Girl Scouts signals to Boys to back off

With ranks down in its title gender, youth group looks to recruit females

Long plagued by declining membership, the Boy Scouts is considering a campaign to recruit in a previously untapped market: girls.

The Girl Scouts aren't having it.

A feud between the two largest Scouting organizations broke into the open Tuesday when the president of Girl Scouts of the USA called the Boy Scouts' "covert campaign" to recruit girls "reckless" and "unsettling" in a letter obtained by BuzzFeed News. A Girl Scouts spokesman confirmed the letter in an email to The Washington Post.

"We were disappointed in the lack of transparency as we learned that you are surreptitiously testing the appeal of a girls' offering to millennial parents," Girl Scouts President Kathy Hopinkah Hannan wrote in her letter to Boy Scouts President Randall Stephenson. "Furthermore, it is inherently dishonest to claim to be a single gender organization while simultaneously endeavoring upon a co-ed model."

She said the Boy Scouts' "well documented" declining membership is behind its push to include girls.

The Boy Scouts said in a statement that it is considering including girls in its ranks not to boost its numbers but in response to requests from families who want their daughters to be a part of the same organization as their sons.

"The Boy Scouts of America believes in the benefit of single-gender programs," said the statement from the Boy Scouts' director of national communications, Effie Delimarkos. "But in evaluating the possibility of serving the whole family, we've been having conversations with our members and volunteers to see how to make Scouting accessible for families."

No final decision on whether to include girls has been made, she said.

The Girl Scouts spokesman, explaining the letter, said the organization "believes in maintaining an open and honest dialogue with other organizations in the youth serving space. ... To that end we sent a professional letter" to the Boy Scouts and look forward to "working out those issues with them in a mutually satisfactory manner."

Girl Scouts' membership has also taken a hit in recent years, falling from its peak of more than 3.8 million, including adult volunteers, in 2003 to 2.8 million in 2014. The Boy Scouts currently has about 3.2 million members, including adult volunteers.

Some women outside the Girl Scouts have actively lobbied the Boy Scouts to include girls in its ranks. In February, after the 107-year-old Boy Scouts announced that it would admit transgender children in its Scouting programs, the National Organization for Women called on the group to "honor its decree to help all children by permitting girls to gain full membership."

"Women can now hold all combat roles in the military, and women have broken many glass ceilings at the top levels of government, business, academia and entertainment," said National Organization for Women President Terry O'Neill. "It's long past-due that girls have equal opportunities in Scouting."

One New York teen leading the push for the Boy Scouts to include girls as official members is Sydney Ireland, who has been an unofficial member of her brother's troop in Manhattan for several years but is unable to earn a merit badge to begin the process of becoming an Eagle Scout because she is a girl.

With her father, Sydney has become a leader in the national push to allow girls to join the Boy Scouts ranks, appearing in a video with more than 3 million views and launching a Change.org petition with more than 8,400 supporters.

"I know I could rise through the ranks and become an Eagle Scout alongside the best of the boys -- all I need is the opportunity," Sydney wrote on Change.org.

But the "single-gender expertise" of Girl Scouts' leaders has inherent value, the organization's president argued in her letter.

"Girl Scouts believes in meeting the needs of America's youth through single gender programming by creating a safe place for girls to thrive and learn," Hopinkah Hannan wrote. "Over the last century, GSUSA has adapted to the changing environment, always prioritizing the health, safety and well-being of girls. For BSA to explore a program for girls without such priorities is reckless."

The Boy Scouts organization, which was launched into the national spotlight during President Donald Trump's speech at its jamboree celebration this summer, should focus its efforts on recruiting all boys, including black and Hispanic youths, instead of girls, Hopinkah Hannan said.

SundayMonday on 08/27/2017

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