Boy Scouts of America and Girl Scouts
settle trademark dispute over co-ed scouting
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[July 23, 2022]
By Dietrich Knauth
(Reuters) - The Boy Scouts of America and
Girl Scouts have settled their dispute over the Boy Scouts' right to use
the word "scouting" to advertise co-ed programs, according to a filing
in Delaware bankruptcy court on Friday. |
The statue of a scout stands in the entrance to Boy Scouts of America
headquarters in Irving, Texas, February 5, 2013. REUTERS/Tim Sharp |
The settlement ends a Girl Scouts' lawsuit that the Boy Scouts
had characterized as a "ground war" to counter its entry into
girls' scouting. The Boy Scouts organization prevailed in the
trademark dispute in April, when a federal court in New York
ruled that the Boy Scouts' use of word scouting did not violate
the Girl Scouts' trademarks.
The Girl Scouts agreed to drop its appeal of the April ruling as
part of the settlement, and both sides agreed to drop related
trademark proceedings in other courts and before the Trademark
Trial and Appeal Board. They also agreed to cooperate on the
commercial terms of scouting trademarks in the future, according
to the court filing.
The settlement did not include any payment by either side.
The Boy Scouts announced in 2017 that it would allow girls to
join and later began an ad campaign for co-ed scouting called
"Scout Me In." It changed the name of its main scouting program
to "Scouts BSA" and officially started welcoming girls in 2019.
The Girl Scouts sued in 2018, saying the Boy Scouts' use of
"Scouts" and "Scouting" to market to girls violates its
trademarks. It said the rebrand created confusion and threatened
to marginalize the group.
Both organizations have lost significant membership in recent
years, and the Boy Scouts is trying to finalize a proposed $2.7
billion settlement of thousands of sex abuse claims in
bankruptcy court. The Boy Scouts' proposed reorganization has
been awaiting a judge's decision since the conclusion of a
month-long trial on April 14.
(Reporting by Dietrich Knauth; editing by Grant McCool)
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