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Gay OK for Boston Scouts
August 1, 2001
Associated Press

Boy Scouts of America

BOSTON -- One of Massachusetts' largest Boy Scout councils will allow gay scoutmasters under a new "don't ask-don't tell" policy, despite the national organization's discriminatory policy.

"Discussions about sexual orientation do not have a place in Scouts," said Brock Bigsby, Scout executive for the Massachusetts Minuteman Council. "The Scouts will not inquire into a person's sexual history, and that person will not expose their sexual orientation one way or the other."

The Minuteman Council, an umbrella organization of 330 Scout troops and 18,000 Boy Scouts in Greater Boston, approved the bylaw July 19. The policy also prohibits the exclusion of anyone on the basis of race or religion.

Last year, the Supreme Court ruled the Boy Scouts of America may exclude gay men from serving as troop leaders.

Bigsby maintains the new bylaw is consistent with the national Boy Scouts' policy, since scout leaders would not be permitted to discuss their sexual orientation.

Greg Shields, national spokesman for the Boy Scouts of America, did not immediately return a telephone call seeking comment.

A spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union said the Boston council may be the first in the country to draft an anti-discrimination policy within the framework of the Scouts' national bylaws.

"To have a policy that takes sexual orientation off the table entirely instead of making homosexuality seem like a dirty little secret is encouraging and significant," Eric Ferrero of the ACLU's Lesbian and Gay Rights Project said. "And it sounds like what the group has done is going to be difficult for the National Boy Scouts to oppose."

© 2001 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

See also:
Rhode Island Scouts Vows to Defy Ban on Gays
Florida Synagogue Severs Boy Scouts Ties
Film Focuses on Scout's Battle vs. Gay Ban

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Boston-Area Scout Unit to Allow Gay Leaders
August 1, 2001 2:50 pm EST

BOSTON (Reuters) - One of the largest Boy Scout councils in Massachusetts has adopted a policy that will allow gay scoutmasters to be affiliated with some local troops as long as they do not discuss their sexual orientation, The Boston Globe reported on Wednesday.

Brock Bigsby, Scout executive for the council, told the newspaper the carefully worded "don't ask, don't tell" policy, quietly approved last month, is consistent with the National Boy Scouts Council's stance on homosexuality, since the doctrine would permit avowed gays to lead Scout troops as long as they did not discuss their sexual orientation.

The policy approved by the Massachusetts Minuteman Council -- an umbrella group for 330 Boy Scout troops and 18,000 Scouts in greater Boston -- bars the exclusion of anyone on the basis of race, religion or sexual orientation, the Globe reported.

"Discussions about sexual orientation do not have a place in Scouts," Bigsby told the Globe. "The Scouts will not inquire into a person's sexual history and that person will not expose their sexual orientation one way or the other."

Greg Shields, the spokesman for the Boy Scouts of America, said, "The Boy Scouts doesn't inquire about the sexual orientation of applicants, but avowed homosexuals are not permitted membership. And that's consistent with the national policy."

The Boy Scouts have argued that homosexuality violates the Scout oath to be "morally straight" and the Scout law to be "clean."

In June 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a 5-4 vote that the Boy Scouts may exclude gays, saying that a private group like the Scouts has the right to set its own moral code and espouse its own viewpoint.

Last month, the Massachusetts Minuteman Council and Scout leaders in several other major cities asked the national office to let individual scouting organizations make their own decisions about gay Scout leaders and members, according to the newspaper report. Bigsby told the Globe the petition was under review.

The Boy Scouts of America have more than 4.9 million youth members and about 1.2 million registered adult volunteers.

 
 
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Scouts ignore gay ban in US state
online.ie     01 Aug 2001 Gay scoutmasters are being allowed in a US state under a new "don't ask - don't tell" policy despite the national scout association's ban on homosexuals.

The move has been made by the Massachusetts Minuteman Council, an umbrella organisation of 330 Scout troops and 18,000 Boy Scouts in Greater Boston.

The policy also prohibits the exclusion of anyone on the basis of race or religion.

"Discussions about sexual orientation do not have a place in Scouts," said Brock Bigsby, Scout executive for the Massachusetts Minuteman Council.

"The Scouts will not inquire into a person's sexual history, and that person will not expose their sexual orientation one way or the other."

Last year, the US Supreme Court ruled the Boy Scouts of America may exclude gays from serving as troop leaders.

Bigsby maintains the new bylaw is consistent with the national Boy Scouts' policy, since scout leaders would not be permitted to discuss their sexual orientation.

A spokesman for the American Civil Liberties Union said the Boston council may be the first in the country to draft an anti-discrimination policy within the framework of the Scouts' national bylaws.

Original article at:   http://www.online.ie/news/viewer.adp?article=1466217

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Boston Scouts To Accept Gays
Just Keep Quiet

by Beth Shapiro
365Gay.com Newscenter, in New York 

(August 2, Boston)  One of largest Boy Scout councils in New England is ignoring the ban on gay scout leaders and adopting a "don't ask-don't tell'' policy.

The Minuteman Council, an umbrella organization of 330 Scout troops and 18,000 Boy Scouts in the Greater Boston area has also voted to prohibit the exclusion of anyone on the basis of race or religion.

Under the new policy,  Brock Bigsby, Scout executive for the Massachusetts Minuteman Council said "The Scouts will not inquire into a person's sexual history, and that person will not expose their sexual orientation one way or the other.''

Bigsby hopes the the new bylaw will not be challenged by the National headquarters.  Bigsby said he believes it is consistent with the national Boy Scouts' policy, since scout leaders would not be permitted to discuss their sexual orientation.

The move makes the Boston council the first in the country to draft an anti-discrimination policy within the framework of the Scouts' national bylaws.

``To have a policy that takes sexual orientation off the table entirely instead of making homosexuality seem like a dirty little secret is encouraging and significant,'' Eric Ferrero of the ACLU's Lesbian and Gay Rights Project.

 Ferrero said, " it sounds like what the group has done is going to be difficult for the National Boy Scouts to oppose.''

 

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