I often bemoan my wife's level of involvement in guiding/scouting, and especially how her volunteer service adds up in terms of costs. She is forever getting 'little things' for the kids meetings, taking time for leaders' meetings (Don't forget to bring cookies!!) using up resources to make things work, etc. etc. (Do you have 20 nails and about 30 feet of string? I need to put together an activity for the kids.)
She has been involved with Guides since she was a kid, and is now an area/district guider - which mean less of a time commitment, although more intense, contact with the girls, but a much greater workload on putting together things like camps and training and so on. I admire her work, but she really donates a lot of time and resources. Guides has a budget, but how do you bill for muffins at a leaders' meeting, or the one bag of popsicle sticks you rushed out to get on the meeting night?
Last year our eldest boy enrolled in Beavers (Scouting). At the time we agreed that neither of us would have any involvement since part of the reason for enrolling him was that he gain some independence. Then SWMBO didn't like the way the troop was being run, so she stepped in as a parent advisor. Now she runs his unit and advises on a second. And guess what - more time, money, resources, meetings, cookies and coffee. Of course Scouts has a budget as well, but still much out of pocket and incidentals that "aren't worth invoicing." Oh and now we are expected to support scouting by buying $25 bags of popcorn as well $5 boxes of guide cookies (The cookies are better).
The other side of this equation is that for the involvement she has, we now have a network of scouters/guiders with different skills. The only one we really use is one guider who offers our son piano lessons at a reduced rate. He struggles, but its good for him.
So yeah - I have some issues with level of involvement in these things. On the other hand, when our teen daughter got involved with Sea Cadets, I was supportive. Cadets pays the kids to go to camp. Their uniforms are free, and they learn the same skills in a more disciplined environment. We are out of pocket about $50 a year for trips and weekend camps, it seems like a much better investment. The kids fundraise twice a year by going to shopping cetres in uniform and asking for donations - dangerously close to panhandling, but for a cause. They also sell poppies to raise funds for the Legion - who return the favour by hosting dances and dinners to support the kids.
Last week I was approached by one of the Cadet corps officers to join up. In order to be involved there, you need to give up a lot more information - so they can put you on payroll as a Canadian Forces Reservist. Oh, and when you retire, cadets offers you a military pension to match your days served against the Canadian Forces Pension plan. The more involved you are as a leader, the more they pay for your time, and the more you get in the pension. Of course its a pittance, but at least there is some reimbursement.
Now I know Cadets is paid for by our taxes, but for what it offers the kids (at no charge) and what it offers the parents (at no charge) and the difference between that and what Scouts/Guiding takes out of the families in terms of time and money, why is it that so few kids end up in the Cadet movement? Locally we struggle to keep a corps at 30 kids - and we're PAYING them to go to camp!!! Scouts is charging us $300 for a week of daycamp, last summer our daughter came home with $400 for attending 2 weeks of summer camp with all meals, transportation, and clothing provided. When she came home, she had First Aid Certification, CYA sailing certification, her Powerboat operator's card, and Marine Band Radio Operator's licence. As a kid I got a licensed as a Marine Engineer, and flown coast to coast. Friends of mine toured Europe to represent Canada at the Vimy Memorial and visit WW1/2 sites with the Legion.
I'm baffled. I just don't get it. I can't transition the boys out of Scouting fast enough, yet those in Scouts defend the organization with religious fervour.
I guess I'm just ranting. But I need to rant. Arrgablargablarg.