The Boy Scouts of America have announced that they will delay voting on
the decision to reverse a ban on gay individual and troop leader
participation within the organization until May.
“After careful consideration and extensive dialogue within the Scouting
family, along with comments from those outside the organization,” said
Deron Smith, Director of Public Relations for the organization, “the
volunteer officers of the Boy Scouts of America’s National Executive
Board concluded that due to the complexity of this issue, the
organization needs time for a more deliberate review of its membership
policy."
Smith noted that committees will continue “to further engage
representatives of Scouting’s membership and listen to their
perspectives and concerns.”
The announcement comes on Feb. 6, the day the 1,400 voting members of
the national council were supposed to either re-affirm or overturn the
organization’s ban on gay members- including scout leaders. The decision
affecting nearly 2.7 million members will now be delayed until May
2013.
In late January, Boy Scouts of America announced that they were
considering ending their national ban on gay individuals and troop
leaders in the organization following the loss of funding from
high-profile donors such as UPS for their policy.
Smith added in a Jan. 28 statement that organizations that sponsor and
oversee scouting groups, such as churches, would not be ordered “to act
in ways inconsistent with that organization’s mission, principles, or
religious beliefs.”
President Barack Obama has expressed support of an end to the
organization’s current policy, which was upheld as a constitutional
expression of free speech by the Supreme Court in 2000. “My attitude,”
Obama said, “is that gays and lesbians should have access and
opportunity the same way everybody else does, in every institution and
walk of life.”
Family Research Council said it was “encouraged” by the delay in
changing the national policy. Tony Perkins, president of Family Research
Council thanked the Boy Scouts for continuing to maintain their
national membership standards and thanked the Scout parents who
expressed “an overwhelming outpouring of support for maintaining the
Scouts' timeless values.”
Perkins continued, saying that the delay was “not enough,” calling
officials within the Boy Scouts of America to “publicly re-affirm their
current standards, as they did just last July.” He also warned of “grave
consequences,” should the Boy Scouts change their policy and compromise
their moral standards in the face of threats from corporate elites and
homosexual activists."
Over 40 organizations including Media Research Center, Catholic Family
and Human Rights Institute, Concerned Women for America, Chaplain
Alliance for Religious Liberty and others have joined Family Research
Council in asking Boy Scouts of America to retain the current national
rule.
The organizations took out an advertisement in USA Today on Feb. 4,
saying that the current rule is consistent with the Scout oath keep
oneself “morally straight.” The ad also added that the current policy
helps to protect scouts from sexual abuse and helps parents maintain
control over their children’s sexual education. “To compromise moral
principles under political and financial pressure,” the ad said, “would
teach boys cowardice, not courage.”