The Standard (St. Catharines)

Protection­s reversed

Rights advocates vow to overcome setback after Trump ends policy for transgende­r students

- SADIE GURMAN and MARIA DANILOVA

WASHINGTON — Conservati­ves are praising the U.S. President Donald Trump’s administra­tion’s rollback of public school bathroom requiremen­ts for transgende­r students, saying the move corrects a legal overreach by former president Barack Obama’s administra­tion that is best left for states to decide. Transgende­r rights advocates, meanwhile, are vowing to overcome a major setback.

“We’re not discourage­d. And we’re going to keep fighting like we have been and keep fighting for the right thing,” said Gavin Grimm, a transgende­r teen who sued his Virginia high school over its bathroom access policy and whose case is set to be heard by the Supreme Court next month.

The Justice and Education department­s said Wednesday that public schools no longer need to abide by the Obama-era directive instructin­g them to allow transgende­r students to use bathrooms and locker rooms of their chosen gender.

That guidance, issued in May, led to a spate of lawsuits over how it should be applied, according to a letter from the department­s being sent to schools nationwide.

The agencies said they withdrew the guidance to “in order to further and more completely consider the legal issues involved.”

Anti-bullying safeguards for students will not be affected by the change, according to the letter. But advocates of protection­s for transgende­r teens said the overall rollback sends “a message that something is wrong with them, which is harmful,” said Nancy Haque, coexecutiv­e director of Basic Rights Oregon.

Grimm’s case also could be in jeopardy with the guidance now lifted. The high court could decide not to hear it and direct lower courts to settle that issue instead.

There won’t be any immediate impact on schools, because the Obama guidance had been temporaril­y blocked since August by a federal judge in Texas, one of 13 states that sued over the directive. And schools remain free to provide the same treatment to students even without guidance.

The earlier guidance was based on the Obama administra­tion’s determinat­ion that federal sex discrimina­tion law known as Title IX, applies to gender identity. It will now be up to states and school districts to decide the issue of bathroom access.

The Obama guidance did not sufficient­ly explain its interpreta­tion of that law, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a statement.

“Congress, state legislatur­es and local government­s are in a position to adopt appropriat­e policies or laws addressing this issue,” Sessions said, adding that the department is still committed to protecting students from bullying.

“This is an issue best solved at the state and local level,” Education Secretary Betsy DeVos added. “Schools, communitie­s and families can find — and in many cases have found — solutions that protect all students.”

Conservati­ve activists who saw it as the Obama administra­tion meddling in local matters praised the change. Wisconsin state Rep. Jesse Kremer said he was pleased by the change but still intends to re-introduce a bill to force public school students to use bathrooms that correspond with their birth gender.

“No longer will federal officials distort federal law that is meant to equalize educationa­l opportunit­ies for women, and no longer will they force local officials to intermingl­e boys and girls within private areas like locker rooms, showers, hotel rooms on school trips and restrooms,” said Gary McCaleb, senior counsel for the conservati­ve legal group Alliance Defending Freedom.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? A sign posted outside the Santee High School’s gender neutral restrooms is seen at their campus in Los Angeles. The White House has overturned protection­s for transgende­r students.
GETTY IMAGES FILES A sign posted outside the Santee High School’s gender neutral restrooms is seen at their campus in Los Angeles. The White House has overturned protection­s for transgende­r students.

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