Life membership is usually reserved for the more, shall we say, vintage members. And at 44, Scott is just a pup.
But he has crammed an awful lot into those years.
Here is a rapid summary. He played more than 200 senior games for the club, claimed 354 wickets, combined with his brothers, Randal and Bradley, to help win the national title in 2002, has been secretary for the past 13 years, painstakingly put together a comprehensive set of statistics, and never, never misses an opportunity to promote the club. Except this time that is. We had to contact him for this story.
He was caught a little off guard when he was made a life member as well.
Scott thought Sunday's annual general meeting was dragging on a bit long. He got a little suspicious when his family showed up and then twigged to what was going on.
''It was pretty emotional,'' he said.
''My wife, Emily, walked in. Then Dad walked in and my brother walked in.
''I was thinking this is a really long AGM. They are usually 10 minutes max and it was going on for half an hour and I was getting a bit toey.
''I was still taking minutes as the secretary and then the penny dropped. Then I felt a bit guilty for not being in my tie and blazer.
''You don't join a club expecting to be made a life member. I never thought when I started I'd still be involved in 2019.
''So it was really touching.''
Scott made his debut for the club in the summer of 1992-93. He was fresh from a golden season for the Otago Boys' High School First XI. The school had won the Gillette Cup.
''In my first senior game we started fielding after tea with seven players because four of them were at the McDonald's drive-through.
''Shane Robinson said 'I'm captain next year and we have to sort some stuff out'.''
Green Island definitely got sorted out. The club started collecting titles and plenty of them.
The right-arm medium-pacer was a little more rapid when he started out. He once bounced out Stu McCullum, who was an Otago selector as the time.
But Scott never received an opportunity at representative level.
He did play a role in his younger brother's rise, though. Bradley Scott played 66 first-class games, 103 one-day matches and 61 twenty20 games for Otago and Northern Districts.
Bradley was regularly put through his paces by his sibling downstairs at the family home. Jeremy once notched up 1000 runs. Yes, 1000 runs.
''Randal was pretty tough on me and I was pretty tough on Bradley. I'm sure Jeff Crowe was pretty tough on Martin Crowe and Dayle Hadlee was tough on Richard Hadlee,'' he said.
Scott retired from playing when son Joshua was born in 2007. He ended up playing 241 games for the seniors. But his contribution was far from done.
He has continued on in the role of secretary and he is regularly updating the statistics.
''Serving Green Island as secretary has not always been easy but I have an example of unpaid work from my parents and my wife. And I want to model that to my kids as well.
''You just do stuff because you've got the skills or it is the right thing to do. You don't expect a reward for it.''
Scott, who is a teacher at Kaikorai Valley College, said the school has not had a team for two years.
''Co-ed schools are really struggling. Cricket's biggest problem is the length of time it takes to play.
''But there still needs to be a pathway for future Black Caps and representative cricketers.''
Scott's children Joshua (12), Hannah (10) and Laura (7) attend Carisbrook School and he volunteers his time at the school to coach cricket.