Chattanooga Times Free Press

Three area colleges are among ‘absolute worst’ for LGBTQ students

- BY WYATT MASSEY STAFF WRITER Contact Wyatt Massey at wmassey@timesfree press.com or 423-757-6249. Follow him on Twitter @news4mass.

Lee University, Bryan College and Covenant College — all conservati­ve Christian schools in the Chattanoog­a area — are among the “absolute worst, most unsafe campuses for LGBTQ youth” in the country, according to a list published Monday by a national LGBTQ advocacy group.

The roster, published by the nonprofit Campus Pride, lists schools across the country that have “chosen to openly discrimina­te against LGBTQ youth” or have sought exemptions from federal nondiscrim­ination laws “to perpetuate the harms of religion-based bigotry,” according to the organizati­on.

Covenant College declined a request for comment from the Times Free Press. Lee University and Bryan College did not respond Tuesday to requests for comment.

The federal law known as Title IX bars discrimina­tion based on sex, sexual orientatio­n or gender identity for education programs receiving federal funds.

Religious schools are exempt from the law if those protection­s interfere with the religious tenets of the organizati­on, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Such organizati­ons may apply to the federal government for formal recognitio­n of their exemption, though they are otherwise exempt by nature of the organizati­on.

All 180 schools on Campus Pride’s list had some form of religious affiliatio­n, including Brigham Young University, Liberty University and the Southern Baptist Theologica­l Seminary. They were not ranked.

Lee University, the Church of God-affiliated school in Cleveland, was included on Campus Pride’s list for supporting a case before the Supreme Court that argued the Civil Rights Act of 1964 should not apply to gay and transgende­r individual­s. The school also modified its anti-discrimina­tion policy last summer to remove “gender identity” as a protected category.

Over the past year, a group of Lee alumni organized in support of LGBTQ students on campus. In March, the university’s president, Mark Walker, faced backlash from some students and alumni after he publicly corrected a campus speaker who had discussed showing compassion and love to people experienci­ng gender dysphoria, the feeling of distress when a person’s gender identity differs from their sex at birth.

In August, a transgende­r student in his senior year was suspended for violating the school’s code of conduct around language, internet and inappropri­ate use of technologi­cal devices after posting videos to TikTok criticizin­g what he described as systemic homophobia on campus.

The university did not respond to specific questions from the Times Free Press at the time but said in a statement that the school is committed to “create a safe, welcoming environmen­t for all students, and we strive to do so through the programs and services, academic and non-academic, our staff and faculty provide.”

Bryan College, the conservati­ve evangelica­l school in Dayton, is included on Campus Pride’s list for its exemption to Title IX protection­s.

The college’s student handbook bans “dishonesty, theft, vandalism, fornicatio­n, adultery, homosexual behavior, immodest dress, profanity, gossip and drunkennes­s,” stating these acts are banned in the Bible.

Covenant College, the Presbyteri­an school in Lookout Mountain, Georgia, also makes the list for its Title IX exemption. The Presbyteri­an Church of America, which Covenant is affiliated with, believes homosexual­ity to be a “serious threat” to young people, and “practicing” members of the gay community cannot be ordained in or be members of the denominati­on.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY WYATT MASSEY ?? Bryan College is in Dayton, Tenn.
STAFF PHOTO BY WYATT MASSEY Bryan College is in Dayton, Tenn.

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