Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Boy Scouts on edge as they await decision on gays

Jacquelyn Martin / AP

Pascal Tessier, 16, center left, a Scout, and his brother Lucien Tessier, 20, who had earned the rank of Eagle Scout, pose for a portrait with their parents, Oliver Tessier, left, and Tracie Felker, at their home in Kensington, Maryland, on Monday. The two Tessier boys enjoyed Cub Scouts, progressed to Boy Scouts, and continued to thrive there even as many in their troop became aware that each boy was gay.

By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

Published at 4:45 a.m. ET: Special prayers have been urged, petitions handed in, phone calls placed and pleas for a delay made, all over a decision on an issue that has rocked one of America?s most popular youth organizations: whether or not gays can join the Boy Scouts.

A decision by national Scout leaders is expected Wednesday. Some fear an unwanted new era, while others are welcoming what they believe is an overdue change that comes amid other recent gains for the LGBT rights movement nationwide.

President Barack Obama has twice weighed in on the issue, earlier this week affirming his support for including gays in the Boy Scouts of America, while former Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum has called for an end to what he labelled the ?war on Scouts.?

?The Boy Scouts are a fundamental part of this nation?s moral bedrock and they are one of our great cultural institutions. We have trusted them to grow and develop our young men for over a century,? Zach Wahls, an Eagle Scout and son of a lesbian couple campaigning for gays to be included, said Tuesday. ?They?re a big deal, and that is why this proposed change is so critically important.?

Advocates on both sides of the issue have stepped up their campaigns ahead of the BSA's final decision: They?ve encouraged their backers to?make their voices heard through a phone-in and email deluge. A conservative group, the Family Research Council, said that it and 41 other groups ran a newspaper ad on Monday asking the BSA not to change the policy, and some conservative religious groups have urged their supporters to join in prayer to ask the board not to accept gays.

Related:?'Gravely distressed': Religion looms large over Boy Scouts decision on gays?

John Makely / NBC News file

Ryan Andresen had recently completed the requirements to earning his Eagle Scout award, including his final project of building a "tolerance wall" for victims of bullying like himself, but his Scoutmaster would not sign off on honoring him with the Boy Scouts' highest ranking because he is gay, his mother said. Here, Ryan holds an Eagle Scout pin that was sent to him from a supporter.

A coalition of Boy Scouts councils representing some 540,000 youth -- or 20 percent of the organization?s 2.6 million active Scouts -- asked the national organization on Monday to delay a decision on ending the controversial policy, saying it was concerned ?about the pace at which such actions are being taken,? according to a statement posted on the website of the Utah-based Great Salt Lake Council. ??

Roger ?Sing? Oldham, spokesman for the conservative Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee, said the outpouring of feedback on the issue came as no surprise to him since his group felt the BSA had not allowed opponents of the change to weigh in on the proposal, which?was announced just a little more than one week ago?and was being reviewed by national leaders.

Oldham said he had spoken with some troop leaders, pastors and parents who have expressed concern about the way forward if gays are allowed, particularly those units that will try to maintain the ban locally as would be permitted under the proposal.?For more than two-thirds of Scouting groups affiliated with religious bodies, faith plays a large role in the private youth organization.

?When local chapters begin realizing the financial liability that they face if they exercise the local option then ? they?re going to have to say we either fall into step or we have just to end the relationship,? he said. ?There?ll be attrition over time and, you know, the Scouts will have permanently altered the face of who they are into the future.?

'Feeling of shame'
Some have said they will even leave the organization over the issue.

Angela Russell, who has an 11-year-old in the Boy Scouts and a 9-year-old in the Cub Scouts, said that if the BSA allows gays, particularly as leaders, they would be ?breaking their own highly held codes to be ?morally straight? and to commit to such principles via oaths and promises.?

If the ban is lifted, ?I must remove my boys from this program. My heart truly aches to think of it,? Russell, of Auburn, Wash., wrote in a letter she emailed to NBC News.??However, to leave them in a program that goes against its own teachings would be worse.?

But another mother, of a Boy Scout and two Cub Scouts, said she had ?been torn for years? over the policy since her own mother is a lesbian and allowing gays would be a relief.

?I am very happy about the things my children have learned and the tools they have been given from the program,? Gina Beaudry, 37, of Raleigh, N.C., who will be the Cub Scoutmaster for her sons pack this year, wrote in an email to NBC News.?

?To have this ban lifted would take away some of the feeling of shame I feel for the organization that has been so beneficial to my children.?I would hate to see any child or parent not feel like they were welcome in the program.?

Related:?After years of heartache, gay Scouts and supporters react warily over proposal to lift ban

The proposed policy change comes just seven months after the BSA said it was sticking with its ban following a confidential two-year review.

That review was announced months after Jennifer Tyrrell was dismissed from her post as leader of her son?s Tiger Cubs den because she is a lesbian, and a few months before California teen Ryan Andresen was denied his Eagle award because he is gay.

Both cases made national headlines, roiling the private youth organization. Some critics pointed to declining membership numbers as a sign that families were being turned off over the issue. The controversy also prompted a few hundred Eagle Scouts to turn in their hard-earned regalia in protest of the ban, which the U.S. Supreme Court upheld in 2000.

Wahls believes the Boy Scouts will lift the exclusion of gays and rejects the idea it will cause any ?mass exodus.?

?We don?t think that that?s going to be a problem at all and think that this move will definitely bolster Scouting for future generations,? he said, later adding, ?Our generation has embraced LGBT rights, and like all things, Scouting should not be playing catch up, it should be blazing the trail.?

Related:?

Gay teen denied Eagle Scout: 'Change is happening' over Boy Scouts anti-gay policy

Eagle Scouts return badges to protest policy banning gays

Boy Scouts: We're keeping policy banning gays?

If you are a current or former member of the Boy Scouts and would like to share your thoughts on how your troop, pack or council is handling the possibility of a change in the membership policy, you can email the reporter at miranda.leitsinger@msnbc.com. We may use some comments for a follow-up story, so please specify if your remarks can be used and provide your name, hometown, age, Boy Scout affiliation and a phone number.

Source: http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/02/06/16859099-boy-scouts-on-edge-as-they-await-decision-on-gays?lite

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