-K
Alexey
Ace |
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Non-Patrol Scouts |
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Sean Fink
Josh Rose |
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Patrol |
Attend. |
Uniform |
Behavior |
Game |
Spirit |
Meeting |
6 Mo |
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V. Badgers |
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F. Ferrets |
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Mullets |
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Biohazards |
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Fromage |
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Piffs |
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notes: 1) you get
half a point for wearing a "class B" on a "class
A" night
2) We're adding a category for the evening's
contest (whatever it may be). We'll see how it
works.
3) We'll try another new rule...especially
because we have reduced summer attendance. In
case of tie, the patrol with the largest number
of people attending gets the award.
Note: Scouts with more than three consecutive
misses will not be counted against patrol
attendance scores. Such scouts
are not
removed from their patrols. They are simply not
counted for attendance points until they
return. Also note that when all patrols score
the same on a category, it doesn't matter what
they score. |
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Behavior, subtract for each
incident.
Fails
to come to order when scout sign
given -1
Fighting with each other -1 per
incident
Bad language -1 per incident
Failure to treat others with respect
-1
Asked repeatedly to do any task -1
Fails to clean up -1
Shows poor sportsmanship -1 |
Spirit: Add for each, highest score
is a five.
All
members cooperate with game +1
Members make progress on meeting’s
task +1
Members show enthusiasm for tasks +1
Members show good organization
(listen to PL and Coach) +1
Members exemplify Scout Law +1 |
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News of the Scouting World |
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Boy scouts weigh merits of
selling hot real estate
By Jennifer S. Forsyth
The Wall Street Journal
BRADENTON, Fla. For 77 years, Boy Scouts have spent
nights telling stories around the campfires at Camp
Flying Eagle, beneath a lush canopy of oaks and Spanish
moss on the banks of the Manatee River.
That ritual may soon be over. With the Gulf Coast's hot
real-estate climate enveloping the area, developers have
offered to buy the camp from the Southwest Florida
Council of the Boy Scouts of America for as much as $13
million, setting off a local battle.
Scout boosters here want to hang onto Camp Flying Eagle,
arguing that the original land donors intended it to
always be used for scouting. Selling the camp, says
retired Army Col. B.J. "Red Dog" Maynard, would
"dishonor and disrespect all those people who took care
of the camp when money wasn't as easily available." Col.
Maynard, a longtime volunteer at the camp, has joined a
group that filed a lawsuit in September against the
scout council to block any future sale.
Fights like this are playing out across the country, as
scouting groups face lean coffers and declining
membership. Many councils, especially those in hot
real-estate markets, are debating whether to cash in on
skyrocketing property values. As a result, struggles
over camp land and all it symbolizes to local residents
have erupted in such states as Michigan, Texas, Arizona
and Washington. Mere rumors of a possible sale often
spur action by community members. Some try to buy the
camps themselves or align themselves with nonprofit
organizations to bolster their chances in a bidding war.
Others file lawsuits or wage zoning battles.
Boy Scout and Cub Scout participation was about 6.5
million in 1972, but totals about 4.2 million today,
excluding new programs. That decline has caused some
councils to merge, sometimes creating organizations with
multiple camps and not enough money to maintain them.
Each Boy Scout council is a corporation, beholden to the
policies of the national organization, based in Irving,
Texas, but they raise their own funds, manage their
finances and make decisions about property and programs.
Increasingly, councils face stark marketplace realities.
Here in Manatee County, Fla., for example, land that
could be used for single-family housing is going for
$60,000 to $100,000 an acre. From year-end 2002 to
year-end 2005, the median sales price for an existing
single-family home in the Sarasota-Bradenton area jumped
to $322,700 from $165,900, according to the Florida
Association of Realtors.
"In the scouting world, (selling land) is the most
emotional topic that comes before a council," says Jack
Crawford, scout executive of the Boy Scouts' Three
Rivers Council in Beaumont, Texas, which sold a 132-acre
camp in 2001 due to financial pressures. "To sell a
camp, that's about the worst possible thing, because all
those memories are there."
Here in Bradenton, on Florida's west coast, Boy Scout
officials are being pragmatic about a possible sale. "We
have a lot of youth for whom we are providing programs,
and we will not allow anything to come before that,"
says Tyrone Shinn, a local banker who is on the
council's board. "But as a board member, you have to
look at it as a business decision."
Camp Flying Eagle isn't even formally on the market.
That hasn't prevented people from wanting to buy the
roughly 185-acre camp or the Boy Scouts from taking
their offers seriously. Executives with the Southwest
Florida Council, a governing body that oversees 26,000
scouts, say it would be irresponsible not to consider
offers that might benefit the council in the future.
Scout volunteers, local citizens and youth have rallied
to block a sale. One Cub Scout pack is building a "Save
Camp Flying Eagle" float for the DeSoto Heritage Parade,
to be held in April. This month, the Bradenton Rotary
passed a resolution supporting the camp's preservation.
A group of scout volunteers, meanwhile, has promised to
blitz the national Boy Scouts headquarters with letters.
Margi Nanney, a Bradenton-area scouts official, says it
is getting tough to solicit pledges from local
businesses and other once-supportive groups. "Now, they
say, 'No, because you're going to sell the camp.' "
Scouting isn't about land ownership, says Gregg Shields,
spokesman for the national Boy Scouts of America, which
takes a neutral stance on camp sales. It is about
preparing young people to make moral choices over their
lifetime, with outdoor education being one way to help
achieve that goal. "Maybe the location changes. That
happens," he says. "But the mission has not changed."
That mission, however, doesn't reel in the number of
youths it once did. Today, scouting faces competition
from an explosion of after-school activities, from
sports to martial arts to private tutoring. "When I was
a kid back in the 60s, there just weren't a whole lot of
things to do," Mr. Shields says.
The pressure to sell land is greatest in urban areas
where real-estate prices have soared and the costs to
staff and maintain camps are highest, says Erik
Kulleseid, New York state program director for the Trust
for Public Land. The nonprofit group has helped secure
funding to save several camps from development,
including Camp Glen Gray in Northern New Jersey.
The council in Beaumont, Texas saddled by debt and
unable to pay its staff couldn't afford to maintain its
two camps. It sold the smaller one, Camp Bill Stark, for
$276,000. Members of the Stark Foundation, whose founder
donated the land 70 years earlier, felt betrayed after
part of the land was clear-cut by developers.
"Every time I go up there, it makes me sick," said
Walter Riedel III, a former Eagle scout and chairman of
the Orange, Texas, foundation, a not-for-profit group
that provides education and arts grants. "It's just
barren sort of what it looked like after the tsunami."
For other councils, the silver lining to a sale is
better service for scouts. At a Jan. 14 public hearing
in Michigan's Blue Lake Township, dozens of people spoke
against a proposed zoning change that would allow the
4,776-acre Owasippe Scout Reservation to be turned into
housing. Some lamented the loss of a childhood
institution; others wondered what effect development
would have on sewage and water systems. If Owasippe is
sold, for an estimated $19.4 million, the Chicago Area
Council that controls it might be able to buy land
closer to the youths it serves and still add to its
endowment.
At Bradenton's Camp Flying Eagle, lizards and armadillos
scurry under dense palmettos. The Manatee River turns
murky when it ebbs with the Gulf of Mexico's tide. In
the early days of the camp, supplies were brought in by
boat. In the '50s, boys plotted to outwit the camp cook,
Miss Bertie Crawford, to sneak late-night snacks.
Generations of campers shared their memories for a book,
"Diamond on the Manatee," commemorating the camp's 75th
anniversary in 2004. "It's a special little place that
is cut off from the rest of the world," says Eric Wolf,
a scout who is now a freshman at the University of
Florida, Gainesville.
The Manatee County Boys Development Association, a
scout-booster group formed in 1929, raised $2,000 to buy
the land for Camp Flying Eagle. For decades, the
association leased the camp to a local Boy Scout
council, Sunny Land, for $1 a year. In 1991, the
association deeded the camp to Sunny Land with the
understanding that it wouldn't be sold.
However, the association put no restrictions in the deed
when it handed over Camp Flying Eagle, says association
attorney John Harllee III. At the time, there didn't
seem to be a need, he says.
By 1995, the Sunny Land Council was in financial
straights and merged with the Southwest Florida Council,
based in Fort Myers. As a result, the Southwest Council,
now stretching 150 miles, became the owner of Camp
Flying Eagle.
The Manatee Boys Development Association says the
Southwest Florida Council knew of Sunny Land's promise
to use the land solely for scouting. Mr. Harllee says
the association wants the land returned or for a judge
to block the scouts from selling it.
Gary Hampton, scout executive for the Southwest Florida
Council, says he opposes any effort to limit the
council's options. Unlike some others, it isn't
struggling financially. Still, Mr. Hampton points out
that camp upgrades are costly. Camp Flying Eagle, for
example, needs $3 million for capital improvements such
as updated bathrooms. To sell the land, the executive
board and the scout unit representatives must be in
agreement.
In 2000, the Foundation for Dreams, a local nonprofit
group that offers disabled children an outdoor
experience, signed a lease for 10 acres of Camp Flying
Eagle. The lease gave the foundation the right of first
refusal to buy the camp. In 2002, the foundation offered
$750,000 for the camp in a deal that would have
preserved the land for youth recreation. The price was
deemed too low, though the foundation said the offer
matched the council's appraised value.
Mr. Hampton recalls developers offering as much as $5
million for the camp in late 2003. The following year,
Manatee County offered $3 million. Its logic: The county
hoped to prevent further residential sprawl in the
floodway downstream of the Manatee Dam, while giving the
scouts an infusion of cash and letting them continue
using the camp.
The scout council got skittish about that possibility.
In January 2004, after a federal judge ruled that the
City of San Diego's $1 a year lease with the Boy Scouts
was unconstitutional, the city settled with the American
Civil Liberties Union and terminated the lease. (The
scouts, who were being sued over their exclusion of gays
and atheists, can still use the park while they appeal
the judge's decision.)
That precedent worried the owners of Camp Flying Eagle.
"Should we make a deal with a government entity that now
is very happy with us but someday in the future might
not be?" Mr. Hampton asks.
Community fears that Camp Flying Eagle would be sold
next erupted last summer after the scouts began quiet
discussions with Silver Cos., a Fredericksburg, Va.,
builder of luxury homes. On Aug. 10, the executive
committee turned down the company's offer of $12
million, saying the price was too low. A follow-up offer
of $13.2 million was never considered, because the Boys
Development Association filed its lawsuit in Manatee
County's 12th Judicial Circuit Court on Sept. 13, just
hours before the executive committee was to discuss it.
Meanwhile, Gerald Pankow, vice president of land
acquisition and development for Silver Cos., says his
company has pulled all offers. "Until this thing is
settled, I have no interest in the properties," he says.
As all sides mull their options, the camp faces the
possibility of devaluation. On Feb. 9, Manatee County's
planning commission will consider changes that could
lead to new zoning rules disallowing single-family
housing on the camp land. Such action stands to
significantly lower the market value of the camp.
Regardless of what happens, Kevin Hennessy, the scouts'
lawyer, says that change isn't necessarily a bad thing.
"I think that people are trying to preserve the past and
preserve what Manatee County used to be," he says.
"There should be an understanding that things change,
and you have to be able to adapt. The Boy Scouts are
adapting."
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Upcoming Events |
February 5, Report to
State
February 6, Scout Sunday
February 10-12, Lost Pines.
February 18, Merit Badge University
March
13-17, Enchanted Rock Camp-Out
March
30-April 2, Camporee
April
4, Troop Elections
April
11, Spring Court of Honor
May
5-7, Inks Lake
June
2-4 Big Bend
June 21
- July 3, Camp Daniel Boone, North Carolina (dates plus
or minus one or two days) |
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