Boy Scouts open ranks to gay youth on Jan. 1
The Boy Scouts of America will accept openly gay youths starting on New Year's Day, a historic change that has prompted the BSA to ponder a host of potential complications - ranging from policies on tentmates and showers to whether Scouts can march in gay pride parades.
The Boy Scouts of America will accept openly gay youths starting on New Year's Day, a historic change that has prompted the BSA to ponder a host of potential complications - ranging from policies on tentmates and showers to whether Scouts can march in gay pride parades.
Yet
despite their be-prepared approach, BSA leaders are rooting for the
change to be a non-event, comparable to another New Year's Day in 2000
when widespread fears of digital-clock chaos to start the new millennium
proved unfounded.
"My hope is there will be
the same effect this Jan. 1 as the Y2K scare," said Brad Haddock, a BSA
national executive board member who chairs the policy implementation
committee. "It's business as usual, nothing happens and we move
forward."
Some churches are dropping their
sponsorship of Scout units because of the new policy and some families
are switching to a new conservative alternative called Trail Life USA.
But massive defections haven't materialized and most major sponsors,
including the Roman Catholic and Mormon churches, are maintaining ties.
"There
hasn't been a whole lot of fallout," said Haddock, a lawyer from
Wichita, Kan. "If a church said they wouldn't work with us, we'd have a
church right down the street say, `We'll take the troop.'"
The
new policy was approved in May, with support from 60 percent of the
1,400 voting members of the BSA's National Council. The vote followed
bitter nationwide debate, and was accompanied by an announcement that
the BSA would continue to exclude openly gay adults from leadership
positions.
Under the new membership policy,
youths can no longer be barred from the Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts or coed
Venturers program solely on the basis of sexual orientation. However,
gay Scouts will face some limitations.
"Any
sexual conduct, whether heterosexual or homosexual, by youth of Scouting
age is contrary to the virtues of Scouting," says one BSA document. "No
member may use Scouting to promote or advance any social or political
position or agenda, including on the matter of sexual orientation."
Trying
to anticipate potential friction, the BSA has distributed extensive
explanations and question-and-answer documents related to the policy.
Some examples:
-Could
a Scout march in uniform in a gay-pride parade? No, says the BSA. "Each
youth member is free as an individual to express his or her thoughts or
take action on political or social issues but must not use Scouting's
official uniforms and insignia when doing so."
-How
publicly active could a gay Scout be, in terms of gay-rights advocacy?
The BSA's reply: "While a youth member may acknowledge his or her sexual
preference, that acknowledgment may not reach the level of distraction,
which may include advocacy, promotion, or the distribution of
information of a sexual nature."
A
frequently-asked-questions document anticipates that some objections
might surface from parents - or Scouts themselves - in cases where a
unit includes an openly gay boy.
Regarding
shower and toilet facilities, the BSA says it is encouraging units to
provide greater individual privacy, including moving away from the
tradition of group showers.
"The adult leaders have the discretion to arrange private showering times and locations," the BSA says.
Sleeping arrangements also are addressed, with specific decisions left to unit leaders.
"If a Scout or parent of a Scout makes a request to not tent with another Scout, their wishes should be honored," says the BSA.
Haddock
says "isolated pockets" of problems are likely to surface, but overall
he expects adult leaders will have the skills to defuse potential
conflicts.
There are about 1 million adult
leaders and 2.6 million youth members in Scouting in the U.S. Of the
roughly 110,000 Scout units, 70 percent are sponsored by religious
organizations, including several conservative denominations that had
long supported the BSA's exclusion of gay youth and gay adults.
Among
the major sponsors, the Southern Baptist Convention made clear its
disappointment with the new youth policy, but left the decision on
whether to cut ties up to local churches. An SBC spokesman, Sing Oldham,
said it was not known how many churches have done so.
The
biggest sponsor of Scout units - the Utah-based Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints - commended the BSA for a "thoughtful, good-faith
effort" to address a challenging issue, and said it would stay engaged
in Scouting.
John Gailey of the Utah National
Parks Council, the nation's largest council, said its youth membership
had increased from 74,148 in December 2012 to 75,863 this month.
Like
the Mormons, the Roman Catholic Church has generally accepted the new
policy. Many parishes will continue to sponsor Scout units, though a few
have considered cutting ties.
The National
Catholic Committee on Scouting posted a question-and-answer document on
its website, delving into the intersection of Scouting policy and
Catholic teaching.
"The Catechism of the
Catholic Church teaches that individuals who disclose a same-sex
attraction are to be treated with the same dignity due all human beings
... and also teaches that engaging in sexual activity outside of
marriage is always immoral," says the Q-and-A, concluding that the new
BSA policy does not contradict Catholic teaching.
The
ultimate decision on whether parishes would maintain or cut ties with
the BSA was left to individual bishops. Several expressed cautious
support for continuing in Scouting.
"As the
new policy currently stands, I see no reason to prohibit our parishes
from sponsoring Boy Scout troops," said Rev. Kevin Rhoades, bishop of
Indiana's Fort Wayne-South Bend diocese. "At the same time, it is
critical that we be vigilant on how this new policy is interpreted and
implemented."
One likely target of such
scrutiny will be former Defense Secretary Robert Gates, scheduled to
take over in the spring as the BSA's next president. As leader of the
Pentagon, Gates helped change the military's "Don't Ask, Don't Tell"
policy banning openly gay soldiers, and gay-rights groups hope he will
try to end the BSA's ban on gay adult leaders.
The
new youth policy was approved during a BSA meeting in May in the
Dallas-Fort Worth suburb of Grapevine, near the Scouts' national
headquarters in Irving, Texas.
Texas has a
long heritage of Scouting, with tens of thousands of youth members and
many families claiming generations of Eagle Scouts. Among them is Gov.
Rick Perry, who achieved Scouting's highest rank growing up in the small
town of Paint Creek.
The membership debate
was closely followed by local Scouts on both sides; some carried signs
and held rallies outside the meeting place. But in subsequent months,
the debate has quieted.
Bill Helfand, scoutmaster of Troop 55 in Houston, said membership in his troop has remained steady at about 225 boys.
"We
never considered sexual orientation, and I don't think many troops
really did," Helfand said. "I don't know whether we had Scouts who are
homosexual. I don't inquire ... It's not a matter of concern."
Helfand
said the membership debate, while closely covered in the media, did not
extend into his meetings with leaders and parents, besides occasional
discussion of the policy at camp-outs. He says he hasn't talked to any
Scout about his sexual orientation and doesn't intend to.
"I
know that this is something that people felt was a momentous turning
point for Scouting," Helfand said. "Everybody I know has made Scouting
available to every boy who wants it, and that's what we continue to do."
However,
some Texas parents and leaders have decided to switch to Trail Life
USA, an alternative which declares itself "a Christian adventure,
character, and leadership program for young men." Among them is Ron Orr,
a business consultant from the Fort Worth area who is signing up local
units for the group.
So far, he said he has 25
groups "pre-chartered" for a Jan. 1 launch date in the territory
covered by the BSA's Circle Ten and Longhorn councils. That's modest
compared to the 39,000 Scouts served by the Circle Ten council alone.
Orr
is part of a family with four generations of Eagle Scouts. His older
son recently earned his Eagle rank and his younger son was on the verge
of doing likewise. But Orr said he could not stand by after the policy
change.
"As Christians, from a scriptural
basis, we love all folks, but the scripture is very clear that being
homosexual is a sin," Orr said. "We've got to be able to hold a strong
line and set a consistent example for our young men."
Orr
said his decision to cut ties with the BSA rested in part on the Scout
Oath, which includes the admonition to remain "morally straight."
Scott
Scarborough of Lubbock, Texas, is helping Orr recruit Trail Life
members in the Texas Panhandle, a mostly rural, conservative region.
Scarborough said he offered to let his 14-year-old son stay in Boy
Scouts and achieve his Eagle rank, but the boy elected to join him in
Trail Life.
Orr and Scarborough said they didn't consider themselves rivals to the Boy Scouts, though they've chosen a different path.
"Our tradition comes out of Boy Scouts," Scarborough said. "We'll never not honor that heritage."