Sorry, but the more likely scenario this is just like all the posts that pop up here weekly asking for ways to fundraise for trips to Disney. My “favorite” are folks who come here and say my band/show chori/dance team, etc. was “chosen” to perform in WDW. This whole being “chosen” is a Disney racket! Disney invites thousands of these organizations to perform on some random stage and then in return these groups spend hundreds of thousands of dollars in the park/hotels/dining. Disney is a smart marketer. I do not agree with asking for donations for these trips. If the majority of your trip is for personal travel then you need to offer services/goods at market rate and not ask for donations.
If the purpose is to fulfill badge requirements there are plenty of less expensive options. Asking people to donate so kids can take a pleasure trip while doing a few token badge activities in this economy is not right.
First, I don't think you're at all familiar with Girl Scouts.
Yes, scouts do service projects.
Yes, scouts earn badges.
They also take trips for educational or just plain fun purposes. If you make everything in scouts serious, you'll lose your girls. A good troop offers a balance of activities: Outdoor experiences, crafts, service to the community, leadership opportunities and just-for-fun outings.
The OP doesn't seem to be begging for donations at all. Rather, she's looking for ideas for how to have the girls raise money. Hosting a spaghetti supper or raking leaves
are fundraisers. The girls do the work and people pay for their services.
I do agree that the "being chosen" thing is a racket, but that's not really the point at all. High school bands are "chosen", but scout troops aren't.
Going to Disney is not JUST a fun experiance, but a learning experiance as well. Where else can you learn ALL of the things that Disney can teach all in one place?
I disagree. It's possible to search out educational experiences for kids at Disney, but -- if you're going to be honest about it -- the vast majority of the experience is just plain fun: rides, characters, cool sites and meals. It sounds less than honest to say that you're going to a theme park for educational purposes (and, no, I don't want to hear about the various programs because the majority of the Disney guests go for Splash Mountain, not those programs). But for the purposes of this discussion,
that's not a negative; not everything has to have a serious, life-long purpose. Sharing a fun time with friends is a worthwhile reason to take a trip.
The most valuable lessons that a scout troop would learn from a Disney trip would revolve around goal-setting, financial planning, and organization.
We've been denied for simple easy fundraisers like pancake breakfasts. We were told it was "out of our scope" and they suggested things like " washing windows " instead. I'm sorry, I don't see how soliciting manual labor on private property followed Safety Wise.
Hint-hint-hint: The council can tell your troop that it cannot hold a certain fund-raiser, but it cannot tell the parents that they can't get together and host a pancake breakfast . . . and then donate the proceeds to the troop. Instead of advertising that Troop 100 is hosting a pancake breakfast, you advertise that A pancake breakfast will be held and all proceeds will be donated to Troop 100. Tread lightly, speak carefully -- but do it!
Of course, this flies in the face of the spirit of scouting, but I lost respect for our national leadership years ago, and our council has recently gone down the tubes as well. It's all about money and membership numbers to them. So I do what's best for MY GIRLS.
And as an individual who supports and donates to local charities and has a DH who has a business who contributes to local events, we would support and give to the community planting project but would not give to the Disney World trip. It's frivilous and a veiled excuse for a fun vacation. That's why it's so important to figure out where your donations are going. Just because a foundation is legit, doesn't mean the people running it are spending the money wisely!!!!
Consider this:
You want to plant flowers in your yard. You see that a scout troop is offering to come to your house and plant flowers for a decent price. Or they're offering to rake leaves, or they're offering to wash your car, or they're offering a pancake breakfast with Santa. They plan to use the money for a Disney trip.
They're offering a service. You want the service. You determine that the price is fair. THAT'S NOT A DONATION. It's a way for kids to earn money towards a goal that matters to them.
If they were walking around with tin cans saying, "Will you give me some change so I can go to Florida?" , I'd be dead-set against that.
I say take the girls to Disney. Every child deserves to go to Disney at least once.
Disagree. No one deserves an expensive, out-of-state vacation.
I don't even think Disney is a particularly great choice for a scout trip. Why? Because so many kids have already been to Disney (multiple times) with their families, and I'd prefer to take my scouts on trips that are new and unique. Things they haven't done before and probably won't do again.
A couple times Disney has come up in my troop's brainstorming list, but every time I've asked them, "Who here has been to Disney?" 100% of the hands go up. Most of them have been multiple times. Then I ask them who's been whitewater rafting, who's biked the Virginia Creeper trail, who's hiked to LeConte Lodge? They end up choosing something that they've never done before. It's more exciting for them. I've heard of some troops doing some pretty cool things -- not long ago I heard about a troop that saved and took SCUBA lessons together. I'm sure that cost as much as a Disney trip, but it's a unique experience that the girls'll always remember sharing with their friends. In my mind, that's much better than one more Disney trip to be remembered along with the other four that they took with family.
But that doesn't mean that it's wrong for a troop to go there, if it's what the girls really, really want to do. Scouts emphasize that THE GIRLS pick what they want to do, and they figure out how to make it happen.
I did this with my 8th graders in June, 2001. We went to Savannah, GA, stayed at the military base and visited the Juliette Gordon Low Birthplace.
We've taken our troop to Savannah, GA, and it's an ideal trip for a scout troop. So much to do in that area: The Birthplace is wonderful, and they offer a range of programs for scouts of all ages. Historical tours, ghost tours, the beach and the lighthouse, the Marine Science center, a wildlife preserve. Loads of great stuff, and it's all different and unique. Not things that most of the girls have done with their families. I highly recommend this for any scout troop; it's best for an older Junior troop or a young Cadette troop.
Trips are one of the big things that keep girls coming to scouts once they reach high school, but if you plan trips that kids
have taken/can take with their families . . . you'll likely lose the girls. Look at it from a girl's perspective: Why work your fanny off at car washes and bake sales so you can go to Disney? Why do all that when your mom and dad took you last year anyway, and you didn't have to lift a finger for that family trip.
I was a Girl Scout for 7 years (Silver & Gold Award) and a troop leader/consultant for 3 years. I am now involved with Cub Scouts because God chose to bless me with boys

I am midly surprised that a trip to WDW would fall under the domain of Girl Scouting. There are so many other Wider Ops sponsored at the council and National level that would be a (imho) a better use of their efforts.
I have noticed that girls have tons of event patches on their uniforms at the last Scout Sunday I attended - even Daisy's and Brownies going to Great Wolf and such. What? Scouting isn't supposed to be about exotic and expensive locals at that age. There are so many local sites to see that traveling that far seems unnecessary - parks, zoo, museums, momuments, libraries, skating rinks, bowling alleys, police & fire stations - and what happened to good old fashioned craft meetings and camping? Not every activity has to be an "event". The girls want to go to WDW or Great Wolf? Go as a family and not as a Scout event. By the time they get to Cadettes and Seniors/Ambassodors no wonder they quit because the bar has been set so high.
*off soapbox*
I've been in scouting for 34 years, and I'll point out a couple things: Only a handful of girls will be accepted into Destinations (which were called Wider Ops back when I was a scout), and they're very expensive. I did a national Wider Op and an international Wider Op; my daughters haven't, and it's because of the cost. Plus, many of the younger girls (and their parents) would rather see them take trips with their troop -- with people they know and trust.
Scouts STILL DO all those local things -- my girls have, especially my younger ones. Also, we have a tremendous number of local events planned (within the scout community) by our older scouts: Daddy-Daughter dances, Halloween parties, Christmas craft events, camping weekends, career days. But it's not scouts that've "raised the bar" on what's acceptable -- it's the whole world. Kids aren't taught to "make do" any longer, and the average girl today has little interest in camping/outdoor experiences . . . or maybe it's more fair to say that today's girls enjoy outdoor experiences (i.e., hiking and sports), but they expect to have a hot shower and sleep in a bed in an air conditioned room afterward.
Still, I don't think that's the reason girls tend to leave scouts when they reach the upper ranks. I think it's a two-fold problem: 1) Scouts has always been perceived as a
little girls' club, and older girls don't want to be seen as un-cool; National does
nothing to dispell this notion -- and their pathetic attempts at being trendy are always about a decade behind. 2) When I was a kid, I didn't have a whole lot of options for my extra-curricular activities. Kids today have MANY more choices, and their parents are willing to spend more on their entertainment than mine were!
Most of the girls I've "lost" over the years have left the troop because they were forced to choose between sports (or band) and scouts once they reached high school. Still others were lost to the lure of part-time jobs; their parents tell them that if they want a car, they must come up with money, and (for many girls) scouts can't compete with wheels.
The girls I still have (14 high school seniors) are still here because of the friendships they've made over the years. That and summer camp; half my girls were CITs this summer, and they ADORE summer camp. They no longer care about badges, but they LOVE taking trips together and they enjoy community service projects.
Check with your council before doing anything. A friend of mine held an American Girl Tea Party to raise $ for a trip (they sold raffle tickets to win a doll as well) She had to return all of the $ raised and it was a lot.
That's a pretty cool fundraiser.
When I was attending a training class when preparing my girls to bridge from Brownies to Juniors, something that was stressed to me is that the troup activities should be what the girls want and they should make the decisions about what activities will be done.
Exactly. When they were Brownies, we picked a scout campsite, and we let the girls choose the meals they wanted to cook from a list we'd made -- that was an age-appropriate choice for them. Now that they're about to graduate from high school, we let them do all the planning. For example, soon we're going to spend a meeting making homemade high school graduation invitations and taking senior pictures. The idea that THE GIRLS pick and THE GIRLS make it happen -- with guidance from their leaders -- is the cornerstone of the scout program.
Commercial venture designed to sell tickets to a large group that otherwise might not buy. This wouldn't convince me that we should give up other plans for a Disney trip.
Not sure why you are so wound up about this - I don't think anyone has said the troops that travel don't also help out their community.
Yes, troops are encouraged to offer a balance of activities. I have never heard of a troop that existed JUST for trips.