Overview
Den leaders are the backbone of the Cub Scout program — they work directly with Scouts week to week. The Cubmaster’s role is to ensure every den has a capable, trained den leader and that den leaders have the support they need to succeed.
Den Leader Meeting
The Cubmaster (often delegated to the Assistant Cubmaster) organizes and conducts monthly den leader meetings. These meetings:
- Coordinate pack meeting participation (which den does flag ceremony, skits, etc.)
- Review upcoming events and how dens should prepare
- Share training updates and program resources
- Provide a forum for den leaders to raise issues and get help
- Ensure consistency across dens
Cadence: Monthly, typically before or after the committee meeting.
Supporting New Den Leaders
When a new den leader joins, the Cubmaster should:
- Introduce them to the Committee Chair and other leaders
- Ensure they have completed YPT and den leader position-specific training
- Walk them through Scoutbook — this is how advancement is tracked
- Connect them with an experienced den leader as a peer mentor
- Provide a copy of the rank-specific den leader guide (see
den-leader/ranks/) - Ensure they understand the shared leadership model (Lions and Tigers)
Training Expectations
The Cubmaster is responsible for ensuring all den leaders are trained. Specifically:
- Required: Youth Protection Training (YPT) — every 2 years
- Required: Den Leader Position-Specific Training (CS19) — online at my.Scouting.org
- Recommended: BALOO (for any den or pack camping)
- Encouraged: Attendance at monthly district Roundtable
Track training status via my.Scouting.org under the pack’s leader roster.
Den Chiefs
Den chiefs are older Scouts (ideally First Class or above) from a Scouts BSA troop who assist den leaders as role models, activity helpers, and friends to the Cub Scouts.
Cubmaster responsibilities for den chiefs:
- Request den chiefs from local troop Scoutmasters (typically Troop 75)
- Ensure each den chief completes Den Chief Training (ideally with their den leader)
- Recognize den chiefs at pack meetings
- Work with the Assistant Cubmaster to coordinate den chief planning meetings
See ../den-chief/README.md for the full den chief role guide.
Filling Leadership Gaps
If a den lacks a den leader:
- Identify a parent in the den willing to step up (Cubmaster and Committee Chair work together)
- Use the Selecting Cub Scout Leadership Guide (see
docs/Training/Positions/Committee Chair/Selecting Cub Scout Leadership Guide.md) - Ensure the Cubmaster or Assistant Cubmaster provides interim support to the den
Current Den Leader Roster
| Rank | Grade | Den # | Leader |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lions | Kindergarten | Den 7 | Courtney Baldwin & Kristianna McWilliam |
| Tigers | 1st Grade | Den 1 | Michael McGuire |
| Wolves | 2nd Grade | Den 2 | Kevin Calacone |
| Bears | 3rd Grade | Den 3 | Christopher Heckathorne |
| Webelos | 4th Grade | Den 4 | Ben Friedman |
| Arrow of Light | 5th Grade | Den 5 | Patrick Slade |
Resources
../den-leader/README.md— full den leader role guidedocs/Training/Positions/Den Leader/Den Leader Guide.mddocs/Training/Positions/Committee Chair/Selecting Cub Scout Leadership Guide.md