The Mercury News

Thousands of girls join Cub Scouts

- By Holly Ramer

DURHAM, N.H. >> Ten-yearold twins Tatum and Ian Weir aren’t about to let matching, minor injuries deter them from their goal of becoming the first sister-brother pair to become Eagle Scouts.

“I cut myself, too!” Tatum said, pausing only briefly during a recent Cub Scout meeting to touch her thumb to her brother’s before continuing on with a woodworkin­g project.

New Hampshire’s Daniel Webster Council, which includes Durham’s Pack 154, is among more than 170 nationwide participat­ing in an early adopter program as the Boy Scouts of America begins welcoming girls into the organizati­on in new ways.

The soft launch followed the Boy Scouts’ announceme­nt in October that it would begin admitting girls into the Cub Scouts starting later this year and would establish a new program next year for older girls based on the Boy Scout curriculum.

“We heard from our families, ‘OK, you’ve made the decision, can you please give us a way to do this right now because we’ve got families and daughters that are just really excited about it,” Boy Scouts spokeswoma­n Effie Delimarkos said.

“We heard from so much that we decided to kick off this early adopter program with the understand­ing that a lot of the materials we’re working on, in terms of uniforms and handbooks and so forth, were still in developmen­t,” she said. “But folks were very understand­ing. They just wanted to be able to start.”

About two-thirds of councils nationwide signed up, bringing roughly 3,000 girls into the Cub Scouts program so far, she said. Under the new plan, Cub Scout dens — the smallest unit — will be single-gender, either all boys or all girls. The larger Cub Scout packs will have the option to remain single-gender or not.

Scouting leaders have some leeway, particular­ly in smaller communitie­s.

Asked what he likes about Cub Scouts, Ian Weir ticked off a short list: Going places, nature, and “Tatum’s in it.”

“I was a little skeptical because it was me and my dad’s thing, but when Tatum got in it was even more fun,” he said.

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ian Weir, left, smiles as he stands with twin sister Tatum after a Cub Scout meeting in Madbury, N.H.
CHARLES KRUPA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ian Weir, left, smiles as he stands with twin sister Tatum after a Cub Scout meeting in Madbury, N.H.

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