March 19, 2018

 

 

Featured Stories

 

Youth Protection Update

The top 10 reasons to send your kid to Summer Camp

Venturing and Sea Scout Weekend

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New

BSR NEW Climbing Tower will be ready for 2018 Summer Camp!

 

We have been waiting to show this to you all for a while, and we are finally ready to reveal that Boseker Scout Reservation is getting a 63 foot tall Climbing Tower!

 

Due to a generous donation, the Troop 300 Eagle's Nest Climbing Tower will be established and built in May to be ready for Summer Camp in 2018!

 

Sign up today for Summer Camp to be part of this amazing program that we will offer with the tallest climbing tower in California, and most likely at ANY Boy Scout Camp in the nation.

 

BSR, your climbing destination for 2018 and beyond!

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New

Update on Youth Protection Training

 

Updated Youth Protection Training Now Available

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Update Your Training by October 1, 2018

The Boy Scouts of America’s updated youth protection training doesn’t just talk about the dangers of child predators – it shows how they work to gain access to their victims.

In early February, the BSA introduced newly updated youth protection training that is required for all volunteers before October 1, 2018. Even if they took the previous training prior to the February rollout, it will need to be taken it again.

The updated training, which includes three modules and a test that take a little over an hour to complete, draws on research from experts in the field of child abuse and maltreatment to identify the contributing factors and threats across the spectrum of child abuse, including: bullying, neglect, exposure to violence, physical and emotional abuse, and child sexual abuse. Once completed, volunteers will not have to retake the training for two years.

New to this version of the training program are video interviews with psychologists and law enforcement professionals who discuss the root causes of abuse, how to recognize it, and how to respond.

“There is no substitute for hearing directly from experts who have spent their careers studying child predators and abusers,” said Michael Johnson, the BSA’s director of youth protection. “They shine a new light on the challenge we all face in protecting kids and how parents and volunteers can put barriers in place to keep them away.”

Some of the most impactful aspects of the training are interviews with abuse survivors, who give their first-hand perspectives. “In developing this training, we discussed whether or not to include survivor videos,” said Johnson. “It was the right decision. Their testimony is powerful and highlights how predators work and the tragic impact like nothing else.”

In addition to updated training, the BSA recently announced new policies to ensure compliance with mandatory training requirements, including:

  • As of January 1, 2018, no new leader can be registered without first completing youth protection training.
  • As of January 1, 2018, no council, regional, or national leader will be allowed to renew their registration if they are not current on their Youth Protection Training.
  • As of September 1, 2017, no unit may re-charter without all leaders being current on their Youth Protection Training. Registrars no longer have the ability to approve charters without full compliance.

Effective June 1, 2018, adults accompanying a Scouting unit who are present at the activity for 72 total hours or more must be registered as a leader, including completion of a criminal background check and Youth Protection Training. The 72 hours need not be consecutive. All together, it’s a bold new approach that will serve as just one part of the BSA’s ongoing effort to enroll the entire community in the fight against child abuse both in and out of Scouting.

Need help with the training? Find out more in the How-to Guide for Taking Youth Protection

 

New

Travel Trailer for Sale

 

For Sale Fleetwood Travel Trailer only $1000

Rear bedroom and Living Room over 5th Wheel hitch

Needs some plumbing repairs due to frozen pipes

If interested contact Tucker.Adams@scouting.org

 

   

New

The top 10 reasons to send your kid to Scout Camp!

 

By Mike Cooney

 

10. So they’ll be homesick and get over it.

At some point in our lives, we all experience homesickness. Kids who go to camp tend to experience it earlier, and tend to have it happen around supportive people that they know. They also tend to do so much closer to home. The alternative for a lot of kids is being homesick when the get to college. My first year at Boy Scout Camp, at June Norcross Webster Scout Reservation in Ashford, Conn. I got extremely homesick on Tuesday. There were definitely more tears than I’d care to admit. But my leaders convinced me to stick it out. They distracted me.

By Friday, I didn’t want to go home, because I was having so much fun. I cannot tell you how many times I’ve seen this exact same process at other camps. 

9. They’ll Gain Confidence

Going to camp can be a daunting thing for kids. They’ll get nervous, and build it up to be a big thing in their heads. They’ll convince themselves that they’re going to die in their tents because the Daddy Long Legs spider is going to eat them. You laugh, I’ve had this conversation. They’ll tell themselves they can’t pass their swimming test.

And you know what, an adult Scouter or older scout they trust will tell them that they can. And they will.

This confidence won’t evaporate once they come home from camp – but they’ll have these little victories to look back on when they go back to school. They’ll have it with them for the rest of their lives.

8. It’s Gets Them Moving

Summer camps tend to be big, and you have to do a lot of walking. This is more of a feature than a bug. Walking the trails at camp gives kids some time to think. They might also get to go swimming, rock climbing, canoeing, running, or play sports.

All of which are healthier for them than simulating any of those activities on a PlayStation.

7. They’ll Try New Things

Camp is the Super Bowl of Scouting. It’s where the kids get to do all the things that they thought they were going to do when they signed up.

Maybe it’ll be archery, canoeing or basketry. But they’ll be exposed to all sorts of things that they’d likely never experience at home or in school. They could go rock climbing. They’ll sing songs, and may even wind up doing a skit in front of hundreds of people.

6. Gain Self-Reliance

As it turns out, the best way to learn how to do things for yourself is… to do things for yourself. They’ll have to take care of their own stuff. Mom won’t be there to clean their room for them.

They’ll learn that staying up until midnight talking to your friends is fun on Sunday night, but that you’ll pay for it on Monday morning. They’ll also have the experience of truly managing their own money for the first time. When they get to camp with a certain amount of money, they’ll have to figure out how to spend it best over the course of a week.

And this rolls into the next point, scout camp is a…

5. It’s A Safe Place to Fail

Accidents happen at camp.  They might not complete a merit badge. A towel could go missing. They might get a blister. They might spend all of their money on candy on the first day, and have nothing left for the rest of the week – and they won’t actually starve.

In life, things go wrong.

And you’ll still be okay. There will be people there to help and to support you.

You’ll learn that the little setbacks in life aren’t the end of the world.

4. They Learn Skills

They’ll learn to look out for others. Delegating important tasks to others is a difficult concept for adults. But it’s vital to accomplishing any big, worthwhile goal. This is a skill that the boys will learn at camp. They’ll learn how to manage others – how to take a list of things to do and to match them up with the right people for the job.

But they’ll learn any number of things – from construction skills to life-saving, to basketry, to canoeing, or archery. Above all, for many of them, it will be the first time they’ll actually get to pick what they want to learn about. They’ll actually set their own schedules. They may be exposed to a hobby or career they’ll enjoy for the rest of their lives.
 

3. Scout Camp Is the Friendliest Place on Earth

Sorry Disney, but Boy Scout camp is the friendliest place you can send your kid this summer. Everybody tends to be in a great mood. The kids are doing what they’ve been looking forward to all year long. The staff has the best job of their lives. And the volunteers are on vacation. It’s the perfect storm for a good time. Sure, it may rain sometimes, but still, a bad day at camp is better than a good day at the office, or school, or pretty much anywhere.

2. See the World Differently

In my time at camp, I’ve gotten to meet people from all over the world. From every continent. It’s one thing to read about people from the other side of the planet in a book or see them on television, but you get a different perspective when you actually get to spend time with them as friends.

But they’ll also get to see their own area in a different way. When there are no walls, you tend to be open to new ideas. You can sit quietly, and listen to the birds, the trees, and the wind… and you have some time to think. Time to figure things out.

1. Make Friends That Last a Lifetime

They’ll run into people from all over, and learn to find similarities. They’ll find themselves singing songs, doing skits, and telling jokes with people they might not otherwise ever come into contact with. When you camp with people, you find out your similarities and differences in a hurry. Camp is one of the great places to have the shared experiences that build strong friendships.

And oh yeah, camp is fun!

 

 

New

Venturing and Sea Scout weekend

 

 

click here to register for Venturing and Sea Scout weekend

click here to download the flyer

New

Thank you Campership Committee

 

Adam H.

 

January 7, 2018

Campership Committee

1230 Redlands CT

PO Box 8910

Redlands, CA 92375

 

Dear Campership Committee

                        Thank you for sponsoring me to go to NYLT Winter Camp. I learned about many different things for my future leadership. We talked about visions, goals, and plans. I enjoyed the presentations that were given. They talked about communication and how your hand gestures and body language would affect how listeners respond to you.  I also learned about how to handle a disagreement going on in a patrol. I can step in or notify my ASPL or SPL. Thank you for supporting me to go to NYLT. This training has changed my scouting life forever.

 

Sincerely,

Adam H.

Troop 720

Live the Adventure

New

Whitney M Young Jr. Service Award Honorees

 

 
March 15th, 2018 the California Inland Empire Council had the privilege of honoring
 
Dr. Paulette Brown-Hinds
Publisher of the Voice and founder of Voice Media Ventures
And
Mr. Heck Thomas
Philanthropist and Educator with San Bernardino City Unified School District
 

  

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Eagle Dinner

 

 

 

Cartoon Corner

 

 

Thoughts from the Council:

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Positive Quote and Prayer
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Before me peaceful
Behind me peaceful
Under me peaceful
Over me peaceful
Around me peaceful
-Navajo prayer

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