Yorkshire Post

Scouting for helpers to ensure young do their best

Waiting list for cubs and scouts hits record levels as volunteers try to juggle duties with their busy lives

- DAVID BEHRENS DIGITAL EDITOR ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

IN AN age before video games and even TV, it was a way of keeping schoolboys gainfully occupied for the communal good, during the Easter holidays.

Bob-a-Job Week, in which boy Scouts knocked on their neighbours’ doors and offered to carry out modest household chores for a shilling, was washed away 25 years ago on a tide of health and safety and child protection regulation­s. And this Easter, it emerged last night, children with no knowledge of what a bob even was, are lucky if they can get even their foot in the door of the local Scout hut.

A shortage of volunteers means that thousands of young people in Yorkshire alone have been consigned to waiting lists before they can put on the traditiona­l scarf and woggle.

The pressures of 21st century life are blamed for the bottleneck, with record numbers of helpers coming forward but many limited by the constraint­s of their work lives to the hours they can donate, the Scout Associatio­n says.

The organisati­on picked the traditiona­l Bob-a-Job holiday to launch a new appeal for officials. It said that although more than 33,000 young people in the Yorkshire region were now involved with Scouting, another 3,668 were on waiting lists to join up. Nationally, despite 154,000 volunteer youth workers, charity trustees and instructor­s, the waiting list is put at 51,000 – its longest ever – with 7,000 having joined in the 21 months to the end of January.

Places in Cub Scout packs, for children aged eight to 10, are said to be the most popular, with a 158,000 membership swelled by nearly 2,000 new recruits in the last year. Girl Scouts, no longer a separate organisati­on, account for just over a quarter of total numbers.

Tim Kidd, UK chief commission­er at the Scout Associatio­n, said: “Our adult volunteers today seek much more flexible volunteeri­ng arrangemen­ts than in the past, so that they can fit it around their busy lives.

“Many adults who are signing up with the Scouts have a limited amount of time to donate to us, and so we need more volunteers as a whole in order to accommodat­e the continued demand for Scouting among young people.”

He urged people to volunteer for the Scouts, adding that the organisati­on was making it easier for those with limited time to join by being flexible about a range of roles, including group leaders and trustee positions.

Overall, there are 457,000 young people involved in the Scouts across the UK. Once adult volunteers are included, the membership is 618,000, up 7.8 per cent. In Yorkshire, a total of 44,000 are either scouts or volunteers.

The adventurer Bear Grylls, the organisati­on’s Chief Scout, said: “Volunteeri­ng changes us all for the better.

“Our challenge is to keep recruiting even more adults, as we’ve got 51,000 young people wanting to join and benefit from what Scouting offers.”

Olympic rowing champion Helen Glover, who signed up last month as a “Scout ambassador”, added: “Adult volunteers are the lifeblood of our movement. Whatever your skill, big or small, come and share it and help inspire the next generation.”

Other celebritie­s to volunteer so far this year include Paralympia­n swimmer Ellie Simmonds and the Bradfordbo­rn TV presenter, Anita Rani.

51,000 young people want to join and benefit from what Scouting offers The adventurer Bear Grylls, the organisati­on’s Chief Scout,

 ?? PICTURES: PA WIRE ?? SCOUTING AHEAD: Clockwise, from top, 30,000 Scouts from nearly every corner of the world taking part at the 23rd World Scout Jamboree in Japan; West Leeds Scouts going caving in North Yorkshire; chief scout Bear Grylls; a Scouts parade in 1974; below...
PICTURES: PA WIRE SCOUTING AHEAD: Clockwise, from top, 30,000 Scouts from nearly every corner of the world taking part at the 23rd World Scout Jamboree in Japan; West Leeds Scouts going caving in North Yorkshire; chief scout Bear Grylls; a Scouts parade in 1974; below...
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