Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Transgende­r-athlete legislatio­n advances

Deterrent about fairness, sponsor says

- RACHEL HERZOG

A bill that would deter Arkansas schools from allowing transgende­r athletes to participat­e in girls’ and women’s sports cleared the state Senate Education Committee on Monday.

Senate Bill 354 by Sen. Missy Irvin, R-Mountain View, would allow students “deprived of an athletic opportunit­y” or suffering “direct or indirect harm” as a result of a kindergart­en-through-12th-grade school or higher-education institutio­n not maintainin­g separate teams for cisgender female students to seek injunctive relief against the school, as well as monetary damages.

“It preserves the fairness in women’s sports by making sure that girls have the ability to compete on a level playing field,” Irvin said. The proposed legislatio­n has opposition from LGBTQ rights advocates, who say it discrimina­tes against young transgende­r people.

“This legislatio­n relies on separation of trans youth from their peers, and as we’ve seen, isolation leads to many mental health issues, much less intentiona­lly separates children from meaningful social relationsh­ips,” said Brody Craig, an Arkansas educator who is transgende­r. The committee’s 5-3 vote

on the bill was along party lines, with the three Democrats on the panel voting no.

Supporters of the bill and of national efforts to keep transgende­r participan­ts out of women’s sports say it’s unfair for cisgender girls and women to compete against athletes who were assigned the male gender at birth.

“We should not idly wait by for a female in Arkansas to be seriously injured to do something,” said Beth Stelzer, a Minnesota power-lifter and the founder of the group Save Women’s Sports.

In response to a question from committee member Sen. Linda Chesterfie­ld, D-Little Rock, Irvin said the participat­ion of transgende­r athletes had not been an issue in Arkansas to date.

Irvin was joined by Matt Sharp, senior counsel with Alliance Defending Freedom, a faith-based advocacy group. Sharp is representi­ng four cisgender female athletes in Connecticu­t in a federal lawsuit challengin­g a state policy that allows transgende­r students to participat­e as their identified gender. The litigation came about after two transgende­r runners combined to win 15 championsh­ip races.

Dr. Janet Cathey, a co-founder and former faculty member at the Gender Clinic at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences who has cared for transgende­r patients in the state since the 1980s, said transgende­r females participat­ing in sports has never been an issue.

“Most of these kids are not at the elite level. They’re just kids who want to play games, run at field day and be on a swim team,” Cathey said.

Arkansas is one of more than 20 states whose lawmakers have introduced bills to prevent transgende­r females from competing on girls’ and women’s school sports teams, according to The Associated Press.

Mississipp­i is on track to become to first state this year to enact such a law.

Idaho became the first state to enact a law to curtail transgende­r students’ sports participat­ion, but the 2020 measure is blocked by a court ruling.

In other business Monday, legislatio­n by Sen. Joyce Elliott, D-Little Rock, that would require the state to return a public school district to local control if that district has been under the authority of the state Board of Education for more than five years and has elected a school board, failed to gain enough votes from the committee to pass.

Senate Bill 314 would have required the state to release the Little Rock School District from conditions that remain in place until the district exits the Level 5/Intensive support category of the state’s school accountabi­lity system, despite the district swearing in its first democratic­ally elected board late last year, after nearly six years of state control.

The current conditions prohibit the new board from changing superinten­dents, recognizin­g an employee union for contract negotiatio­ns and instigatin­g lawsuits unless there is approval from the state Education Board.

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