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Yankee Clipper Council
- Boy Scouts of America Northeastern Massachusetts and Southern New Hampshire |
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By Mark E. Vogler ,
Staff Writer, Eagle-Tribune, July 9, 2007
LAWRENCE - This city's once floundering Boy Scout
program has been rejuvenated thanks to an outreach
effort into the Hispanic community.
The number of Scouts in Lawrence has expanded from
53 to 250 over the past two years, making the city a
national model on how to spark interest in Scouting
programs among Hispanic youths.
By way of comparison, Lawrence, with a population of
about 72,000, once lagged behind Plaistow, N.H., a
town of about 8,000 people, which had 61 Scouts two
years ago. Plaistow's membership has increased to 85
over the same to years.
"The majority of these new Scouts are Hispanic, and
it is important that we understand and respond to
the needs of the Latino community," John Skelton,
president of the Yankee Clipper Council, said of the
membership surge in Lawrence.
The Haverhill-based Yankee Clipper Council serves
more than 9,000 members ages 6 to 18 in 52
communities in eastern Massachusetts and southern
New Hampshire.
There are still more Scouts registered in Andover
(422) and Haverhill (365), communities that
experienced modest growth - 9 percent and 12 percent
respectively.
But Lawrence's enrollment actually overtook North
Andover (215) and Methuen (240), both of which
experienced more than a 20 percent drop.
The strategy to make Scouting more relevant to the
Hispanic community involved the creation of a
bilingual Web site, program and training materials
in Spanish, bilingual leader training, the hiring of
bilingual and bicultural employees to address the
needs of Latinos, and the appointment of bilingual
and bicultural members to the council's executive
board.
Lawrence's Hispanic community accounts for between
60 percent and 70 percent of the city's overall
population.
The recruitment efforts were so successful that Boy
Scouts of America executives from Dallas and
Washington, D.C., visited the city to study
Lawrence's methods as a national model. The council
also earned the Yankee Clipper Council the Regional
President's Scoutreach Award for 2006.
Lawrence was one of only eight communities across
the country to earn the award.
"The city was also the only community in the Eastern
U.S., the only community that serves a
non-Mexican-American population and the only one
that was not a major metropolitan community to win
this award," said City Attorney Charles Boddy, who
has been recognized locally and by council officials
as a key catalyst to the renaissance of scouting in
Lawrence.
Boddy is a Lawrence native who earned his Eagle
Scout badge while growing up in the city. Though he
has moved away from the area, he maintains local
ties to Scouting as a member of the council's
executive board and as district chairman.
"The increase in Scouting membership in Lawrence was
dramatic," Boddy said.
"But part of the reason was that Lawrence was so
underserved for so many years that the opportunity
for expansion was really unlimited."
Boddy cited the involvement of Latino church
leaders, including Pastor Nelson Gonzalez at Iglesia
Evangelica Hispana, Father Jorge Reyes at St. Mary's
of the Assumption Catholic Church and Pastor Victor
Jarvis at Iglesia Ebenezer as crucial to unit
organizational and recruitment efforts.
In the spring, the council hired Wendy Perez of
Lawrence to work as a special liaison to the
Hispanic community. A key part of her job is to
assist Lawrence and Latino families who wish to join
a Scout troop.
But she will also help improve communications
between the Boy Scouts office and Latinos living
throughout the council.