Toronto Star

Boy Scouts ‘not safe for kids,’ ex-official says

U.S. organizati­on’s first youth protection director speaks out about policies

- RANDALL CHASE

DOVER, DEL.—The former youth protection director for the Boy Scouts of America said Tuesday the organizati­on is not doing enough to protect children from sexual abuse and is still trying to maintain a veil of secrecy over decades of past abuse.

In a speech at the National Press Club, Michael Johnson urged Congress to investigat­e the BSA’s efforts to coverup decades of past abuse, as well as the dangers he said the organizati­on still poses to children.

“The Boy Scouts of America is not safe for kids. It is safer, but it is not safe for kids,” he said.

“We failed you. I failed you,” a tearful Johnson added in remarks aimed at abuse survivors.

Johnson was terminated in December in what the Boy Scouts described as a financial restructur­ing. He refused to sign nondisclos­ure and nondispara­gement agreements in exchange for a severance payment.

“I’m fed up with people telling me in that organizati­on what to say, how to say it, and what to believe,” said Johnson, who was hired in 2010 as the BSA’s first youth protection director.

A spokespers­on for the Boy Scouts said there was no attempt to buy Johnson’s silence and the terms in the severance package were the same as those for other eligible employees who were terminated.

Asked why he decided to step forward now, Johnson said he began to sense in recent years that the Boy Scouts were becoming less receptive to needed reforms.

“All of the sudden, I wasn’t able to make the changes that were needed, and there were excuses and omissions … I felt, naively, that I could make change within the organizati­on, and there were some successes, but it wasn’t nearly enough,” he said.

Johnson’s decision to speak out comes amid a key point in the Boy Scouts of American bankruptcy case, as ballots are being distribute­d to tens of thousands of men who say they were molested as children by scoutmaste­rs and others to vote on whether to approve the BSA’s reorganiza­tion plan.

The Boy Scouts, based in Irving, Texas, sought bankruptcy protection in Delaware in February 2020, seeking to halt hundreds of individual lawsuits and create a fund for men who say they were sexually abused as children. Although the organizati­on was facing 275 lawsuits at the time, it’s facing more than 82,000 sexual abuse claims in the bankruptcy case.

The Boy Scouts issued a statement Tuesday expressing appreciati­on for Johnson’s dedication to youth safety and for the effect he had on the organizati­on.

“We are disappoint­ed to hear Mr. Johnson’s characteri­zation of the program he spearheade­d and the concerns he raised, especially given his past public support for the robust measures the BSA instituted at his recommenda­tion,” the statement read.

“Today, Scouting is safer than ever before,” the statement adds, citing many policies that have been implemente­d in recent years.

“While any instance of abuse is one too many, it’s important to know that the vast majority of claims in the BSA’s Chapter 11 case predate our modern youth protection policies.”

Scouts BSA is the traditiona­l Scouting experience for children in fifth grade through high school, according to the BSA’s website.

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