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Scouting Dollars
Who Pays for Scouting?
Youth Members
Assisted by their parents or guardians, boys in Cub Scouting,
Boy Scouting, and Varsity Scouting and young men and women in Venturing
pay their share from personal savings and participation in money-earning
projects.
Members buy their own uniforms, handbooks, and personal equipment and
pay their own camp fees.
Packs, Troops, Teams, and Posts
Weekly or monthly dues and funds from
approved money-earning projects meet expenses for supplies and activities
in the Cub Scout pack, Boy Scout troop, Varsity Scout team, and Venturer
crew. These monies help pay for camping equipment, registration fees,
Boys' Life magazine, uniform insignia, special activities, and program
materials.
Community Organizations
Each chartered organization using the Scouting
program provides a meeting place and adult volunteer leadership for its
BSA unit(s). The chartered organization and local council must approve
unit money-earning projects before the launch of the project.
Local Council
Financial resources for the local council (the local nonprofit
corporation chartered by the National Council) come from an annual Friends
of Scouting (FOS) campaign, local United Ways, foundation grants, special
events, project sales, investment income, trust funds, bequests, and
gifts of real and personal property.
These funds provide for professional staff supervision, organization
of new Scouting units, service for existing units, training of volunteer
leaders, and maintenance of council camps. They also finance the operation
of the local council service center, where volunteer leaders can obtain
literature, insignia, advancement badges, and other items vital to the
program. In addition, the service center maintains advancement and membership
records.
National Organization
Funds to support the national organization of the
Boy Scouts of America come from registration fees, local council service
fees, investment income, Scouting and Boys' Life magazines, sale of uniforms
and equipment, contributions from individuals, and foundation grants.
These monies help to deliver the program of the BSA (through four regional
service centers and more than 300 local councils) to chartered organizations
that use the Scouting program to meet the needs of their youth.
The national office
- Provides local councils
with program development and evaluation as well as camp and office
planning, extensive financial counseling, planned giving and fund-raising
information, and professional personnel support
- Coordinates a communications
network through magazines and literature (handbooks, merit badge
pamphlets, brochures, training materials, and professional development
training)
- Creates a climate of positive understanding and support
- Makes available
uniforms, equipment, and program supplies
- Administers national high-adventure
bases and national events (jamborees, National Eagle Scout Association
and Order of the Arrow conferences, and National Council meetings)
- Maintains
communication with chartered organizations that use the Scouting
program (religious institutions, PTA, civic organizations, labor unions,
professional organizations, business, and industry)
- Maintains liaison
with Scouting associations in other countries as a member of the
World Scout Conference
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