Friday, June 26, 2009

Flying Circus Camporee Registration Documents

Unit Leaders,

Pre-Registration information for the Fall Camporee has been posted to the website:  https://doubleknot.com/registration/calendardetail.asp?ActivityKey=605241 This is sure to be a popular event so please get your pre-registration forms to Mr. Sternberg as soon as possable.

YIS

Chip

 

Fall Camporee 2009   

When:  October 16-18, 2009 

Where:  Flying Circus Aerodrome, Bealeton, Virginia  

Activities:  Aviation Themed

    • Air Show
    • Rocket Building/Launching
    • Airplane  Rides
    • Remote Controlled Model Airplane Flying
    • Paper Airplane Construction/Flying
    • Merit Badge Work
      • Aviation
      • Astronomy
      • Radio
      • Space Exploration
      • Weather
    • Dodge Ball
    • Special Webloes II Program 

Registration:

Pre-Registration Forms are due by September 15, 2009. The completed permission forms:

are due by September 30, 2009. Either email the forms to philip.sternberg@verizon.net, or mail them to Patriot Fall 2009 Camporee, c/o Philip Sternberg, P.O. Box 4052, Alexandria VA 22303,  Contact Philip Sternberg with questions.



If you believe that you received this message in error and/or do not wish to receive further emails please click here.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Change to 2009/2010 Calendar of Events – Webelos to Scout Transition

Unit Leaders,

There has been a change to 2009/2010 Calendar of Events involving the Webelos to Scout Transition. The  Webelos to Boy Scout Transition Program has been moved from November 21 to December 5. 

Please contact Mr. Patrick Ring at pring978@verizon.net if you have questions.

YIS

Chip



If you believe that you received this message in error and/or do not wish to receive further emails please click here.

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Patriot Press June/July 2009


Share The News: Click here if you would like to send this information to one or more friends. Note, your friends will not be added any mail list.

 

To open the June/July 2009 Patriot Press click here. You will need Adobe Reader or a similar PDF reader to view the Patriot Press. If you have any problems, please email PatriotBSAWebmaster@gmail.com .

In this issue of the Patriot Press you will find:

  • Patriot District Day Camp Preview
  • Annual Recognition Dinner Review
  • Patriot OA Chapter Dinner Review
  • Reminder: Unit Membership Inventories
  • Key Scouter Workshop June 13
  • Troop 1525 Provides Service at BRCES
  • Troop 1345 Supports Burke Centre Memorial Day
  • 2009 Eagle Rank Application Changes
  • Wood Badge news
  • Health and Safety Note
  • District Chairman, Commissioner, and Executive Minute
  • Calendar of Patriot District Events
  • And much more!!!

Be sure to sign-up for District E-lists so you can stay up to date with all the latest scouting news. Pick as many lists as you like. Sign-up for "Scoutmasters", "Cubmasters", or any other list you may have interest in.  

Would you like to see the activities of your unit in the spotlight? Share your  news with us - please submit articles and pictures to osborne@erols.com  or PatriotBSAWebmaster@gmail.com 




Click Here to see the calendar of events.

 





If you believe that you received this message in error and/or do not wish to receive further emails please click here.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Asking for money

As the son of a United Way Exec., fundraising should come easy to me. And I guess it is. I don't have an issue asking for money. And asking again, again, and again. I believe in our mission and the money goes to support the mission of the BSA.

We are getting close to finishing our Family Friends of Scouting campaign. The goal for our district is $70,000, which is one of the top goals in the council. And other than the newly formed Montgomery District, which was created from 6 districts in Montgomery County, we have raised the most money of any district in the council. Per capita, Patriot does more than its fair share.

Fundraising is an interesting lens to look at our community. My best friend from college was an economics major. I asked him about this major--I was an English major, something I loved, so I just didn't get what he liked about boring economics. He explained that at NYU (our alma mater), he had made a conscious decision to be an economics major instead of finance major. Finance was a science. Economics was an art.

And that's what I mean when I say that fundraising is an interesting lens to look at our community. There's a science to fundraising: direct mail, donor databases, well-researched prospect lists. And there's the art: the art of the ask, the art of the pitch, the art of prospect cultivation, relationship building, connecting our donors to our mission and to our programs.

The science of fundraising tells me to look for people with the ability to give. The art tells me to look for the most compelling Scouting stories.

What I find fascinating is the irony (it must be my English-major nature). Irony is what happens when ones expectations are changed. I am always surprised by the sort of financial support Scouting receives (or doesn't receive). A working-class family that whose sons have dropped out of Scouting still supports the BSA because of what we do for the community. A wealthy family with 3 boys in Scouting won't give because they feel that the time they give to Scouting is the way they want to support our programs. A Scout leader won't give because he didn't receive his FOS recognition patch or cap from the year before. A parent whose son has graduated from the Troop gives a huge gift every year and says he doesn't want any recognition--saying that Scouting has already given him his gift, a son who was profoundly influenced by our character-building program.

The stories of giving, I guess, is what interests me. Why folks give, why they don't, shines a new light on our community. And I guess it's easy to criticize folks for not supporting the Scouts, but that's just not constructive. The most important thing is to shape our fundraising message. Connect folks to the costs of Scouting and our mission in the community. Show folks what we do for the community.

In a way, it's like what my teacher wife calls "differentiated learning." I give a fundraising pitch or make an ask and everyone hears a different story, a different appeal. Some folks tell me to concentrate on the costs of Scouting. Some folks say I need to focus more on the stories of our youth in Scouting. Some folks wish I just wouldn't take up so much time with my FOS pitch--they're going to support the BSA anyway!

All this goes into the extent to which a person supports Scouting financially.

And it's a lot more complicated and nuanced than just asking for money...