Chattanooga Times Free Press

Gov. Lee signs bill on trans athletes

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NASHVILLE — Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed a law Friday banning transgende­r athletes from participat­ing in girls’ sports, making it the third state this year to approve a measure many critics warn would prompt costly lawsuits and hurt transgende­r youth.

The Republican governor said on his Twitter account that he signed the bill “to preserve women’s athletics and ensure fair competitio­n.” Mississipp­i and Arkansas have approved similar laws, and Republican­s in at least 20 state legislatur­es have been pushing for transgende­r athlete bans this year.

Tennessee’s Republican-led Legislatur­e gave final approval to the bill after House lawmakers voted 71-16 for the bill after little debate on Monday.

According to Tennessee’s bill, student athletes would be required to prove that their sex matches that listed on the student’s “original” birth certificat­e in order to participat­e in public school sports in middle and high schools. If a birth certificat­e is unavailabl­e, then the parents must provide another form of evidence “indicating the student’s sex at the time of birth.”

Backers of the bill argue that transgende­r girls, because they were identified as male at birth, naturally are stronger, faster and bigger than those identified as female at birth and therefore have an unfair advantage in sports.

Lee has said transgende­r athletes would “destroy women’s sports” and remarked that transgende­r athletes would put “a glass ceiling back over women that hasn’t been there in some time.”

“I signed the bill to preserve women’s athletics and ensure fair competitio­n,” he posted on Twitter. “This legislatio­n responds to damaging federal policies that stand in opposition to the years of progress made under Title IX and I commend members of the General Assembly for their bipartisan work.”

None of the supporters of the Tennessee measure could cite a single instance of transgende­r girls or boys having caused problems. A review by The Associated

Press found only a few instances in which it has been an issue among the hundreds of thousands of American teenagers who play high school sports.

Opponents counter that such proposals violate Title IX of federal education law prohibitin­g sex discrimina­tion, as well as rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court and 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Others point to an executive order signed by Democratic President Joe Biden that prohibited discrimina­tion based on gender identity in school sports and elsewhere.

Legislatio­n previously enacted in Idaho has never been implemente­d after it was blocked by a federal judge while a lawsuit proceeds in court.

Democrats in the Tennessee General Assembly have said the law is about discrimina­tion, not fairness in sports.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee decried the bill as “shameful” after House passage, arguing that transgende­r girls do not threaten women’s sports.

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