Group delays decision on exclusion of gays

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Scott Hines, scoutmaster for Troop 16, and his son Garrett, pray during a prayer vigil in the First Baptist Church Moores Lane Tuesday in Texarkana, Texas. Members of the troop, parents, and others prayed that the Boy Scouts of America would continue to retain their policy of excluding gay scouts and scoutmasters. The national executive board of the BSA began closed meetings on Monday to discuss the policy. (AP)
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The extra time will give local Scout leaders in Utah and elsewhere time to determine how their members feel about the proposal, said Kay Godfrey, a spokesman for Boy Scouts in the Great Salt Lake Council. The heavily Mormon council is one of the largest in the country, with 5,500 troops and 73,400 youth members.

“It’s so important and so historic in nature that serious deliberation over time, involving a broad spectrum of folks, is needed,” Godfrey said.

Outside BSA headquarters, hundreds of supporters of the ban held a rally and prayer vigil Wednesday, carrying signs that read, “Don’t invite sin into the camp” and “Homosexuality is a sin! BSA please resist Satan’s test. Uphold the ban.”

Scoutmaster Darrel Russell of Weatherford, west of Fort Worth, took his wife and five of their seven children to the rally. Russell said having gays in the scouting movement would be like mixing boys and girls.

“The whole idea is to protect our boys at all costs,” Russell said, warning that if the ban is lifted, “we’re shutting down our troop.”

Among those joining the debate was New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, an Eagle Scout who told reporters the ban should be lifted.

“I can’t urge them enough to make sure that every young man is eligible, regardless of his orientation, to be a scout and to benefit from a great program that really helps kids develop,” he said.

In Washington, White House spokesman Jay Carney declined to comment on the BSA’s delay but reiterated President Barack Obama’s view that gays should be able to participate in the Scouts.

Members of the Scouts’ executive board remained silent about their deliberations during and after their meeting. Police and security guards blocked journalists from entering the meeting area, and board members approached as they walked to their cars outside the hotel declined to comment.

However, it’s likely the board — and corporations that contribute to the BSA — will face continued pressure.

By delaying the vote, the Scouts “have guaranteed continuing controversy and increased pressures on corporate sponsors to withdraw funding,” said professor Kenneth Sherrill, a gay rights advocate who teaches political science at Hunter College in New York.

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