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The official badge of the LDS-BSA partnership.
The official badge of the LDS-BSA partnership.
Indefinitely Wild

In Breakup with Boy Scouts, It鈥檚 Mormons Who Lose

What does the end of the 105-year partnership mean for Scouting's future?

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After over a century together, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints and the Boy Scouts of America are calling it quits, effective December 31, 2019. What does that mean for the country鈥檚 largest outdoors program? I spent the last two days trying to figure that out.聽

The Mormons鈥 Long History with Scouting

To understand the significance of all this, you first have to understand how intertwined the two organizations currently are. Scouts in LDS troops currently make up . Historically, that number has reached as high as one-third. That鈥檚 because the church enrolls all its boys in Cub Scouts when they turn eight, then in Boy Scouts once they鈥檙e 11. The BSA has historically been the official youth development program for boys in the Mormon church, but it will be replaced in 2020 by that will place a greater emphasis on religion, rather than outdoor experiences. Church members will be free to participate in scouts, but they will no longer be compelled to do so.聽

The way the BSA organizes its individual troops allows for unique arrangements like that, serving local needs. The national organization sets direction, then chartering organizations鈥攃hurches, community centers, and such鈥攕ponsor individual troops that are naturally attuned to the needs of local communities. Boys involved in Scouts through a Mormon church in rural Utah work on the same programs, with the same goals as boys participating in scouts through a YMCA in the Bronx, but the culture within those two example troops will obviously differ.聽

This approach聽has enabled the Scouts to effectively serve the diverse needs of kids across the country for the last 108 years, but it鈥檚 also occasionally led to tension with the LDS church.聽At times, the BSA聽has pushed the church to be more progressive. In 1978, the聽Boy Scouts forced the church to allow African-Americans into the priesthood for the first time.聽(That was the topic of in 2015.)聽Adult Scout leaders from outside the church have told me that summer camps and other scout events appeared聽to be the first time that many Mormon boys had encountered people from other faiths, races, and cultural backgrounds.聽

Yet the influence of LDS is part of the reason why the BSA聽has maintained such conservative practices for so long, according to multiple people I interviewed, who asked to remain anonymous to avoid ruffling the feathers of either the BSA or the church. It聽wasn鈥檛 until 2013 and 2015聽that聽the BSA formally accepted both gay boys and adults as members, respectively. (When I requested comment from the BSA, the spokesperson聽referred me to the 聽with the LDS church.)聽But when up to a third of your membership鈥攁nd your revenue鈥攃omes from a single, conservative organization (the Mormon church聽, and ), it's not shocking that you could be forced to take its interests into account.聽

This recent break聽has been a long time coming. In 2015, when the BSA began accepting gay adult leaders, the Mormon church objected and . A compromise allowing individual troops to set their own adult volunteer policies was reached that year, but the church still began development on the new youth development program that鈥檚 launching in 2020. In January 2017, the BSA began accepting聽transgender boys as members. In聽May of that year, the Mormons announced that they would begin withdrawing from the BSA鈥檚 older teen programs. Then, in聽October, the BSA announced that it would begin allowing girls. Last Wednesday, it announced that it was dropping the gender from the name of its teen program, changing it from Boy Scouts to Scouts BSA. One week later, the Mormons announced their withdrawal from Scouting.聽

What鈥檚 Next for the聽BSA?

鈥淭his is a sad day for Scouting,鈥 Justin Wilson, the executive director of , told me over the phone yesterday. That answer surprised me. Wilson leads an organization that has campaigned heavily for the BSA to become more inclusive. I was expecting him to celebrate the official end of the church鈥檚 sway聽over Scouting, but instead he mourned the loss of the organization鈥檚 influence on Mormon children. 鈥淭he more kids who benefit from Scouting, the better,鈥 he says.聽

Everyone I spoke with while writing this article expressed a strong sentiment that it鈥檚 Mormon youth who stand the most to lose. While they鈥檒l still be able to chose to participate in Scouting, and work toward聽the Eagle rank, its inevitable聽that fewer of them will do so. It remains to be seen what the church鈥檚 own program will offer its kids.聽鈥淗igh-level Scouting creates opportunity, and with opportunity comes a chance at success,鈥 says聽Sydney Ireland, who fought to convince the聽BSA to allow women Scouts.聽

The breakup is going to hurt the BSA financially. The Mormon church currently enrolls nearly 460,000 Scouts in the BSA, and聽each scout pays $33 per year for membership鈥攁 contribution from the church of about $15 million per year. Some of the adult Scout leaders I spoke to聽predicted an increase聽in membership fees聽to help offset that lost revenue. That said, no one had any fears for the BSA鈥檚 future. 鈥淭he BSA is doing just fine financially,鈥 says Wilson. 鈥淭hey never have a problem finding plenty of donors.鈥 (The BSA received in 2016.)聽

The Future of Religion in聽Scouting

The BSA still聽. Devout atheists need not apply. Will the withdrawal of the Mormon church from Scouting lead to change in that long-held policy?聽

鈥淲e obviously want to work toward聽a future in which religion is not a prerequisite for people to participate in Scouting,鈥 says Wilson, citing his belief that Scouting should benefit as many kids as possible.聽

Scouts doesn鈥檛 dictate which god you have to believe in, just that you do need to believe in one. Anecdotally, I鈥檝e seen more and more parents voice this as a reason why they haven鈥檛 encouraged their kids to participate in Scouting. In my own experience, it creates a dilemma for non-religious Scouts. The Scout Law requires Scouts to tell the truth, yet as an atheist,聽I lied through omission both when I attained聽the Eagle rank and when I became an Assistant Scoutmaster as an adult. I doubt I鈥檓 the only otherwise proud Eagle Scout who鈥檚 been forced to do that.聽

鈥淭here鈥檚 still a lot of strong religious influence within the BSA, and a lot of support for the requirement,鈥 says Cate Readling, an adult BSA volunteer in Chicago who has three sons in the Scouts. Many chartering organizations within the BSA are churches, and many will likely still be LDS churches, even after 2020. But none of them represent a voting block compromising 20 percent of the organization,聽or speak from such a unified platform.聽

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