In a move to open the door to girls, the Boy Scouts of America announced a name change for its flagship program on Wednesday to reflect that it will no longer be a boys-only organization.
For more than a century, the program for 11- to 17-year-olds was known simply as Boy Scouts. Next year, the name will officially be changed to Scouts BSA.
"We hope the name change is inviting," said Kent York, spokesman for the Northern Star Council, which oversees scouting in 21 counties in Minnesota and four in Wisconsin.
Opening the organization to girls comes at a time when many youth organizations are seeing drops in membership in part because of competing interests with sports leagues and busy family schedules. Nationally, about 2.3 million young people participate in the Boy Scouts, down from 2.6 million in 2013 and more than 4 million in past peak years.
Nationwide, the Girl Scouts also have seen membership dip from just over 2 million youth members and about 800,000 adult members to 1.76 million girls and more than 780,00 adult members.
Now both scouting organizations will vie for girls.
The Boy Scouts of America organization is responding to the wants and needs of families looking to do more things together, York said.
The Girl Scouts aren't likely to flinch.