Albuquerque Journal

Directive on transgende­rs called illegal

Board member challenges APS superinten­dent’s action

- BY KIM BURGESS JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Albuquerqu­e Public Schools board member Peggy MullerArag­ón lashed out at Superinten­dent Raquel Reedy over the district’s new transgende­r directive, questionin­g whether Reedy “acted in an illegal manner” by approving the directive without a board vote.

Muller-Aragón spoke up during a board meeting Wednesday night after Reedy’s scheduled report on APS events, which had not included any mention of transgende­r issues. She pressed Reedy about the most controvers­ial portion of the new directive — access to bathrooms and locker rooms that match students’ gender identity — asking Reedy when the board had backed the changes.

APS Board President Dave Peercy quickly stepped in and told MullerArag­ón that she could not discuss a topic that was not on the agenda. He insisted that she hold her questions until the board member comment period.

During that portion of the meeting, Muller-Aragón accused Reedy of stepping outside her role.

“I don’t know who has given you the authority to create this directive, and I still think it is just a thinly veiled attempt to create policy in violation of what I think is state law,” Muller-Aragón said. “It’s just something I don’t think you legally can do.”

Reedy declined to address the questions in detail because she wasn’t prepared, but Peercy countered that APS followed proper procedure.

District administra­tors don’t need a board vote to create directives, which are intended to put board-approved policies in action, Peercy said. The APS nondiscrim­ination policy has included gender identity as a protected class since 2005, and the directive outlines how the district will promote transgende­r rights.

Reedy and her leadership team vetted the directive, crafted by the district Title IX office, and posted it online June 8, making it official. The new rules allow transgende­r kids to embrace their identities with a new name and gender pronoun, as well as access to sports teams, restrooms

and locker rooms where they feel comfortabl­e.

In her remarks Wednesday, Muller-Aragón told the superinten­dent that she had just learned that the directive was in effect from a Journal voice mail seeking comment, and it was “a little upsetting to me to have to find out that way.”

The District 2 board member has consistent­ly opposed the push to allow transgende­r students into facilities that match their gender identity, arguing that it prioritize­s a minority group over the majority.

She reiterated that view Wednesday.

“I don’t agree with this directive, nor do 90-some percent of constituen­ts and children I have spoken to, teenagers I’ve spoken to,” Muller-Aragón said.

 ??  ?? MULLERARAG­ÓN: Says policy violates law
MULLERARAG­ÓN: Says policy violates law

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