69传媒

Law & Courts

How Moms for Liberty鈥檚 Legal Strategy Has Upended Title IX Rules for 69传媒

By Mark Walsh 鈥 September 05, 2024 7 min read
Moms for Liberty co-founder Tina Descovich speaks before Republican presidential nominee former President Donald Trump at the Moms for Liberty annual convention in Washington, Friday, Aug. 30, 2024.
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One of the most popular breakout sessions at the recent Moms for Liberty national conference at a downtown hotel here focused on one of many education topics that has the focus of the conservative grassroots group鈥擳itle IX.

The session focused on the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 recently promulgated final regulation for the 1972 federal statute, which bars sex discrimination in federally funded schools and colleges. The regulation, among other things, interprets the statute to protect students on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity.

That doesn鈥檛 sit well with Moms for Liberty, whose conference also included sessions such as 鈥淐rafting parental rights laws with teeth鈥 and 鈥淧rotecting kids from secret gender transitions in schools.鈥 The conference also heard from former President Donald Trump, who notably didn鈥檛 say much about education, though he did attract attention for suggesting that public schools were facilitating students鈥 gender transitions.

鈥淲e don鈥檛 want to stop Title IX,鈥 said Kimberly S. Hermann, the executive director of the Southeastern Legal Foundation, a conservative legal organization that represent Moms for Liberty in litigation over the regulation. 鈥淲e want to save Title IX. We want to stop the changes to the regulations.鈥

Moms for Liberty and the Southeastern Legal Foundation, the non-profit legal organization that represents it, celebrated their role in one of several lawsuits that have led courts to block the regulation in roughly half the country.

In a session sometimes interrupted by cheers and whooping by the Moms for Liberty members, Hermann鈥檚 colleague Braden Boucek, the vice president of litigation for the Roswell, Ga.-based group, said, 鈥淲e鈥檝e been prevailing so far. We certainly still have a long way to go. But right now, things are going well.鈥

Groups鈥 legal maneuver expands the scope of Title IX injunctions

Last month, the U.S. Supreme Court declined the Biden administration鈥檚 request to allow much of the Title IX regulation to take effect in at least some of the states where it is blocked.

Moms for Liberty is involved in one challenge that technically wasn鈥檛 the subject of the Supreme Court鈥檚 emergency action. The group鈥檚 litigation has a unique feature that is being felt well beyond the 26 conservative-leaning states where the regulation is blocked statewide.

In a lawsuit in which four states鈥擪ansas, Alaska, Utah, and Wyoming鈥攃hallenged the regulation, Moms for Liberty and two other groups were also plaintiffs in the case before a federal district judge in Kansas.

鈥淓very one of these injunctions has been localized to states that participated in the lawsuit,鈥 Boucek said. 鈥淪o unfortunately, if you鈥檙e in a blue state that didn鈥檛 participate in a lawsuit, you鈥檙e just kind of out of luck鈥攗nless you鈥檙e part of our lawsuit.鈥

Because Moms for Liberty was suing as an association, Boucek argued, any relief granted by a court should apply to all members of the group, or 鈥渢o each and every one of the members, no matter where they are.鈥

What the Kansas federal judge agreed to do was allow Moms for Liberty and the two other private groups in that case, Young America鈥檚 Foundation and Female Athletes United, to block the new Title IX regulation at any school where a member or a member鈥檚 child attends school, even if they are in states that did not challenge the regulation.

That, said Boucek, gives 鈥淢oms for Liberty an effective veto anytime they want to get out of the Title IX regulation in their schools, no matter where they are.鈥

The audience in the session cheered and whooped some more.

The judge also allowed Moms for Liberty and the other group to recruit new members and add their children鈥檚 schools to the list of those where the regulation is blocked. That has led Moms for Liberty to step up its recruiting. And the groups just last week filed a fourth list of schools and colleges where their members or members鈥 children attend, totaling hundreds of educational institutions in every state where there is no statewide injunction.

鈥淭he bad news is we [have to] function as a clearinghouse for all this data,鈥 Boucek said.

The federal Education Department is .

A 鈥榤essy and confused鈥 situation in the schools

The U.S. Department of Justice, representing the Education Department, has appealed the Kansas court鈥檚 injunction to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, in Denver.

The Biden administration, however, has not made specific arguments against the school-by-school approach that has greatly expanded the areas where the regulation is blocked, though any appellate ruling lifting or undoing the injunction would affect that provision.

For school administrators, and their legal advisers, the ongoing legal battles over the Title IX regulation have been a source of uncertainty and bafflement.

鈥淭his got very messy and confused,鈥 said Justin Petrarca, an education lawyer in Chicago whose firm represents some 100 school districts in Illinois.

He said he is getting calls every day from his clients as schools seek to accommodate transgender students or have other questions about Title IX and its regulations.

Illinois is not one of the 26 states subject to a statewide injunction blocking the new regulation. But there are some 200 Illinois schools that appear on the lists filed by Moms for Liberty and the other two private groups.

Petrarca said he has one suburban Chicago school district client where one high school is on the list and the other isn鈥檛, as well as another district where about half the schools are on the list and the other half aren鈥檛.

鈥淪ome of these communities have active Moms for Liberty chapters, and [the parents] have been quick to inform the schools where their children attend,鈥 he said.

While the new Title IX regulation is blocked on its face from applying to the schools on the list, Petrarca and other education lawyers are advising their school district clients that they can still take steps to protect students based on gender identity and sexual orientation.

For one thing, the injunctions apply to the federal Education Department and where it may currently implement the new rule, the experts say. Petrarca noted that even the Kansas district judge wrote in his opinion that 鈥渘othing in this order limits the ability of any school to adopt or follow its own policies, or otherwise comply with applicable state or local laws or rules regarding鈥 issues such as gender identity.

In Illinois, there is a state law that protects students based on sexual orientation and gender identity, as well as case law from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, the Chicago-based court that covers Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin, .

Different Title IX rules apply depending on whether a school is subject to an injunction

Sonja Trainor, the executive director of the National Association of School Attorneys, said at least one other federal appeals court has issued . That is the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, in Richmond, Va., which covers Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia.

She said that given the Kansas judge鈥檚 admonishment that other laws and legal rulings may be relevant, 鈥渢here may be greater legal risk in adopting policies contrary to applicable law than in following a district court order in another jurisdiction in a case in which it was not a defendant.鈥

Trainor, whose group is made up of more than 1,200 school lawyers across the country, said that in districts where some schools are on the non-enforcement list and some aren鈥檛, administrators are applying the new regulation where they can and defaulting to the Education Department鈥檚 2020 regulation for the schools on the list.

鈥淏ut that approach may be unworkable in a district with district-wide programs including athletic teams, career programs that have students from all district high schools, 鈥 and academic programs in which middle school students take classes at some high schools,鈥 Trainor said.

All this means is that, for possibly the better part of this school year, the legal landscape over Title IX enforcement will remain complicated. The Supreme Court, in its short opinion last month refusing the limit two of the injunctions, noted that appeals of the injunctions were moving forward and that it 鈥渆xpects that the Courts of Appeals will render their decisions with appropriate dispatch.鈥

In other words, this likely isn鈥檛 the last time the nation鈥檚 high court will have to weigh in.

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