Boy Scouts of America President Robert Gates said on Thursday that the organization’s existing ban on gay leaders “cannot be sustained” and urged for an eventual change of course in order to avoid potential litigation.
Gates, a former U.S. Secretary of Defense, made the remarks at the group’s national business meeting In Atlanta.
RELATED: NY Boy Scouts hire gay camp leader despite national policy
According to a copy of his prepared remarks, Gates said the Boy Scouts of America cannot continue to “ignore growing internal challenges to our current membership policy.” He added, “Nor can we ignore the social, political and juridical changes taking place in our country — changes taking place at a pace over this past year no one anticipated.” Gates pointed to the impending U.S. Supreme Court decision on gay marriage and recent debates in Indiana and Arkansas over discrimination based on sexual orientation.
Gates stressed at the meeting in Atlanta that he wasn’t asking the national board to take immediate action, but urged the organization to do something “sooner rather than later.” He floated the possibility of changing the policy to allow local Boy Scout groups and their charter partners “to determine the standards for their Scout leaders.”








