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Buying
food for your patrol is a very important job! If you don't
buy enough, your patrol members aren't going to be very happy.
At the same time, if you buy too much food, some of it will be
wasted.
Managing
the food buying task is very important. Keeping track of
who in your patrol is going, how much money they've paid in,
setting your budget and managing your funds are a big part of
being successful in this leadership task.
To
start, plan the menu with your patrol. Get a firm count of
how many patrol members are going at the campout prep meeting.
The best way to keep track of this job is to use our Campout
Planning Guide. You can get the form from your Patrol
Leader or from this web site (Campout Prep Guide) Click onto
this at the lower part of this message. Once you know the
number going camping, plan to only buy as much food as your
patrol will need ... you want to be as close to the correct
amount as possible.
Buying
too much food costs extra money and is wasteful. Typically,
leftover food is not sanitary by the time the campout is over
and must be thrown out. Try your best to stay within your
budget. If you have 10 patrol members, but only 7 have paid and
said they are going, your budget is $72, not $100. Plan
your menu and purchases accordingly. After you have purchased
the food, place the receipts in an envelope with the names of
those who paid on the outside. Also put the total cost of the
food, ice and supplies on the envelope. If there is
change, place it in the envelope.
Buying
food for the patrol is supposed to be a break-even proposition.
You should not keep any change, and you should not run out of
money. When you are done, return the envelope to the
Scoutmaster. He will keep any extra money in the envelope set
aside for your patrol. This way, if you or the next person to
buy comes up short, you or they will be reimbursed only to the
extent that your patrol has returned their overages in the past.
If it is found that you have purchased wastefully and are short
on funds, monies to make up the shortage may not be available.
It is your job when buying the food to stay within your budget!
Once
you arrive for the campout and turn in your envelope to the
Scoutmaster, your job is not complete. After the campout, the
person who bought the food (GRUBMASTER) is also responsible for
removing all food from the patrol boxes and cooler and disposing
of it in an appropriate manner. Disposal may mean splitting it
between patrol members or giving it to one. Be careful, though
... if the food is spoiled or ruined, it should be disposed of
in the church Dumpster located in the parking lot.
If
you used a Troop ice chest for the campout, you are responsible
for taking it home, cleaning it thoroughly, disinfecting it and
bringing it to the next Troop meeting. If you brought your own
ice chest, you are responsible for taking it home immediately.
Print
out this Sheet...make copies for your patrol notebook so you
will have them ready to use.
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