News

May 1st Firecrafters to Train Units in Flag Retirement

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Spring Camporee SuccessThe Firecrafters of the North Star Ember would like to extend a warm thank you to all the troops who came out and participated in the Spring Camporee. One of the goals of our organization is to encourage continued participation by our youth in camping, outdoor activities, and Scouting. The activities and fellowship promoted at district camporees is a great opportunity that benefits these goals.

Importance of Scouts in Flag Retirement. At the evening campfire, we were excited to be given the opportunity to perform a flag retirement ceremony. The Boy Scouts is one of the largest organizations that gives communities opportunities to have worn American Flags properly retired. Organizations that also offer this service include the American Legion Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, and other civic associations. Using flags donated by the Broad Ripple American Legion, one of our service projects for the year will be a flag retirement this Sunday, May 1st.

Invitation to Units and Scouts. We would like to invite Scouting members of the North Star District to attend. We will not just be retiring flags, but also answering any questions you have about proper flag retirement. This may be of great value to upcoming Firecrafter candidates, if they want to include a flag retirement as part of the candidate campfire. One of our goals in carrying out this service project is educating you in this area. We hope to improve your confidence so that in the future, you might consider conducting a retirement as a troop service project or include in your troop ceremonies.


Where: Second Presbyterian Church
7700 N. Meridian Street, Indianapolis, IN 46260
(fire ring in picnic area at north end of the parking lot)

When: Sunday, May 1, 2016

Time: 1:00-2:00 PM

What: North Star Firecrafter Flag Retirement Seminar


The weather for Sunday is not predicted to be as beautiful as the camporee weather. In the event it is raining between 1:00 and 2:00, the meeting will be at the Broad Ripple American Legion Post #3 at 6379 N College Ave, Indianapolis, IN 46220. We will still have a mock retirement and answer questions from an inside location.

Jacob Danek
North Star Ember Chief

Greg Hoyes
North Star Ember Advisor

Service at 500 Festival Mini-Marathon

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Greg Jacoby from Troop 174 and Council Committee visited Roundtable last night. He was seeking support from Troops, Packs, and Crews for a re-doubled scouting presence at the 500 Festival Mini-Marathon at the start of May. He wrote with more details.

Dear Scouters:

I have been asked by the council to increase the presences of the Boy Scouts at the 500 Festival, specifically the Mini-Marathon.  The Boys Scouts have been involved in the past but many times it has been behind the activity in a supporting role.  One way to get the boys out in front is to have them man a water station and so we have been asked to man water station number 17 at the Mini-Marathon on May 7,2016   It is the water station just before the end of the race, and is located on the IUPUI campus so it is very easy to get to and park. I am contacting a number of the  Troops and Packs in the North Star District  to see if they could announce this opportunity  and give the Council  some support for the this event.

My Troop 174 will be bring a number of boys and we are opening this up to all family members so the community can see how Scouts is more than just the boys.  This is one of the only activities that children accompanied by an adult can volunteer during the 500 festival.

We need 70 people to come help. The water station is open from 6 am to 1pm.  People can work all morning, or in 3 hours shifts.   If you are interested in getting yourself, your Troop or Pack involved please let me know by email and then sign up on the web site www.500festival.com .     Some Troops and Packs are making this a group community volunteer activity and others are lettering their members know about the event on their Troop or Pack web site.

Below are the instructions for the 500 Festival volunteer web site.

Thanks for your help and as always call my cell 828-6230 or email at gjacoby@bdmd.com  if you have any questions.

Yours in Scouting
Greg Jacoby

PLEASE SIGN UP ON LINE BY MAY 2, 2016

  1. Log onto our web site www.500festival.com
  2. Click on the volunteer tab at the left of the page
  3. Click on the red box “register here” link
  4. Welcome to the 500 Festival online registration, please read the important information
  5. Click the purple ”Volunteer Registration” button on the right side of the page.
  6. Select “500 Festival Volunteer
  7. Enter the access code “Boy Scouts” at the top of the page and click unlock
  8. Scroll down to Boy Scouts of America, Crossroads of America (it may be the last item on the last page)
  9. Select your volunteer opportunity – Pit Station #17- Boy Scouts
  10. From there you can complete your volunteer registration

Thanks for helping to promote Scouting.

Questions?  If you have any reach out to Volunteer Intern, Fherry Hannah at fhannah@500festival.com or 317-614-6113 or Program Manager, Jennifer Livesay at jlivesay@500festival.com

 

Overview of ‘500 Festival Parade’ Participation

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Bill Hodgson, the long-time district coordinator for the 500 Festival Parade, visited Roundtable last night. The theme of the parade will be “Celebrating the Stories of May” in honor of this year’s 100th running of the Indianapolis 500.

He reported that North Star District will be reprising its role as the chair-setters for the 300 block of North Pennsylvania Street this year.

Unfortunately Bill will not be available for the parade this year. He has asked one of his long-time associates to take the lead in his place. (More on this once the succession plan is confirmed.)

North Star will be setting up 1,030 chairs near the former location of the Indy Star Building, across the street from the federal courthouse and 1 block north of the Union Planter Tower.

Cubs and Scouts should arrive in Class A uniforms. Plenty of on-street parking should be available this early. Bill also recommends parking to the East of the parade route to ease exiting the area, as scourt can get out of there early.

They will be able to see the parade afterward.

Set up will begin around 8:30 am.

Hope to see you there.

 

Congratulations to our April 2016 Eagles

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Congratulations to the scouts who passed their Eagle Boards of Review on April 13, 2016. Their date of rank will be that date, once confirmed by the National Advancement Team in Dallas, Texas.Eagle pin

Name Last Name Troop #
Cullen Booth 56
Luke Elliott 56
Mark Henn 514
Jay Maturi 56
Forrest Ridings 358
William Stolz 56

North Star Eagle Board Coordinator Jerry Simon reports a year ago, 11 of our 51 Eagle Scouts from 2015 had completed their boards. As of last night, 20 scouts have achieved Eagle in 2016. That is 181% of 2015’s figures!

 

Camporee Planning Meeting tomorrow

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Stu Bowes will be holding a Spring Camporee planning session at 6:30 pm tomorrow April 7th at Second Presbyterian Church 2nd floor.

Each troop is asked to send their Camporee Coordinator or other delegate.

REMINDER: April Committee Meeting

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Just a quick reminder that the April committee meeting is coming up on Thursday, April 7th at 7:00 pm.

Related to that Camporee Chair Stu Bowes will hold a Spring Camporee Organizing Meeting at 6:30 pm at the same location. All troops are invited to send a representative to that meeting.

Spring Camporee Invite

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Dear Scouters,SuperScout Weekend

2016 North Star, Spring Camporee

Camp Kikthawenund

7651 W 500 N.

Frankton, IN

April, 22nd to the 24th

Scoutmasters!

 

Please find information HERE about the 2016 North Star Spring Camporee. I would encourage everyone to register online to take advantage of an adult discount. If you don’t know your total number attending, please try to give an accurate estimate (you can change it later online). If you have any question about the Camporee or know what activity your unit would like to host, please contact Stu Bowes at sbowes@indy.rr.com.

 

The online registration link is www.scoutingevent.com?NS16SpringCamporee.

What is a Commissioner in boy scouts?

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This week marks the anniversary of my learning what a commissioner in boy scouts was.

As I have learned the job of being a District Commissioner, I have had to teach it to many other scouters and parents.

Unit Problems I Witnessed in Scouting

About six years ago, I was stepping down as the Cubmaster of Pack 61 in Washington Township. My son had changed schools, so it was not practical for me to continue in the position, since my scouting time was being spent elsewhere. The pack had struggled with being properly staffed. The parents were loyal to scouting but I had struggled to recruit them to serve as leaders. Many were exhausted having been through Cub Scouts with two sons many years apart. They had been doing Cub Scouts for approaching a decade with these same staffing problems.

I called the District Executive and asked for help. He proposed a meeting with the Chartered Organization Representative and the Committee Chair. If I could find a proposed Cubmaster, he suggested I invite them, too.

I did as he suggested.

We held a meeting and discussed the strengths and weaknesses of the pack, what our goals were, what our roles would be, and what needed to happen.

Then the District Executive shared some bad news with us. He was overwhelmed with duties and could not give us the time that we probably needed. He told us that the District was understaffed, so he was loaded with duties that he ideally should not be.

The conclusion of the story is that the pack folded within 9 months of that meeting. I was frustrated and confused about the matter. I had felt let down. The District Executive had been honest with us. I just did not like the story that he told.

Two years later, I was serving as the Chartered Organization Representative of my son’s troop. His scoutmaster was the scoutmaster who had handed my mother my Eagle pin several decades earlier. Suddenly, the scoutmaster died in a traffic accident.

Our troop pulled together and managed itself with great aplomb through the difficulties that followed. We had little contact from District or Council, aside from Scout Executive Scott Clabaugh’s presence and willingness to help. Scott was going above and beyond his role.

Three years later, I sat in the room hearing Stroh Brann tell us that North Star District might be dissolved. Council Commissioner Rick Tardy was present and offering his services. I had never met Rick. I had no idea what his job in scouting was.

Yet within five weeks, I was sitting on Rick’s Commissioner Staff, wondering what I had just got myself in to.

Learning What a Commissioner Is

During that five weeks, I had gone to Unit Commissioner Basic Training in Greenwood’s Pathfinder District. The instructors were wonderful. They taught me what a Unit Commissioner was and what the mission of the Commissioner Service was. Now my learning had begun.

I learned that Unit Commissioners were volunteer scouters. Their mission was to help units thrive and grow. Unit Commissioners are the ombudsmen of scouting. They visit packs, troops, and crews to see how they can help the units. Commissioners help primarily by having the Unit’s Key 3, committee members, or other staff identify a problem. The commissioner then either offers advice or seeks expert help from members of the District Committee.

Essentially commissioners try to deal with many of the types of problems that I had already experienced in scouting.

Commissioners advise on recruiting adult leaders. One of the hardest parts of the job for new Cubmasters or committee chairs is being able to describe the role and duties of different positions. Commissioners assist by bringing their experience or network of contacts in to help, when requested by the unit Key 3.  This prior experience allows them to be more effective recruiters.

Commissioners help units reorganize in times of difficulty. In units that have lost historically-significant leaders, such as when Cubmasters follow their sons into boy scouting, the unit may need to reorganize. The pack committee chair may need to become the Cubmaster. The treasurer may need to become the committee chair. The commissioner helps the committee define its vision and keep the process moving forward. This is often done by bringing the Chartered Organization Representative into the picture and recruiting resources from the Chartered Organization to help with the transition. The Commissioner’s experience and resources often create a sense of calm because the unit does not feel so alone.

They help units celebrate successes that the unit may ignore. Units often do not realize what they are doing well because their only frame of reference is their own experiences as an adult and sometimes as a youth. Unit leaders may think that they are failing if things don’t go as planned. A commissioner helps bring perspective. Most commissioners serve more than one unit and/or have years of experience in a different unit. Commissioners also meet monthly to discuss the issues of the day. They end up with the perspective of many units across the district. All of this exposure to different units means that Commissioners can often see successes that the unit does not.

Special tasks

The commissioner service also handles the strange departments.  Continuing education and rechartering are imperative to the health of units. Consequently, they fall into the commissioner service domain.  Special round table commissioners can be appointed and are needed to administer and run the Boy Scout and Cub Scout roundtables.

This past year we were blessed with the assistance of Mat Gerdenich in serving to lead  rechartering. He has chosen to make that his specialty as a commissioner. I’m delighted to report that he will be returning for 2016.

Teaching What Commissioners Do

As I am reaching my first anniversary in the position of North Star District Commissioner, I have had contact unit leaders in all of our packs, troops, and crews. I have helped boys make Eagle in ways that I never imagined. I have seen struggling units solve problems. I have seen misunderstandings be fixed quickly. I have seen volunteers having more fun because they are less distracted by misunderstandings. I have seen volunteers move into positions that fit their personalities and passions better. I have seen volunteers at District find their positions to be interesting and exciting.

For all of these people, I have had to teach my role as the District’s chief ombudsman.

Thanks All Around

I have received thanks from many leaders. Yet for me it is not only the thanks from the wonderful scouters that makes this job rewarding. It is seeing Cub Scouts from Pike Township enjoying the hospitality and friendship with Pack 358’s Eagle Creek Park hayride. It is seeing unit leaders light up in seeing new opportunities for fun and adventure with their boys that they had not considered possible. It is seeing more scouters see increased volunteerism as  they become better at recruiting and describing the vision for their unit.

While we still need more unit commissioners to expand our reach and effectiveness, I am delighted to report that we have 10 active commissioners in place or coming online. We have three more that are looking to retire.

I would like to make a special thank you to Troop 358 for making a special effort to help staff the commissioner service fully. They have several candidates for future positions.

Future

 As we look to recruit more commissioners and bring new units on line, we need your help in finding more commissioners. A twentysomething Eagle Scout or a recent retiree both make good recruits. They do not need to have experience in scouting. A businessman with a good network of contacts may be able to bring resources to the district that a young eagle scout cannot.

One of the ideal recruits is a father whose son has recently aged out of scouting. He may still be interested in volunteering but is not as interested in participating in troop activities on a weekly basis. This father could be very helpful unit commissioner.

Please keep your eyes open and let us know if you find good future commissioners for us.

Zionsville’s Scouting for Food

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Scouts in Zionsville have picked up and run with the Scouting for Food Program.

For other packs and troops that are interested in promoting Scouting for Food, this is what Zionsville Scouts are doing.

Take a look and see what you could do to support such a worthy program.

Hey Zionsville Scouts!
It is that time of year – the time when we show how a Scout is Helpful 🙂  Time for the annual Scouting for Food Drive!
Each Cub Scout Den/Girl Scout Troop is asked to sign up for one or more neighborhoods in Zionsville to canvas for donations (trick or treat style works best) and then bring and sort those donations to the Zionsville Food Pantry.  The dates for delivery this year are April 9 and 10th.  1-3pm.
Scouts wishing to participate in the Eagle Elementary, PVE, Stonegate or Boone Meadow school districts please go to the signupgenious for neighborhoods — Scouts participating in the Union Elementary neighborhood please contact Cub Master Jeremy Morin [email omitted] for instructions.
Boy Scout Troops are asked to either volunteer at the pantry for service hours Saturday or Sunday between 1-3 or have Patrols sign up for neighborhoods.  Whichever works best for your scouts.  If volunteering at the Pantry please send Sharla Merrick [email omitted] a list of volunteers and hours expected to work prior to that weekend.

District Appreciation Dinner

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North Star 2015 Awards DinnerDistrict Appreciation Dinner Chair Tucker Herbold and Advancement Chair Mark Pishon are proud to announce the Dinner to recognize scouters and scouts for high achievement in 2015.

You can download a copy of the North Star 2015 Awards Dinner Invitation.

UPDATE: link in flyer is wrong. It should be https://scoutingevent.com/?2016NSDD. I am having trouble fixing flyer today.