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Scouts Canada

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Scouts Canada is a Scout association and member of the World Organization of the Scout Movement, in affiliation with the French-language Association des Scouts du Canada. Scouts Canada runs programs for young people, male and female, ages 5 to 26.

Program

Program sections

Scouts Canada has five program sections: Programs are open to males and females.

Major Awards

Scouts Canada has several major awards:

Badge Program

See:

Camps

Scouts Canada runs the Canadian Scout Jamboree (also known as "CJ"). The next Jamboree will be CJ'07.

Scouts Canada operates about 200 Scout camps across Canadahttp://scoutdocs.ca/Camps/. Well-known camps include Impeesa Extreme, Haliburton Scout Reserve and Tamaracouta Scout Reserve. The Tamaracouta Scout Reserve is the oldest continually operating Scout camp in the world.

History

In the spring of 1908, just months after the book Scouting for Boys was published in England, Scouting came to Canada. Robert Baden-Powell wrote to Earl Grey, then Governor General of Canada, in 1910 to ask him to organize Scouting in Canada. Scouting was carried on as part of The Boy Scouts Association Overseas Department until The Canadian General Council of the Boy Scout Association was incorporated by an Act of the Canadian Parliament on June 12, 1914. The Canadian General Council continued to be a branch of the Boy Scout Association until October 30, 1946, when it became an independent member of the Boy Scout World Conference, now the World Organization of the Scout Movement. A subsequent amendment to the Act of Parliament changed the name to Boy Scouts of Canada. In 1976 the Scouts Canada logo was introduced and the organization, by its By-laws, adopted the name Scouts Canadahttp://scoutdocs.ca/Scouts_Canada_Act/Statutes.php.

Organization

Scouts Canada is divided into twenty Councils, each representing a whole province or large part thereof. Each Council is headed by a Council Commissioner appointed by the Executive Commissioner (the top staff member reporting to the Board of Governors). Councils are divided into Areas, each headed by an Area Commissioner appointed by the Council Commissionerhttp://sunshine.scouts.ca/bpp/BYLAW2.pdf.

Scouts Canada has two affiliated Scout associations:

Canada is the only country that has more than one WOSM member association without a national federation. Scouts Canada and Association des Scouts du Canada send a joint delegation to meetings of the World Organization of the Scout Movement. This is coordinated through the Committee on Cooperation.

Every Governor General since Earl Grey, has been either the Chief Scout for Canada (prior to 1946) or Chief Scout of Canada (after 1946).

Canadian Scout Jamboree

The Canadian Scout Jamboree or CJ is a Scout Jamboree run by Scouts Canada for members of the Scout and Venturer sections. The Jamboree is well known on the international Scouting scene, and will usually have several groups from other countries attending, most notable from the United States. The CJ that would normally have been held in 2005 was cancelled shortly after CJ'01 due to concerns about volunteer burnout. In 2004, CJ'07 was announced. CJ'07 is the first CJ planned to be held at a Scout camp.

List of Jamborees

Issues

Since the late 1960s, Scouts Canada has suffered from ongoing membership decline in all sections and among adults, especially in the transition between Cubs and Scouts. During this transition, Scouting's market share drops from between ten and fifteen percent of young people to less than two percent.

Scouts Canada's 2005 Annual Report, published in November, 2005, reported an unfunded pension liability of over $5 million, other liabilities totalling over $5 million (including bank indebtedness of $1.9 million), and an annual operating deficit of over $1 millionhttp://www.scouts.ca/inside.asp?cmPageID=297. This financial situation has led to some people having serious concern about the ongoing financial viability of Scouts Canadahttp://scouteh.ca/resources/2006-02-03-sc_finances.php.

Scouts Canada conducted a property review in Ontario which concluded that dozens of camps should be sold. This has resulted in legal action between the Scouts Canada Ontario Incorporated Body and local Scouters. Action was underway in November 2005http://www.stthomastimesjournal.com/story.php?id=199066 and is ongoing.

Members of Scouts Canada are upset with the national organization's governance structure which no longer includes locally-elected councilshttp://sunshine.scouts.ca/bpp/BYLAW2.pdf. In response, Scouter Mike Reid from Montreal, Québec founded in August, 2004 an organization called SCOUT eh! which is a group of "registered Scouts Canada members from across Canada dedicated to transforming Scouts Canada into a democratic association".

In 1998, the Baden-Powell Scouts (BPSA) were established in Canada, rejecting the modernization of the Scout method by WOSM and Scouts Canada. Scouts Canada challenged the association and successfully argued that the word "Scout", in the context of a youth organization, is a trademark held by Scouts Canada.

See also

References

External links

Members of the Interamerican Scout Region
Full members: Argentina | Bahamas | Barbados | Belize | Bolivia | Brazil | Canada | Chile | Colombia | Costa Rica | Dominica | Dominican Republic | Ecuador | El Salvador | Grenada | Guatemala | Guyana | Haiti | Honduras | Jamaica | Mexico | Nicaragua | Panama | Paraguay | Peru | Saint Lucia | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | Suriname | Trinidad and Tobago | United States | Uruguay | Venezuela
Associate members: Aruba | Netherlands Antilles
Countries without Scouting: Cuba

 


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