Tillikum District, Mount Baker Council   
Serving Everett, Mukilteo and Mill Creek
1910   100 YEARS OF SCOUTING   2010
Celebrating the Adventure 
* Continuing the Journey

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updated 04/16/12

1715-100th PL SE #B
Everett, WA 98208
425-338-0380

COMMISSIONER

Doug Smart, District Commissioner


Commissioners are district and council leaders who help Scout units succeed. They coach and consult with adult leaders of Cub Scout packs, Boy Scout troops, and Venturing crews. Commissioners help maintain the standards of the Boy Scouts of America. They also oversee the unit charter renewal plan so that each unit reregisters on time with an optimum number of youth and adult members.

Commissioner Brochure

Click here to volunteer

Roundtable

 

Commissioner Resources:

Unit Visit Tracking

For information on the Unit Visit Tracking System, please visit the BSA site.  If you need a hard copy of the form to fill out, it can be found here.

Current Commissioners:

Commissioner

Units

Ken Black

Pack 320, Troop 189

Brandon Bodily

Crew 71, Team 71, Troop 71, Crew 412, Team 412, Troop 412

Sue Campbell

Pack 55

Steve Chin

Pack 21, Troop 122

Sam Colson

Crew 12, Troop 12, Team 12

John Diaz

Pack 33, Troop 114

Nicki Gorski

Pack 110, Pack 95

James Hendry

Ship 226, Troop 120

Jim Henshaw

Pack 121

Tom Hutchinson

Crew 18, Pack 18, Troop 18

Ryan Jensen

Crew 55, Troop 55

Michele Johnson

Pack 4, Pack 27

John Levandowski

Troop 1

Jackie Libby

Pack 73

Ed Reger

 

Jim Ruck

Pack 31, Troop 35

Richard Shurtz

Pack 1

Lori Smart

Pack 30, Pack 122

Bill Stiteler

Pack 189, Troop 16

Sean Sweetnam

Crew 22, Team 22, Troop 22

Mike Wynn

Pack 16, Troop 221

 

Crew 23

 

Pack 8

 

Pack 11

 

Pack 12

 

Pack 19

 

Pack 22

 

Pack 25

 

Pack 71

 

Pack 90

 

Pack 91

 

Pack 120

 

Pack 412

 

Pack 777

 

Troop 19

 

Troop 20

 

Troop 23

 

Troop 90

 

Troop 91

 

Troop 327

 


Roles the Commissioner Plays

A commissioner plays several roles, including friend, representative, unit "doctor," teacher, and counselor.

The commissioner is a friend of the unit. Of all their roles, this one is the most important. It springs from the attitude, "I care, I am here to help, what can I do for you?" Caring is the ingredient that makes commissioner service successful. He or she is an advocate of unit needs. A commissioner who makes himself known and accepted now will be called on in future times of trouble.

The commissioner is a representative. The average unit leader is totally occupied in working with kids. Some have little if any contact with the Boy Scouts of America other than a commissioner's visit to their meeting. To them, the commissioner may be the BSA. The commissioner helps represent the ideals, the principles, and the policies of the Scouting movement.

The commissioner is a unit "doctor." In their role as "doctor," they know that prevention is better than a cure, so they try to see that their units make good "health practices" a way of life. When problems arise, and they will even in the best unit, they act quickly. They observe symptoms, diagnose the real ailment, prescribe a remedy, and follow up on the patient.

The commissioner is a teacher. As a commissioner, they will have a wonderful opportunity to participate in the growth of unit leaders by sharing knowledge with them. They teach not just in an academic environment, but where it counts most—as an immediate response to a need to know. That is the best adult learning situation since the lesson is instantly reinforced by practical application of the new knowledge.

The commissioner is a counselor. As a Scouting counselor, they will help units solve their own problems. Counseling is the best role when unit leaders don't recognize a problem and where solutions are not clear-cut. Everyone needs counseling from time to time, even experienced leaders.

How are commissioners selected?

Selection process and criteria vary depending on the position.

Unit Commissioners are appointed by the district commissioner with the approval of the council executive board.

Unit commissioners should—

  • Have excellent people skills

  • Have a Scouting background or be fast-track learners

  • Know and practice Scouting ideals

Assistant District Commissioners are appointed by the district commissioner with the approval of the council executive board.

Assistant district commissioners should—

  • Be able to recruit and work through a team of unit commissioners.

  • Have excellent people skills

  • Have a broad Scouting background or be fast-track learners

  • Know and practice Scouting ideals

Roundtable Commissioners are appointed by the district commissioner with the approval of the council executive board.

Roundtable commissioners should—

  • Be congenial and enthusiastic performers

  • Have the ability to recruit a roundtable staff

  • Have a good Scouting program background in the program for which they will run roundtables

  • Be a good planner

District Commissioners are approved and appointed by the council executive board, with the concurrence of the Scout executive, on the recommendation of the district nominating committee.

District commissioners should—

  • Be widely respected in the community

  • Be an enthusiastic leader of adults

  • Have the ability to recruit a complete team of commissioners for their districts

  • Have the ability to guide and motivate commissioners to visit units regularly, identify unit needs, and help unit adults to meet needs

  • Be a role model of Scouting ideals

Commissioners must not be registered simultaneously as unit leaders. Some commissioners may be registered on a unit committee because they have a son in the unit or because of previous personal history in the unit, but their principle Scouting obligation should be with commissioner responsibilities. Commissioners may be currently registered in only one commissioner position.

 


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