Boy Scouts of America leaders this week said they’re reconsidering the group’s ban of gay members and leaders.
Last year when the organization reaffirmed their ban, hundreds of scouts left the organizations and numerous companies withdrew their funding. In 2000, the Boy Scouts won a U.S. Supreme Court case affirming the group’s right to ban gay members.
Scott Leadingham, a journalist and longtime Eagle Scout, says he’s surprised by the organization’s reversal, because they reaffirmed their ban only months ago.
“It seems that the pressures on them to change the policy have just become too large to ignore and I can’t imagine that they’d want to go forward being on the wrong side of history,” he said.
Eric Jones, a former Eagle Scout, says after he came out to his boss at the Boy Scout camp he’d been working at for years, he was asked to leave.
“It wasn’t that I was doing a bad job or that I was in trouble for lying or anything like that, it was just my boss was tied up,” he said. “He had to let me go because he has to follow the policy.”
After he left the camp, Jones says his boss received a letter from the Boy Scouts asking that he be removed.
When you earn your Eagle Scout rank, you make a promise to always be involved in the organization, Jones said. If the Boy Scouts change their policy, it’s going to improve the organization, he added.
The ban on gay members and scout leaders has hit the organization hard.
“The Boy Scouts are really struggling with what many organizations are struggling with, a lot of competing organizations and tugs on the lives of individuals who won’t allow them to be in scouts for any number of reasons,” Leadingham said.
The organization lost a lot of funding over the last decade, typically from large sponsors of local troops, Leadingham said. Modernizing the organization, he added, could help them with funding.
“When (the United Way) pulled back, those local councils of the boy scouts were faced with a large deficit in fundraising,” he said.
Now, there’s pressure for the Boy Scouts to reconsider their current policy because local councils are losing their ability to fundraise. But religious organizations — specifically the Mormon church — make up a majority of Boy Scout sponsors. And they’re not eager to see the policy changed.
“In 2000, the case that was being reaffirmed at the Supreme Court, the Mormon church was advocating that it be left in place or they could pull out their support for the boy scouts,” he said.
If the organization does remove their ban on gay members and scout leaders, Leadingham says, the proposed policy will most likely be left up to the discretion of local organizations.
The World is an independent newsroom. We’re not funded by billionaires; instead, we rely on readers and listeners like you. As a listener, you’re a crucial part of our team and our global community. Your support is vital to running our nonprofit newsroom, and we can’t do this work without you. Will you support The World with a gift today? Donations made between now and Dec. 31 will be matched 1:1. Thanks for investing in our work!