Chattanooga Times Free Press

Judge sides with transgende­r teen, declines to dismiss suit

- BY BEN FINLEY

NORFOLK, Va. — A federal judge on Tuesday sided with a transgende­r teen in Virginia who claims a school board violated his rights when it banned him from using boys’ bathrooms.

U. S. District Court Judge Arenda Wright Allen declined the Gloucester County School Board’s request to dismiss the case filed by former student Gavin Grimm, writing that the board’s policies “singled out and stigmatize­d Mr. Grimm.”

The judge in Norfolk ordered lawyers for both sides to schedule a settlement conference in the next 30 days.

Attorneys for the school board did not immediatel­y respond to a phone call and email requesting comment. Joshua Block, an ACLU attorney representi­ng Grimm, said Grimm is seeking nominal damages from the school board and the admission that its bathroom policy was illegal.

“Maybe the school board will give up at this point or maybe they’ll want to keep appealing,” Block said. “But I do know that Gavin has, from the beginning, been so dedicated to this because he’s wanted to make sure other kids are protected.”

The case has continued on a circuitous path well after Grimm’s graduation in June 2017 from Gloucester High School, which is about an hour east of Richmond.

A different federal judge initially sided with the school board in 2015. Then an appeals court ruled in Grimm’s favor, citing a directive issued by the Obama Administra­tion that said students can choose bathrooms that correspond with their gender identity.

The U.S. Supreme Court backed out of hearing the case after the Trump Administra­tion pulled back that guidance. Grimm’s case was sent back to U.S. District Court.

In her 30-page opinion, Wright wrote that Grimm’s lawyers successful­ly argued that the school board violated his rights under the U. S. Constituti­on’s equal protection clause as well as federal Title IX protection­s against gender-based discrimina­tion. She wrote that the board’s argument “rings hollow” that it was protecting students’ privacy rights, including Grimm’s.

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