Boy Scouts of America to allow girls to
join, earn Eagle Scout rank
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[October 12, 2017]
By Gina Cherelus and Bernie Woodall
(Reuters) - In a historic shift, the Boy
Scouts of America will let girls enroll in Cub Scouts starting next year
and allow them to eventually earn the highest rank of Eagle Scout, the
organization said on Wednesday.
The unanimous decision by the 100-year-old group's board of directors
came after years of requests from families and girls, it said, though
the announcement prompted a largely negative reaction on social media.
"We believe it is critical to evolve how our programs meet the needs of
families interested in positive and lifelong experiences for their
children," Boy Scouts Chief Executive Michael Surbaugh said in a
statement.
The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) has lost about a third of its members
since 2000, which now stands at 2.3 million. BSA insisted that allowing
girls was in response to the needs of families, not related to declining
membership.
The Girl Scouts of the USA said girls thrive in a girl-only environment,
and that "we are girl experts."
Starting in 2018, the Boy Scouts will allow girls to join the 7- to
10-year-old Cub Scouts. Small, community-level "dens" will be
single-gender. Larger "packs," which are comprised of dens, will decide
whether to include dens of each gender or not, the BSA said.
In a program to be announced next year and projected to start in 2019,
girls will follow the same curriculum as the Boy Scouts, which are for
ages 11-17.
Surbaugh in a tweet said, "Today, the BSA opens a new chapter in our
history w/a unanimous vote to welcome girls to Cub through Eagle Rank."
After the announcement, the Girl Scouts issued a statement that did not
mention the Boy Scouts or its move to include girls.
"Girl Scouts remains committed to and believes strongly in the
importance of the all-girl, girl-led and girl-friendly environment that
Girl Scouts provides, which creates a necessary safe space for girls to
learn and thrive," the organization said.
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An Eagle Scout patch is pictured in Orlando, Florida in this May 30,
2012 file photograph. REUTERS/David Manning/Files
In August, a top Girl Scout official accused the Boy Scouts of
running a "covert campaign" to recruit girls to increase its
declining membership, the Washington Post reported.
The program for girls older than Cub Scouts projected to begin in
2019 will allow them to earn the Eagle Scout rank, the highest
achievement in the organization.
On social media, hundreds of people were critical of the news, with
many posts echoing the sentiments of Donald Trump Jr., the
president's son.
"Strange, I thought that's what the Girl Scouts was for???" he said
on Twitter.
Sing Oldham, spokesman for the Southern Baptist Convention, said the
announcement continued a "reinvention" of the Boy Scouts his group
does not support, including the decision in 2013 to allow openly gay
members.
In January, the Boy Scouts also opted to allow transgender boys to
join.
(Reporting by Gina Cherelus in New York and Bernie Woodall in Fort
Lauderdale, Florida; editing by Colleen Jenkins and David Gregorio)
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