THE PEOPLE WHO MAKE IT WORK
Meet Our Leadership
Every leader in Pack 118 is a trained parent volunteer.
Here's who's steering the pack this year—the front office that delivers the program, and the back office that keeps it running.
Meet Our Leadership
Every leader in Pack 118 is a trained parent volunteer.
Here's who's steering the pack this year—the front office that delivers the program, and the back office that keeps it running.
Many of our leaders never participated in Scouts before they volunteered at Pack 118. Fortunately, the BSA provides us training that teaches us how to be effective Cub Scout leaders. We also have the collective experience of everyone in the pack to answer questions, support each other as we work together.
All of our pack leaders are parents with scouts and volunteers.
We ask that each parent make an effort to help the pack in some way to make light work for all of us.
When we lead as Cub Scout parents, we make Scouting part of how we raise our kids—modeling that volunteering matters and that time together is worth protecting. Standing beside your scout in uniform shows them a different side of you, and builds a bond that lasts. Your involvement leaves a real, lifelong mark on a child's confidence and sense of worth.
Prefer to help behind the scenes? Plenty of roles keep the pack running without ever leading a den. Below are our current positions—see one that's open and speaks to you?
Click the link and sign up!
Running the program.
The leaders your scout sees at every den and pack meeting.
Trent
Eagle Scout and lifelong Scouter. Tiger Cub to Eagle with Troop 453 back in Indiana, plus camp counselor and Assistant Scoutmaster years. Now raising a Bear scout of his own here in Pack 118, and glad to be doing it. Happiest with the family on a national-park trail.
Brittany
Mark
Whitney
Mom of two Cubs, entering her fourth year leading a den and moving up with her scouts this year. Horseback rider, gardener, hiker, friend to most creatures (spiders excepted). Wants every family in her den to leave Scouting better than they found it.
Dorothy
Kindergarten teacher, Fayette County baseball coach, and proud Cub Scout leader who grew up in Girl Scouts and is grateful for the chance to give back through Scouting. She enjoys photography, painting, crafting, and reading, and is happiest when surrounded by family. Whether in the classroom, on the ballfield, or around the campfire, she loves helping children discover their strengths, develop leadership, and grow into kind, confident people.
Jerel
Cub Scout with Pack 220 in Warner Robins, then Life Scout with Troop 550—Georgia Scouting his whole life. A mechanic by trade who loves teaching kids hands-on skills, and coaches with Fayette County Youth Softball. Woodworker, fisherman, classic-car tinkerer.
Chris
A Cub Scout parent who loves being outdoors and exploring national parks with his family. Chris enjoys helping kids learn new skills, try new things, and build confidence through hands‑on work. He runs his den through teamwork, respect, and keeping things fun and welcoming. His goal is to create an environment where every Scout feels included, supported, and excited to grow.
Keeping it running.
The committee that plans the events, balances the books, and hauls the gear—so the front office can just have fun with the kids.
Patrick
Christy
A third-year Scouting family with a Bear scout leading the way. A social worker of over fifteen years, now serving as Treasurer to support a program that's been so meaningful to her family. Enjoys gardening and reading in her spare time.
Lindsey
Dustin
Entering his fifth year in scouting. Father of a Bear Scout. Older brother to three Eagle Scouts, and just a hair too old to join when they caught the bug—so he's making up for it now. Army veteran, DIY fixer, outdoors lover, techie, and a serial "yes"-sayer. Which is, more or less, how a person ends up both quartermaster and webmaster.
Kevin
Eagle Scout who found his best childhood friendships through Scouting, and wants the same for this pack. Miami kid turned offshore fisherman, now a father of six—three of them Cubs in Pack 118—with a houseful of animals and a day job at the FAA.
Jennifer
Five years in the pack, following her son from Tiger all the way up—and staying on one more year even now that he's bridged to the troop. A Girl Scout for nine years who always dreamed of a troop of her own; the pack became it. Happiest outdoors—camping, hiking, or at the beach.
Every leader here is a parent who said yes.
There's no separate staff—the pack is us. Lead a den, help at one event, bring your ideas to committee, or just raise your hand when a leader asks.
If you're unsure where to start, become an Assistant Den Leader. And never be shy about asking questions—every leader is happy to share what's worked.
Your first job, always:
Make sure it stays fun.