Philippine Daily Inquirer

Boy Scouts open ranks to gay youth on Jan. 1

- AP

THE BOY Scouts of America (BSA) will accept openly gay youths starting on New Year’s Day, a historic change that has prompted the BSA to ponder a host of potential complicati­ons —ranging from policies on tentmates and showers to whether Scouts can march in gay pride parades.

Yet despite their be-prepared approach, BSA leaders are rooting for the change to be a nonevent, comparable to another New Year’s Day in 2000 when widespread fears of digitalclo­ck chaos to start the new millennium proved unfounded.

“My hope is there will be the same effect this Jan. 1 as the Y2K scare,” said Brad Haddock, a BSA national executive board member who chairs the policy implementa­tion committee. “It’s business as usual, nothing happens and we move forward.”

Some churches are dropping their sponsorshi­p of Scout units because of the new policy and some families are switching to a new conservati­ve alternativ­e called Trail Life USA. But massive defections haven’t materializ­ed and most major sponsors, including the Roman Catholic and Mormon churches, are maintainin­g ties.

“There hasn’t been a whole lot of fallout,” said Haddock, a lawyer from Wichita, Kansas. “If a church said they wouldn’t work with us, we’d have a church right down the street say, ‘We’ll take the troop.”’

The new policy was approved in May, with support from 60 percent of the 1,400 voting members of the BSA’s National Council. The vote followed bitter nationwide debate, and was accompanie­d by an announceme­nt that the BSA would continue to exclude openly gay adults from leadership positions.

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