General Merit Badge
Procedures
The first thing a scout should do is find a "Buddy" who wants to earn the same merit badge, and approach the Scoutmaster for a "Blue Merit Badge Card". If the scouts don't already know who the merit badge Counselor is for that particular merit badge, the scoutmaster will help the boys find a registered counselor.
** The "buddy system" is always used in scouting, as per the requirements found in the Guide to Safe Scouting.**
The Scoutmaster then
fills out the section of the blue card with "Application for Merit
Badge" on the front (the 3rd third on the front). The Scoutmaster puts the
date of the request of the blue card at the bottom of the form.
The scouts then contact the merit badge counselor to arrange a meeting. At the first meeting, the scout turns over the blue card to the counselor to keep track of until the merit badge is completed.
** Again, 3 people must be present at all meetings with the merit badge counselor, as per the directives in the Guide to Safe Scouting.**
When the final
requirement of the merit badge is completed, the merit badge counselor fills in
all the rest of the blanks on the blue card. The date of completion is the date
it is earned!!! It will be the date recorded
on all records of the scouts, and the date that will appear on the advancement
order form and the final Merit Badge Card!
The merit badge counselor
will keep the last third of the blue card
"Counselor's Record", and give back the other 2 thirds to the
Scouts who will then turn it into the Scoutmaster.
The Scoutmaster will then record it in the Scout's Handbook, and hand the scout the middle portion of the blue card for the scout's records. The scout must keep this blue card safe. It will be replaced in his records when his formal Merit Badge card is awarded at the Court of Honor. The last part of the blue card is handed to the Advancement Chairman, who will record it, order the merit badge and Merit Badge Card, and keep the blue card for the troop's records.
NOTE: each person holding on to a portion of the
blue card... the Merit Badge Counselor, the Troop Advancement Chairman, and the
Scout must hold on to these cards for 7 years, or until the Scout makes Eagle.
If anything should ever happen to the official records of the scout, the blue
cards will serve as proof of earning the merit
badge towards the Eagle rank. Instruct the scouts, and/or his parents, to keep
the blue cards separate from the Merit Badge cards. That way if one is lost,
the other can replace it!
Sometimes the blue cards are ignored in the program, but the simple fact is it
is an important part of the ranking system.