A federal appeals court has upheld a Florida school district鈥檚 policy of separating restrooms by 鈥渂iological sex鈥 and thus barring transgender students from using facilities consistent with their gender identity.
The 7-4 decision by the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, in Atlanta, goes against several other federal appeals courts that have ruled that transgender students were protected by the the 14th Amendment鈥檚 equal-protection clause or Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which bars discrimination based on sex in federally funded educational programs. The ruling also tees up a potential showdown in the U.S. Supreme Court over transgender rights.
Writing for the majority on Dec. 30, Judge Barbara Lagoa said it was 鈥渦nremarkable鈥 that schools were separating restrooms by biological sex for years and were expressly authorized to do so under Title IX. She said the policy of the St. Johns County, Fla., district did not discriminate on the basis of sex or transgender status, and she discounted some of the arguments of former student Drew Adams, a transgender male, that he should not have been required to use the girls鈥 restroom or a sex-neutral, single-stall bathroom.
鈥淪imply put,鈥 Lagoa said in the 150-page decision in 鈥渢丑颈蝉 is a case about the constitutionality and legality of separating bathrooms by biological sex because it involves an individual of one sex seeking access to the bathrooms reserved for those of the opposite sex.鈥
A contrary conclusion in favor of Adams by a federal district court 鈥渋s not supported by the plain and ordinary meaning of the word 鈥榮ex鈥 and provides ample support for subsequent litigants to transform schools鈥 living facilities, locker rooms, showers, and sports teams into sex-neutral areas and activities,鈥 said Lagoa, who was on former President Donald Trump鈥檚 shortlist for the Supreme Court vacancy filled by Justice Amy Coney Barrett in 2020.
Judge Jill Pryor, in one of several dissents in the case, said the majority鈥檚 definition of 鈥渂iological sex鈥 based on chromosomal structure and anatomy at birth 鈥渉as no business driving the framing and resolution of this case.鈥
鈥淎dams鈥檚 position in this litigation 鈥 has always been that his exclusion, as a transgender boy, from the boys鈥 restrooms at Nease High School violated the Equal Protection Clause and Title IX,鈥 Pryor said. 鈥淔ar from wanting to eliminate sex-separated bathrooms, Adams鈥檚 case logically depends on their existence: he simply wanted to use the boys鈥 restrooms.鈥
Lambda Legal, which represents Adams, issued a statement by its senior counsel, Tara Borrelli, that said, 鈥淭his aberrant ruling contradicts the decisions of every other circuit to consider the question across the country. Transgender students deserve the same dignity and opportunity to thrive in school as all other students, and Lambda Legal鈥檚 work will not be done until that is a lived reality for every student.鈥
The statement did not address whether Lambda Legal planned to appeal the decision to the Supreme Court, but the organization retweeted the message of a supporter who said, 鈥淭his fight is not over.鈥
School district refused to accept an updated birth certificate
Adams, now a college student, challenged a school board policy that barred him from the boys鈥 restroom after he began presenting as a boy when he entered Nease High School in Ponte Vedra, Fla., in 2015.
The St. Johns district had adopted a policy that included using transgender students鈥 preferred pronouns, but it declined to allow transgender students to use restrooms or locker rooms consistent with their gender identity.
The district refused to accept Adams鈥檚 amended Florida birth certificate, which lists him as male, and instead relied on his birth certificate from the time of his enrollment, which listed Adams as female.
A federal district court ruled for Adams on both equal-protection and Title IX grounds. In 2021, a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit ruled for Adams on the equal-protection claim over the strong dissent of one judge. But the full 11th Circuit granted rehearing in the case.
In her opinion for the majority, Lagoa says that the school district鈥檚 policy does not violate Title IX because the statute unambiguously defined 鈥渟ex鈥 as biological sex.
鈥69传媒 鈥榮ex鈥 to include 鈥榞ender identity,鈥 and moving beyond a biological understanding of 鈥榮ex,鈥 would provide more protection against discrimination on the basis of transgender status under the statute and its implementing regulations than it would against discrimination on the basis of sex,鈥 she said.
Lagoa rejected arguments that the Title IX analysis should be governed by the Supreme Court鈥檚 2020 decision in , which held that sexual orientation and transgender status were protected under the sex-discrimination prong of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
鈥淲e cannot, as the Supreme Court did in Bostock, decide only whether discrimination based on transgender status necessarily equates to discrimination on the basis of sex,鈥 Lagoa said. 鈥淭his is because Title IX, unlike Title VII, includes express statutory and regulatory carve-outs for differentiating between the sexes when it comes to separate living and bathroom facilities, among others.鈥
In a separate concurrence to her own opinion, not signed by any other judge, Lagoa expressed concerns about what a ruling in favor of transgender students on restroom access would mean in another context鈥攇irls鈥 and women鈥檚 sports.
鈥淐omingling both biological sexes in the realm of female athletics鈥攚ould threaten to undermine one of Title IX鈥檚 major achievements, giving young women an equal opportunity to participate in sports,鈥 she wrote. Several states have passed laws limiting participation in girls鈥 school sports to 鈥渂iological females.鈥
What about 鈥榠ntersex鈥 people, one dissenting judge asks
Pryor, in her dissent, said the school district鈥檚 policy violates both the equal-protection clause and Title IX.
鈥淏y excluding Adams from the boys鈥 restrooms at Nease High School and relegating him to the gender-neutral restrooms, the school district forced Adams to wear what courts have called a 鈥榖adge of inferiority,鈥欌 she wrote.
In a separate dissent, Judge Charle R. Wilson said the majority wrongly assumes that a person鈥檚 biological sex is accurately determined at birth and that it is 鈥渟tatic and permanent.鈥
鈥淭his presumption is both medically and scientifically flawed,鈥 said Wilson, adding that the policy does not account for 鈥渋ntersex鈥 individuals, those whose sex at birth is not easy to recognize or categorize.
鈥淚f the school board were truly concerned about male genitalia in the female bathroom, or vice versa, the policy would account for intersex students and would accept updated documentation,鈥 he said.