San Francisco Chronicle

S.F. girl one of first to join Cub Scouts

With females allowed, organizati­on drops ‘Boy’ from name

- By Jill Tucker

At her first Cub Scout meeting, Jordan Fong was the only girl with “a bunch of boys.”

“I was like, I don’t know if I could get used to this,” the 8year-old said. “Usually in my school, I hang out with girls a lot.”

Jordan also loves to be outside hiking and camping — what she calls adventures — and she likes a challenge.

So when Cub Scout Troop 47 learned how to tie a square knot that first meeting in March, Jordan picked up the rope and was the first done. Then the group — which was getting ready for a big camping trip this month — played games and sang songs.

Jordan was hooked. The San

“I was like, I don’t know if I could get used to this. Usually in my school, I hang out with girls a lot.”

Jordan Fong, San Francisco third-grader on being the only girl at a Scout meeting

Francisco third-grader had sat on the sidelines for years watching her brother have fun as a Boy Scout and she wanted in.

Until January, that was impossible.

In a landmark policy shift, the Boy Scouts of America announced in October that the 118-year-old organizati­on would allow girls to join for the first time. Girls and their families have requested the change for years, said the organizati­on, which has seen declining membership. Membership is at 2.3 million Scouts, down from 2.7 million in 2010.

For now, girls can join single-gender “dens” that are part of a co-ed troop in the Cub Scouts, the precursor to Boy Scouts. Within a year, programs for older girls will phase in, allowing females to ultimately earn the highest rank of Eagle Scout.

“Early adopter” girls, like Jordan, are typically siblings or friends of Boy Scouts, said Tim Welty, of the Boy Scouts of America San Francisco Bay Area Council.

So far, 28 girls participat­e in Cub Scouts in Alameda and San Francisco counties, with a full national rollout of the plan on June 11.

The decision has no effect on the Girl Scouts, a separate organizati­on that continues to operate as a leadership developmen­t program for girls across the country.

The Boy Scouts’ “record of producing leaders with high character and integrity is amazing,” said Randall Stephenson, the organizati­on’s national board chairman, following the October announceme­nt. “I’ve seen nothing that develops leadership skills and discipline like this organizati­on. It is time to make these outstandin­g leadership developmen­t programs available to girls.”

This week, Boy Scout officials went even further, removing the word “boy” from Boy Scouts and renaming the program “Scouts BSA.” The organizati­on itself will continue to be called Boy Scouts of America.

Girl Scout officials say they support the move that gives girls more options.

“For some girls and families, they’re going to prefer the Boy Scout approach,” said Marina Park, chief executive of the Girls Scouts Northern California.

What has rankled Girl Scout officials, however, is how the Boy Scouts appear to be marketing the decision: communicat­ing to parents that they no longer have to participat­e in two programs because the Boy Scouts serve both genders.

The Girl Scouts aren’t going anywhere, with 4,000 troops in Northern California, Park said.

“I do think we have the best program if a family is looking to develop their daughter’s leadership skills,” she said. “We’re different, and we offer different things.”

Jordan had been a Girl Scout for a few years and said she still thinks it’s a great program. But she said the Boy Scouts offer more chances to earn badges, pins and belt loops for performing various activities or services.

She has her eye on participat­ing on a 100-plus-mile trek when she’s 14 and eventually becoming an Eagle Scout.

“Since she was 4, she’s always been wanting” to be a Boy Scout, said her mom, Lei Fong. “I think it’s all about the fun.”

So far, Jordan has been to three Cub Scout meetings, having recruited four additional girls to create a den in the troop. She hasn’t earned her first pin or badge yet, although she’s memorized the Scout Law, a list of 12 characteri­stics Scouts should strive to achieve: trustworth­y, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean and reverent.

She says her favorite, at least for the moment, is “cheerful.”

While Jordan didn’t have a meeting this week, she was eager to show off her Cub Scout uniform, with the green socks, green pants, khaki shirt and a kerchief around her neck.

She looked down at the patch on the shirt, which still read Boy Scouts of America and shrugged.

“It was originally the Boy Scouts,” she said, adding she doesn’t mind being one of the first female Cub Scouts in the country. “It feels a bit weird, but I’m actually kind of proud of it.”

“Since she was 4, she’s always been wanting” to be a Boy Scout. “I think it’s all about the fun.” Lei Fong, mother of Jordan Fong, one of the first girls in San Francisco to join the Boy Scouts, now the Scouts BSA

 ?? Photos by Sarahbeth Maney / Special to The Chronicle ??
Photos by Sarahbeth Maney / Special to The Chronicle
 ??  ?? Jordan Fong, a third-grader, above, covers the word “Boy” on her Scouts uniform at her home and rolls in a tent, top, at her backyard in San Francisco. She has recruited more girls for her Scouts’ den.
Jordan Fong, a third-grader, above, covers the word “Boy” on her Scouts uniform at her home and rolls in a tent, top, at her backyard in San Francisco. She has recruited more girls for her Scouts’ den.
 ?? Photos by Sarahbeth Maney / Special to The Chronicle ??
Photos by Sarahbeth Maney / Special to The Chronicle
 ??  ?? Jordon Fong, top, playing basketball with her brother, Hayden, wanted to join the Boy Scouts because it looked like fun. One of the first things she learned to do was tie knots, left.
Jordon Fong, top, playing basketball with her brother, Hayden, wanted to join the Boy Scouts because it looked like fun. One of the first things she learned to do was tie knots, left.

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