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Law & Courts

School Sports a Fresh Front in State Battles Over Transgender 69传媒鈥 Rights

By Evie Blad 鈥 January 28, 2021 9 min read
A supporter for the transgender community holds a trans flag in front of counter-protesters to protect attendees from their insults and obscenities at the city's Gay Pride Festival in Atlanta on Oct. 12, 2019.
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State lawmakers around the country are battling on a new front over the rights of transgender students, debating legislation that would prohibit them from playing on single-sex sports teams with their cisgender peers.

The bills鈥 in so far鈥攃ome as civil rights advocates nationwide are gearing up for what could be a renewed fight between states and the federal government over differing interpretations of federal civil rights laws.

At issue: whether the federal sex-discrimination protections in Title IX apply to gender identity, protecting transgender students鈥 rights at school.

Children should be able to learn without worrying about whether they will be denied access to the restroom, the locker room, or school sports.

President Joe Biden has pledged to ensure transgender students have such protections, clearing the way to fulfill that pledge with a sweeping he signed on inauguration day.

鈥淐hildren should be able to learn without worrying about whether they will be denied access to the restroom, the locker room, or school sports,鈥 said that order, which directed cabinet officials to ensure their agencies apply protections in sex discrimination laws to sexual orientation and gender identity.

While the state-level focus in previous years was largely on so-called 鈥渂athroom bills鈥 that sought to restrict students鈥 ability to use facilities that align with their gender identity, the focus this year is largely on sports. Legislators backing those bills have said that transgender girls would have a competitive advantage on women鈥檚 teams. The ACLU has pledged to fight any resulting state laws in court.

On the horizon: a possible return to state-federal fights similar to those that marked the end of the Obama administration, when North Carolina passed a restrictive 鈥渂athroom bill鈥 in defiance of federal guidance on the rights of transgender students, guidance that was later rescinded by the Trump administration.

Transgender students are caught in the middle

Transgender students and their families and schools and districts are left navigating conflicting directives about those students鈥 rights.

鈥淥nce I was on board and I understood it, I was geared up for a fight,鈥 said Jaime Gabrielli, a Helena mother of a transgender son, who has testified against state-level bills in Montana. 鈥淚 never got one. Until now.鈥

But school law experts believe transgender students now have more direct legal support for their cause than they did under the Obama administration, especially in the area of school facilities access.

Biden鈥檚 executive order cited the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 2020 decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, Ga., which held that a prohibition of sex discrimination in Title VII, the federal employment law, prohibits unequal treatment on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.

鈥淎s goes Title VII in terms of sex and gender, so goes Title IX,鈥 said Francisco M. Negr贸n, chief legal officer of the National School Boards Association. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e talking about federal legislation, you want consistency.鈥

But, while more and more school systems have applied that legal standard to transgender student policies during the school day, he said, the question of athletics access could be 鈥渁 challenging issue for districts鈥 in states that pass new restrictions.

Idaho became the first state to enact such a restriction when Republican Gov. Brad Little signed the 鈥淔airness in Women鈥檚 Sports Act鈥 into law in April 2020.

In August, a federal district court judge blocked that law from taking effect while he hears a lawsuit brought by the ACLU of Idaho on behalf of Lindsay Hecox, a transgender track athlete at Boise State University and a cisgender female student, identified in court papers as Jane Doe. Doe plays on the girls鈥 soccer team at Boise High School, and is concerned about being subjected to invasive 鈥渟ex verification鈥 testing under the new law. The case argues that the state law violates Title IX and the equal protection clause of the constitution.

U.S. District Judge David C. Nye wrote in his ruling that the small number of transgender women鈥檚 athletes 鈥渃oupled with the significant dispute regarding whether such athletes actually have physiological advantages over cisgender women when they have undergone hormone suppression in particular, suggest the act鈥檚 categorical exclusion of transgender women athletes has no relationship to ensuring equality and opportunities for female athletes in Idaho.鈥

That legal setback didn鈥檛 stop the bill鈥檚 sponsor, Idaho Rep. Barbara Ehardt, a Republican who played and coached college basketball, from traveling to neighboring Montana Jan. 18 to testify in support of a similar bill there.

鈥淚f you don鈥檛 pass legislation such as this, it will come to the day where there will be no room, no place, for girls and women to compete,鈥 Ehardt said, according to the Idaho Falls .

Montana鈥檚 鈥淪ave Women鈥檚 Sports Act鈥 would require public school athletics teams to be 鈥渄esignated based on biological sex.鈥

The state鈥檚 House of Representatives passed that bill Jan. 27 after striking language originally included in its text that said men generally have 鈥渄enser, stronger bones, tendons, and ligaments鈥 and 鈥渓arger hearts, greater lung volume per body mass, a higher red blood cell count, and higher hemoglobin,鈥 giving them an athletic advantage.

During debate on the bill, Montana Democrats argued it could violate Title IX, putting at risk nearly $500 million in federal education funding for the state鈥檚 K-12 schools.

鈥69传媒 cannot afford to jeopardize this funding, nor should we be tasked with implementing a bill such as this,鈥 said Rep. Mark Thane, a former school superintendent.

I never really heard awful things come out of people鈥檚 mouths until the legislature.

The arguments are personal for transgender children and their families, even if they have no intention of participating in school sports, said Gabrielli, the Helena mother who testified against the bill and another measure that would prohibit medical treatments like hormone therapy for transgender children.

Debates over whether transgender children 鈥渏ust want attention鈥 or a competitive advantage make them feel like their very existence is being questioned, said Gabrielli, whose 16-year-old son Justin, a sophomore, began publicly identifying as male when he started high school.

鈥淭hat is so not true,鈥 she said. 鈥淗e wants attention for all of the things teenage boys do鈥攂eing funny, and smart, and good looking, and things like that,鈥 but not for his gender.

Justin, who had competed in track and basketball, stopped playing sports after 8th grade, she said.

When Gabrielli met with school administrators to discuss his transition, she was prepared for a fight but was surprised to find them ready to give him access to the boy鈥檚 restroom, use male pronouns in connection with him, and make accommodations for him in the gym鈥檚 locker rooms during physical education classes by allowing him to use an office to change.

鈥淚 was ready for the bullying. I was ready for all of that,鈥 Gabrielli said. 鈥淭here have been situations, but ... I never really heard awful things come out of people鈥檚 mouths until the legislature.鈥

Questions about competitive advantage

The question of whether transgender girls have a competitive advantage is at the center of federal lawsuit in Connecticut. Three cisgender female track athletes there argue that the transgender participation policy of the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletics Association violates their Title IX rights, denying them benefits 鈥渂y permitting the participation of biologically male students in girls interscholastic track.鈥

The participation of two transgender athletes, who were identified as male at birth, had drawn complaints from some parents. They had support from the Trump administration, which filed legal briefs that argued in support of the plaintiffs, threatened enforcement actions against their schools, and argued in an internal memo that the Bostock employment case had no bearing on the agency鈥檚 interpretation of Title IX.

The Supreme Court ruling in Bostock 鈥渄oes not diminish the relevance of biological sex in athletics, and does not address the validity of the department鈥檚 historic measures to ensure biological females (girls and women) have equal opportunities to participate in athletics because males and females are not similarly situated with respect to athletic competition,鈥 the memo said.

In this Feb. 7, 2019, photo, Bloomfield High School transgender athlete Terry Miller, second from left, wins the final of the 55-meter dash over transgender athlete Andraya Yearwood, left, and other runners in the Connecticut girls Class S indoor track meet at Hillhouse High School in New Haven, Conn.

In Congress, former U.S. Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, D-Hawaii, filed a 鈥淧rotect Women鈥檚 Sports Act鈥 last year. A group of Republican representatives introduced a similar bill Jan. 21.

LGBTQ student advocates say transgender girls don鈥檛 have an inherent advantage over their cisgender peers. There are variations in factors like muscle mass and natural testosterone levels among cisgender women, they argue.

Some transgender girls also take hormone blockers to pause the effects of puberty, but advocacy groups say such treatment should not be a prerequisite for participation in sports because it can be costly and inaccessible to some students.

Federal interpretation of Title IX takes a U-turn

Biden鈥檚 executive order directly countered the Trump administration鈥檚 arguments, explicitly mentioning Title IX. The Education and Justice departments, whose new leadership is still to be confirmed by the Senate, have not yet put in place any guidance or rules detailing schools鈥 obligations under that order.

A spokesperson for the Education Department did not answer questions about potential guidance for schools, when it may be issued, or what it would include, saying only that the agency looks forward 鈥渢o fulfilling the Biden-Harris administration鈥檚 commitment to LGBTQ students being able to learn and thrive in schools that protect them from discrimination.鈥

Organizations including GLSEN, an LGBTQ students鈥 rights group, are heartened by that position. The support of sports teams can provide a buffer for students, helping them weather the difficulties of coming out at school, said a.t. Furuya, youth programs manager for GLSEN.

鈥淚鈥檝e known students who鈥檝e given up playing athletics because they were too afraid to go through the process. 鈥榃ill my teammates accept me? Will my coach accept me?鈥欌 Furuya said. 鈥淲e are making it so hard for trans kids to exist. And we just keep making it harder.鈥

And the is inconsistent. Though states like Montana and North Dakota will consider new restrictions this year, 17 states and the District of Columbia have state-level nondiscrimination laws that apply to sexual orientation and gender identity, according to a GLSEN tracker, and 16 have LGBTQ-inclusive student athletics policies.

In one of those states, Massachusetts, 12th-grader Esm茅e Silverman will soon decide what sport to play.

Esm茅e stopped playing tennis after her sophomore year of high school, when she decided to publicly identify as a girl. Still 鈥渃loseted,鈥 the transgender student played on the boys鈥 team until then.

Now, after feeling supported by classmates and teachers, she鈥檚 considered returning to athletics, which has lead to some internal debate. If Esm茅e plays on the co-ed rugby team, she can avoid confronting any concerns about competing against cisgender classmates. But she鈥檚 leaning toward playing on the girls鈥 tennis team, which she sees as a chance to live fully in her identity.

At six-feet-tall, and built 鈥渓ike a twig,鈥 Esm茅e takes estrogen and doesn鈥檛 see herself as having a competitive advantage against girls her age. Sports have been important to her family.

鈥淚鈥檝e definitely had my reservations about playing as my identity because I don鈥檛 like bothering people. I鈥檓 a huge pacifist. I don鈥檛 like the scrutiny,鈥 Esm茅e said. 鈥淎t the same time, I feel like playing on the girls鈥 tennis team is a part of me. I feel like playing on that team would make a statement.鈥

A version of this article appeared in the February 03, 2021 edition of Education Week as 69传媒 Offer New Front in State Battles Over Transgender 69传媒鈥 Rights

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