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Boy Scouts bankruptcy will not affect local Scout activities

By Brad Hundt for The 2 min read

Despite the Boy Scouts of America seeking Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, regional Boy Scout leaders say the organization is far from handing out its final merit badge.

In a statement released following the national organization’s bankruptcy filing last week, the Laurel Highlands Council said it has not filed for bankruptcy, and meetings, activities, service projects and other events will be proceeding as usual.

“In short, there should be no change to the local Scouting experience,” the statement said.

That council includes scouts in Washington and Greene counties and parts of Fayette and Westmoreland counties.

Martin Barbie, the Scout executive with the Westmoreland-Fayette Council, said business would also be proceeding as usual in his area, and “we communicated that to all our stakeholders.” That council covers portions of Fayette and Westmoreland county as well.

The Boy Scouts of America has sought bankruptcy protection as a result of claims by thousands of former Scouts that they were sexually abused while they were in the organization, and a flood of lawsuits that has followed the revelations. The bankruptcy filing will give the national Boy Scouts organization the opportunity to create a trust fund to pay victims and get its finances in order. It will also limit the timeframe in which victims can seek compensation.

The Washington Post reported last week that the bankruptcy filing “sets the stage for what could be one of the country’s most complicated bankruptcy cases in history. …”

The Laurel Highlands Council is separate from the national organization, as are other local councils, and it controls the area’s camps and properties, and provides financial and administrative support to local units.

The statement by the Laurel Highlands Council also insisted that being a Boy Scout “is safer now than ever before,” and the organization has “developed some of the strongest expert-informed youth protection policies found in any youth-serving organization.”

Erik Tomalis, the chief development officer for the Laurel Highlands Council, did not respond to an e-mailed question on whether any of the lawsuits filed against the national organization come from this region.

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