We'll see what the western alaska council says when they tell them to use propane when it's -30.... Sure, come on up national council! Bring all your propane gear and lets go camping!! Teach em a lesson.
Not to change the subject on this thread.... But I have found that if you take away something that is possibly unsafe for that reason, you are taking away a valuable lesson. You are taking away a tool to teach safety and responsibility. If those scouts are never taught the responsibility, respect, and proper use of those fuels and tools, then they are more likely to make mistakes at other times.
I've seen one gas accident. Idiot kid decided his white gas was too heavy to pack back and just poured it on the fire, fire went up into the container, and he dropped it, spill a cup or so and had a nice little six foot wide gas fire goin for a bit. Do I blame him for bein dumb? Yes. Do I blame his parents and the leaders as a whole for making sure that kid of thing doesn't happen? Absolutely.
The main problem is - people blame incidents like this on the gas! It's not the gas's fault! It seems to me people are too lazy now a days to get down with their kids on things like this and set them straight on what to do and why they do it. They kick them in the ass out the door and say.... the scouts will teach them.... And that should be partially true, but with volunteer leaders you never know what you are gonna get, and some people just don't have the focus on safety as they should.
When I was in scouts years ago, we used gas, guns, chainsaws, pick axes, snowmachines, machetes, and god knows what else we could of blown ourselves up with an cut our arms off - but we were taught how to use these tools safely and effectively.
But to bring it back to the original subject... I guess that's part of the reason then don't fill 1#'s - liability.