Imperial Valley Press

As girls arrive, Boy Scouts change name of flagship program

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NEW YORK (AP) — For 108 years, the Boy Scouts of America’s flagship program has been known simply as the Boy Scouts. With girls soon entering the ranks, the group says that iconic name will change.

The organizati­on on Wednesday announced a new name for its Boy Scouts program: Scouts BSA. The change will take effect in February.

Chief Scout Executive Mike Surbaugh said many possibilit­ies were considered during lengthy and “incredibly fun” deliberati­ons before the new name was chosen.

“We wanted to land on something that evokes the past but also conveys the inclusive nature of the program going forward,” he said. “We’re trying to find the right way to say we’re here for both young men and young women.”

The parent organizati­on will remain the Boy Scouts of America, and the Cub Scouts — its program serving children from kindergart­en through fifth grade — will keep its title, as well.

But the Boy Scouts — the program for 11- to 17-year-olds — will now be Scouts BSA.

The organizati­on already has started admitting girls into the Cub Scouts, and Scouts BSA begins accepting girls next year.

Surbaugh predicted that both boys and girls in Scouts BSA would refer to themselves simply as scouts, rather than adding “boy” or “girl.”

The program for the older boys and girls will largely be divided along gender-lines, with single-sex units pursuing the same types of activities, earning the same array of merit badges and potentiall­y having the same pathway to the coveted Eagle Scout award.

Surbaugh said that having separate units for boys and girls should alleviate concerns that girls joining the BSA for the first time might be at a disadvanta­ge in seeking leadership opportunit­ies.

So far, more than 3,000 girls have joined roughly 170 Cub Scout packs participat­ing in the first phase of the new policy, and the pace will intensify this summer under a nationwide multimedia recruitmen­t campaign titled “Scout Me In.”

On social media, there was widespread criticism of the name change, generally suggesting it’s a misguided display of political correctnes­s that undercuts the Boy Scouts’ legacy. But many other people dismissed such criticism as an overreacti­on.

“Get over it,” Kevin Aldrich, a member-at-large with a Boy Scout council in central Indiana, told The Indianapol­is Star. “There is every reason to be co-ed. The Future Farmers of America is coed. 4-H is co-ed. Band in school is co-ed.”

Dr. Eugene Gu, a physician at Vanderbilt University Medical Center and CEO of a biotech company, said on Twitter that the outrage is misplaced.

He views the name change as a business decision.

“With declining membership, they need the girls or it would be called Bankrupt Scouts,” Gu tweeted.

The name change comes amid strained relations between the Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts of America.

Girl Scout leaders said they were blindsided by the move, and they are gearing up an aggressive campaign to recruit and retain girls as members.

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLES KRUPA ?? In this March 1 file photo, Tatum Weir (center) carries a tool box she built as her twin brother Ian, left, follows after a Cub Scout meeting in Madbury, N.H.
AP PHOTO/CHARLES KRUPA In this March 1 file photo, Tatum Weir (center) carries a tool box she built as her twin brother Ian, left, follows after a Cub Scout meeting in Madbury, N.H.

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