Monday Memo August 29th, 2022
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This Week's Headlines


Adventure Weekend

Registration Now Open

Scouts BSA Training and Merit Badge Signup 

Breakfast and Dinner Reservations prepared by the Cahuilla Lodge Order of the Arrow




WHO: Any Scout in the CIEC
WHAT: Recruit a Friend to Join Scouts
WHERE: A Unit in the California Inland Empire Council (CIEC)
WHEN: Registration processed between Aug 15 – Oct 15, 2022


HOW: Use the Scouting Force cards to Coach Scouts and families how to invite friends to visit & join Scouting
HOW: When New Scout submits application, a leader or Adult partner fills out the Submission form (Link Below). Both the New Scout and the Scout who recruited them will be entered into the drawing.
HOW: When Council leaders will hold the prize drawing and post it to Facebook at 4:00 PM on Thursday, October 20, 2022. The Winners will also be directly contacted.

WHY: To Join the FUN of Scouting and to win a Fabulous Prize!
TWO Grand Prizes will be awarded:
One lucky winner will take home the Lego Yoda Set 75255
Another lucky winner will take home the Lego The Child Set 75318

MORE QUESTIONS?
Contact the CIEC Membership Team:
MembershipCIEC@gmail.com

Drawing Submission Form:https://forms.gle/bBHpfhWvVyiP1ruP7


BSA Alumni Award Knot


Want to expand your training, and add a knot to your uniform, and help your youth, unit, and council at the same time? 
Then this Zoom seminar is for YOU!

Earn Your BSA Alumni Award Knot
Sunday, September 11, 2022
3 pm PST (6 pm EST), for 45-60 minutes

Presented by 
Jeff Bozanic
Western Territories Coordinator, BSA Alumni Association Council Support 
Ross Arnold
Alumni Committee Chair, Greater Los Angeles Area Council 

Register in advance at: https://csulb.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZcvc-qoqDkoHt0-QA0XOMNB0Ix3J3OhYTDs 
The Zoom link will be sent to you.

One of the Methods of Scouting is Advancement. This is true not only for Scouts, but for Adult Scouters as well.  Some adult advancement is based on training programs, like Introduction to Outdoor Leadership Skills, or Wood Badge. Others are noted by awards that adults can earn. Recognition for some of these programs is evidenced by knots worn on the uniform. One such award is the BSA Alumni Award. The purpose of the award is to bring former alumni back into Scouting, either as an active volunteer or a part-time participant and supporter. This seminar will explain how you can earn the award, not only learning more for yourself but also setting an example to other Scouters and the youth you serve. We will answer questions during the discussion following the presentation. 

Note: This seminar fulfills the requirement in Section III Mentoring (Option 4) of the BSA Alumni Award

About the Presenters:

Jeff Bozanic is an active Scouter in Orange County Council, California. He serves as the Western Territories Coordinator of the BSA Alumni Association, Council Support Committee, working with a team to support all councils in National Service Territories 1, 2 and 3. He is a recipient of the NESA Outstanding Eagle Scout Award, the BSA Alumni Award, and both the Council and Regional Alumnus of the Year Awards. His son, John-Aaron, and daughter, Taleah, are both Eagle Scouts.

Ross Arnold is a 60+ year Scouter in the Greater Los Angeles Area Council, California.  He was the Area 4, Western Region Committee Alumni/NESA Chair.  He currently serves on the Western Territories BSA Alumni Association, Council Support Committee.  He is a member of the National BSA Alumni and NESA Committees.  He is the recipient of the Vigil Honor and the Founders Award from his Order of the Arrow, and has received Silver Beaver and Silver Antelope Awards, the NESA Outstanding Eagle Scout Award, the BSA Alumni Award, the Council Alumnus of the Year, and the Western Territories Alumnus of the Year.  He and his two sons who are Eagle Scouts.



It’s not just an adventure.   It’s Foxfire !

Celebrating 35 years

 

FOXFIRE

Foxfire Advanced Youth Leadership Experience is a unique program where young men and women are able to enhance their leadership skills.  Scouts will expand upon the team building and ethical decision making skills learned at National Youth Leadership Training (NYLT).  The Foxfire program is built upon the mountain man era.  The three areas of Foxfire are Foxfire skills, mountain man skills, and leadership skills.  The program offers Scouts an exciting experience based on American history, and uses the core elements of NYLT to make their leadership skills intuitive.

 

The Foxfire faculty is committed to making the course a special experience.  Scouts live in a crew setting at Camp Emerson in Idyllwild.  There, they use their leadership skills to resolve challenging situations and learn skills from the days of the mountain men.  “The past teaching our future.”  These skills include working in a forge and shooting a black powder rifle.  There is minimal formal classroom type instruction, as skill sessions and leadership reflections are conducted in the field.

 

Foxfire will equip youth leaders to be better troop/crew/ship leaders, youth leader training staff members, and superior camp staff.  It will help guide their journey to become true “servant leaders.”  Foxfire provides skills for now and for the future.

 

Foxfire will give the Scouts the skills, ability, and motivation to be an effective leader gained through advanced practical applications of NYLT skills.

 

MISSION

The mission of Foxfire is to provide participants and faculty the tools, knowledge, and self-confidence to be able to demonstrate what is possible in family, friendship, Scouting, and in life.  The mission will be accomplished by providing a program based on the theme of the mountain man that motivates them to follow a life of servant leadership.

 

The mission is accomplished by:

  • Creating an environment of learning and fun
  • Providing a clear understanding of servant leadership in all activities
  • Providing real life opportunities for ethical decision making, mentoring, and living the Scout Oath and Law
  • Applying all the leadership skills taught at NYLT

 

VISION

Foxfire will prepare every staff member as an educator, earning the distinction of faculty.  Foxfire will prepare both its faculty and participants for advanced leadership by giving them the tools so that: creativity and evaluation are the new thought process, skills become naturalized, and their value for others is characterized by a compassionate affect.

 

COURSE OBJECTIVES

By the end of course, participants should be able to:

  • Construct a vision and ticket that imagines what their future looks like in six months
  • Always practice what it means to be a servant leader
  • Display teamwork during group activities
  • Show self-reliance when needed during individual skill sessions
  • Always value others for who they are, not how they look
  • Use positive reinforcement to help others do their best
  • ALWAYS HAVE FUN!
Camping

   

Eerie Emerson

Heavy Metal Weekend

National Jamboree

Guide where to go camping

2022 Camp Program Guide

Training

  

                        
Events

Popcorn Sales

 

Resources

Link to Cahuilla Lodge

AB506 Resource Page

Delivering the Promise

Eagle Scout Resources

SAFETY MOMENT - SHOOTING SAFELY

SUMMARY

The Boy Scouts of America and the National Rifle Association (NRA) have worked together for more than 100 years to develop a strong shooting sports program. Many NRA trained men and women in BSA local councils are willing and available to work with units and youth. Too often, individual units want to go shooting with whatever guns they have at whatever location they think is safe. However, the BSA Shooting Sports program is both age-appropriate and structured with specific types of firearms and the appropriate places to shoot. Leaders and chartered organizations need to know and follow the program.

GENERAL INFORMATION

This Safety Moment is not an all-inclusive document of every shooting rule available to you, but should serve as a reference document for you to make sure the shooting activities your Scouts are participating in are conducted appropriately and in the safest manner possible.

Safety considerations should be on the top of everyone’s list, especially when dealing with firearms.

  • Every council generally has a Shooting Sports Committee to manage and provide resources for all activities involving shooting sports whether during summer camps or during year-round shooting opportunities.
  • Age-appropriate guidelines limit the shooting sports in Cub Scouting to council and district activities.
    —– Cub Scouts in the Tiger, Wolf, and Bear ranks can only shoot BB guns. Webelos Scouts can shoot pellet rifles only at long-term camps.
  • Unit level activities only occur in Scouts BSA, Venturing and Sea Scouting.
  • Some programs in are limited to council camps and special safety programs (pistol and cowboy action shooting).
  • An established public range is preferred for any live fire.
  • There are provisions for set-up and use of private ranges, if not at council range. These provisions involve council and landowner approvals. (See filestore.scouting.org/filestore/Outdoor%20Program/Shooting%20Sports/430-065_WB.pdf)
  • Using appropriate and adequate eye and ear protection will help to minimize the risk of injury.
  • The proper ratio of range personnel and youth.
  • Both instructors and range safety officers are needed for live fire. Each has a different role.
  • Permission slips from parents are important, and required by states, for youth who will be shooting.
  • Know and follow the standard operating procedure (SOP) for any range being used. Review the council range SOP in advance.
  • The BSA shooting sports program does not include any firearms or devices regulated by the National Firearms Act, including machine guns, silencers, and short-barreled firearms.
  • Use appropriate targets. The BSA program does not include the use of humans, human representations, animal targets in Cub Scouting, or incendiary or exploding targets.
  • When handling firearms or operating a shooting range, take a PAUSE for safety: Pause before you start. Assess possible hazards. Understand how to proceed safely. Share your plan with others. Execute the activity safely.

 

Scout Shop

 

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The purpose of Monday Memo is to communicate information about the week ahead, to acknowledge the good things happening around the Council. If you have something you want publicized in the Monday Memo, please send it to c/o Monday Memo: Brian Paquette

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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