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I don't have an Insignia Guide with me right now, but I thought one was limited to 9 knots. If so, copy the page from the Insignia Guide and mail it to him with a Post-It Note "Dear XXXXX, you're out of uniform."scoutaholic wrote:He wears about 15 square knots on his uniform.
scoutaholic wrote:The problem is he has his own ideas about how scouting advancement should work. He has even gone so far as to hold a fake Eagle Board of Review (for boys who had left the council)
Doesn't a boy's troop have to verify this?scoutaholic wrote:and turn in Approved Eagle papers for boys who had not completed the leadership requirements
Doesn't the Council Executive have to sign all Eagle forms?scoutaholic wrote:(as a district advancement committee member he had the pull to get it to national without the proper council/district approvals).
You are doing the right thing. I like Lynda's idea but if he's an approved MB Counselor, I don't think you can refuse the MBC. Not sure about this, though.scoutaholic wrote:I avoid sending my scouts to him, because I'm aware of his common failure to fulfil the requirements, and I don't include him in the charter for my troop. I don't ask him to help with anything in our troop, but that doesn't stop him doing this for other boys in the area, or volunteering to help our troop boys one-on-one.
but you would be attempting to preserve the integrity of the BSA program and advancement process.scoutaholic wrote:I could raise the issue with our Council, but I suspect that the only outcome of that would be to make enemies.
I'm not aware of any limit on square knots. The point I was trying to make here is that he is an experienced scouter and should know the program and how things work. Although, now that I think about it, I have no way of knowing if he really earned all of the knots he wears. If he would fake an Eagle for a boy, he could easily fake his own awards too.Billiken wrote:I don't have an Insignia Guide with me right now, but I thought one was limited to 9 knots. If so, copy the page from the Insignia Guide and mail it to him with a Post-It Note "Dear XXXXX, you're out of uniform."scoutaholic wrote:He wears about 15 square knots on his uniform.
He just told me this last week about a case where two brothers (neighbor friends) had moved to Las Vegas, and 'they' (troop/council/district/I don't know who, in Vegas) refused to recognize some requirement he thought they had done. So he filled out the paperwork, forged the unit leader signatures, and signed off the board of review approval (without holding a review at all). He even conviced a fellow scouter to go along with his story in case someone asked questions. Then the council sent it on to national not knowing that it was all a sham. He must have either paid their reregistration, or done this before their registrations expired in December after they moved.Billiken wrote:scoutaholic wrote:The problem is he has his own ideas about how scouting advancement should work. He has even gone so far as to hold a fake Eagle Board of Review (for boys who had left the council)
I don't understand what you mean by fake. If a boy left the council then he's not registered in the council. Please explain.Doesn't a boy's troop have to verify this?scoutaholic wrote:and turn in Approved Eagle papers for boys who had not completed the leadership requirementsDoesn't the Council Executive have to sign all Eagle forms?scoutaholic wrote:(as a district advancement committee member he had the pull to get it to national without the proper council/district approvals).
I prefer to preserve the integrity of the BSA program without making enemies in the process. That is why I asked the question here.Billiken wrote:You are doing the right thing. I like Lynda's idea but if he's an approved MB Counselor, I don't think you can refuse the MBC. Not sure about this, though.scoutaholic wrote:I avoid sending my scouts to him, because I'm aware of his common failure to fulfil the requirements, and I don't include him in the charter for my troop. I don't ask him to help with anything in our troop, but that doesn't stop him doing this for other boys in the area, or volunteering to help our troop boys one-on-one.but you would be attempting to preserve the integrity of the BSA program and advancement process.scoutaholic wrote:I could raise the issue with our Council, but I suspect that the only outcome of that would be to make enemies.
I'm not sure I would call Salt Lake City 'large Metro', but it's not the back woods either.wagionvigil wrote:I would 1 Expect you are from a large Metro Council. COrrect?
This is a problem which must be addressed with the Council Executive Staff. If that Fails go to your Area Director of your Region.
If this is an LDS Problem you need to check with your churh leadership and tray to address the problem with them.
WOW!
He just told me this last week . . . .
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