Dylan Crume’s Eagle Scout Project Also Benefits Heritage ElementaryĀ 

Older Brother Davis Crume’s Eagle Project Also Benefited Heritage; Younger Brother Donovan Also Is Expected To Go For His EagleĀ 

New Tampa Troop 148 Eagle Scout Dylan Crume, with his grandfather Rodney Hawkins and one of the four bird feeders Dylan installed at Heritage Elementary for his Eagle Project. (Photos provided by Dylan Crume)Ā 

Our heartfelt congratulations go out to Meadow Pointe resident and Wiregrass Ranch High junior Dylan Crume, age 17, who recently earned the prestigious rank of Eagle Scout. 

Dylan’s Eagle project was the installation of four bird feeders at New Tampa’s Heritage Elementary. According to Heritage Gifted K-5 teacher Jean Josephson, Dylan and many of his fellow Scouts in Troop 148, which meets at St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church, installed ā€œbird feeders/boxes with flower boxes to attract more birds and pollinators to our campus. Dylan researched ideas for his project, put together a fund raiser to purchase all of the supplies, met with me several times in person and by email to discuss his ideas and beautifully executed the installation.ā€ 

ā€œMrs. Josephson needed some help, so I offered my services to help make their outdoor classroom look better,ā€ Dylan says. 

Dylan, whose older brother Davis also earned his Eagle Scout rank and also did an Eagle project that benefited Heritage (he created a micro-irrigation system at the school), says that the project took about three months to complete, from conception to conclusion, and that he appreciated the help of his Scoutmaster Jay Sheridan, his Eagle mentor David Thompson and all of the other Scouts in Troop 148 (see photo below) who helped him with the project.Ā 

The Troop 148 Scouts who helped Dylan with his Eagle project.Ā 

For those who don’t know, Eagle is the highest rank a Scout can achieve, and only 5 or 6% of all Boy Scouts earn the recognition. An estimated two million Scouts have earned the rank since the Boy Scouts of America were founded in 1912. Here are the requirements for earning the Eagle: 

• Earning at least 21 merit badges, including 13 Eagle-required ones, covering subjects like personal fitness, environmental science, public speaking, citizenship and financial management. 

• Learning valuable morals and life-lessons alongside friends, as they work together to overcome challenges. 

• Serving as a leader within their troop by taking charge of a patrol. 

• Learning to independently plan itineraries for campouts, backpacking trips and troop excursions. 

• Competing as a unit against other troops in exhilarating, large-scale scout ā€œcamporees.ā€ 

• Involving themselves in service by volunteering with local organizations and making valuable connections with community leaders. 

(l.-r.) Dylan, Davis, Alison, Donovan & Donny CrumeĀ 

• Coordinating and leading a large-scale volunteer project for the betterment of their community (the Eagle Project). 

Colleges, businesses, the military and community service leaders all respect an Eagle Scout. This performance-based achievement has high standards that not everyone will earn. 

Dylan’s parents told me they are ā€œsuper proud of Dylan and his Eagle Project,ā€ and that their youngest son Donovan also plans to go for his Eagle. I don’t know what the numbers are, but I’m betting there are very few families with three Eagle Scouts. 

Dylan says he plans to become a firefighter, so service to the community is obviously in his blood. He also says he plays varsity lacrosse and plays tenor sax in Marching Bulls marching band. He also is on the Youth Ministry Team at St. Mark’s. 

So, congrats again, Dylan. The Neighborhood News salutes you!

New Sign For Freedom High As Eagle Project

Austin Channels (left), a Boy Scout with Troop 180, built this sign for Freedom High in Tampa Palms as his Eagle project. Austin (with Freedom principal Kevin Stephenson) will graduate from the school next May.

To achieve the rank of Eagle Scout, the highest rank for scouts with the Boy Scouts of America (BSA), Austin Channels had to lead a project that would help his community.

As a student at Freedom High in Tampa Palms, who will start his senior year this fall, Austin wanted to do something to impact his school for good.

ā€œIn previous years, there was a football sign that was up with the football schedule,ā€ Austin explains. ā€œEvery year, they had to make a new sign and print it just for the new football schedule.ā€

So Austin — with the help of his mom, Kim — came up with the idea for an interchangeable sign that could make announcements for all the sports and other important school-related info.

Austin got approval from the school and led a team of fellow scouts and family members to conceptualize, design, build and implement the sign, plus add lighting and landscaping. He had to do his own fund raising to purchase materials, and says he met his goal of about $800 by selling T-shirts.

He worked to pick the perfect spot for the sign, where it could be seen by cars both entering and leaving the school.

Now, Austin’s sign will be maintained by the school, with student assistants changing the words on it as needed.

A final phase of the project will be to add clear plexiglass and a lock, so that no one can switch the letters around without the school’s authorization.

Austin is glad to be able to use his Eagle project as a platform to do something significant at his high school.

ā€œIt was cool to give back,ā€ Austin says. ā€œAfter being there for years with everyone teaching you, it’s good to give back to the school a little bit.ā€

Austin’s Eagle project is the culmination of his many years in Scouts, starting with Cub Scouts, when he was in third grade at Tampa Palms Elementary.

To achieve the Eagle rank, he’ll need to complete a Board of Review, which he expects to do soon. Once he earns the Eagle rank, his family will host a celebration this fall.

ā€œIt’s not as easy as other people made it look,ā€ says Austin, who explains he’s seen many older scouts complete their Eagle projects, ā€œbecause you’re leading everyone, you’re not just doing the project.ā€

Austin is a member of Troop 180, which meets at Compton Park in Tampa Palms. He says the best thing about his Boy Scout experience has been some of the incredible trips he’s had the opportunity to take, such as a 50-mile backpacking trip through the mountains of Wyoming, including Yellowstone Park.

He says his journey to earn the Eagle rank is just another part of his Scouting experience, and he looks forward to finishing out the year with his troop before he completes the program when he graduates high school.

ā€œIt’s like mountain climbing,ā€ Austin says, ā€œYou climb one, but then there’s another one a little bit taller that you can climb.ā€

His dad, Steve, who is a teacher at Freedom, says Austin’s scouting experience has taught him skills and helped him to be more self-reliant than many kids his age.

ā€œAustin has little side businesses repairing cell phones and doing car repairs that has taught him to appreciate money,ā€ says Steve. ā€œHe bought his own car with his own money, after saving for several years. Not many teenagers do that.ā€

Steve says his son has spent a lot of his time this summer doing yard work for elderly neighbors, including one he drives to various appointments and whenever she needs a ride somewhere.
ā€œIt’s been a delight to follow his journey,ā€ says Steve, ā€œand yes, I’m really proud of him.ā€

New Tampa Eagle Scout Project Gives U.S. Flags Proper Retirement

BoyScoutsAll-American holidays honoring veterans, celebrating our independence and remembering those fallen in defense of it are times when citizens, old and new, proudly display the Stars and Stripes. But, what is to be done with Old Glory when it becomes worn and tattered and needs to be replaced and properly retired?

Grant Collie, a 17-year-old New Tampa Boy Scout, has an answer.

With construction help from family and fellow Scouts, using materials donated by theĀ  Lowe’s Home Improvement store in Tampa Palms, Collie built two drop boxes for people to deposit worn flags as his Eagle Scout service project.

Flags that are turned in at Tampa Fire Rescue Station No. 21 on Green Pine Ln., off of Cross Creek Blvd. (about one-half-mile east of Bruce B. Downs {BBD} Blvd.), will be respectfully retired in ceremonies conducted by Boy Scout Troop 148, which is chartered by St. Mark the Evangelist Catholic Church in New Tampa, where the troop also meets.

Collie undertook the project as part of his quest to become an Eagle Scout. One of the requirements to obtain that status is to complete a service project that benefits the community and demonstrates leadership.

Collie says he became aware of the need when he attended a flag retiring ceremony a few years ago.

ā€œMy Boy Scout troop had a flag retirement ceremony at the Lazydays RV Resort campground in Seffner a few years ago, and since then, people have been asking at the office there if they can turn in flags,ā€ the Wharton High grad says.

BoyScout2WEBAccording to the United States Flag Code, organizations such as the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, the military and some veterans organizations are authorized to conduct flag retirement ceremonies.

Collie hopes the boxes, which will be placed at Lazydays RV Resort in Seffner and Tampa Fire Rescue Station No. 21 in New Tampa, will make it easier for people to turn in their flags. ā€œMy troop will periodically empty the boxes, collect the flags and perform a flag ceremony,ā€ he says.

Collie has been involved in Scouting since he was a first-grader at Richard F. Pride Elementary.

He credits the Cub Scout and Boy Scout leaders, specifically Bryan Noll and current Troop 148 Scoutmaster David Thompson, for helping him ā€œBe Preparedā€ for his future endeavors, starting with attending the University of Florida in Gainesville this fall to study electrical engineering.

ā€œScouting has been a huge part of my life,ā€ Collie says. ā€œIt’s taught me about responsibility and independence. ā€˜Be Prepared’ is the motto, and I live my life by that.ā€

According to Thompson, the leadership Collie is demonstrating with his flag box project is consistent with what he has shown in his Troop 148 activities.

ā€œHe has been a great mentor, teaching younger Scouts about the flag,ā€ says Thompson, who suggests people fold their flags and put them in plastic bags when they deposit them in the box.

Collie’s parents are proud as their son advances toward becoming an Eagle Scout and appreciate the role Scouting has in their son’s life.

His father, Phillip Collie, says the flag box project revealed an emerging side of his son’s character to him as he observed the work in progress. ā€œHe was very much in charge and showed a lot of leadership skills,ā€ Phillip says.

Laura Collie is similarly pleased with the influence Scouting and the service project have had on her son.

ā€œI’ve seen him grow in maturity and respect toward others,ā€ she says.

Fire Captain John Donnelly is in charge of Tampa Fire Rescue (TFR) Station No. 21 and sought approval to place the box at the station.

In the letter to TFR Chief Thomas Forward, Donnelly wrote, ā€œI think this would be a great way to assist Grant in achieving his goal, while allowing the citizens of Tampa a dignified way to retire their American flags.ā€

Forward granted permission and a box was placed at Station 21 on Aug. 2.

When Collie delivered the box (far right), Donnelly commented on the project’s alignment with TFR’s purpose.

ā€œOur goal is to aid the community and this goes along with that,ā€ he said.

People wanting to drop flags off at Fire Station No. 21 should enter through the main office door and they will be directed to the box, says Donnelly.

Collie expressed optimism the boxes at the fire station and at Lazydays RV Resort will get a lot of use.Ā 

ā€œI know there’s lots of people around here who have (old or tattered) flags, so I’m hoping they’ll bring them here so we can have ceremonies and retire them,ā€ Collie says.

Tampa Fire Rescue Station No. 21 is located at 18902 Green Pine Ln., off Cross Creek Blvd. Lazydays RV Resort is located at 6210 C.R. 579 in Seffner.

New Tampa Scout Earns Eagle Scout Rank With Veterans Hospital Project

Troop 142 (which meets in Tampa Palms) Scoutmaster Michael Ebert, with new Eagle Scout Benjamin Geller.
Troop 142 (which meets in Tampa Palms) Scoutmaster Michael Ebert, with new Eagle Scout Benjamin Geller.

By Matt Wiley

It’s an honor shared by only about two percent of all Boy Scouts across the country since 1912, but one New Tampa resident is soaring above his peers. After nearly ten years of hard work and determination, Benjamin Geller has earned the status of Eagle Scout, the highest rank a member of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) can receive.Continue reading