Daily News (Los Angeles)

Bonta warns school districts not to adopt forced outing policies

- By Andrew Sheeler The Sacramento Bee

California school districts should not force staff to out transgende­r students to their parents, Attorney General Rob Bonta warned in a legal memo sent Thursday.

The alert was sent to every school district and charter school board and superinten­dent in the state.

“The Office of the California Attorney General issues this legal alert to remind all school boards that forced gender identity disclosure policies — which target transgende­r and gender nonconform­ing students by mandating that school personnel disclose a student’s gender identity or gender nonconform­ity to a parent or guardian without the student’s express consent — violate state law,” the memo begins.

A legal alert is advisory in nature and is intended to clarify the law as the California Attorney General’s Office interprets it.

Several school districts in California have enacted such a policy, as well as policies requiring parents to be notified if a student accesses a bathroom or plays a sport that doesn’t correspond with the sex listed on their birth certificat­e.

These policies require parental notificati­on regardless of whether it places the student at risk of harm from doing so.

Bonta’s office is embroiled in a lawsuit with one Chino Valley Unified and has secured a preliminar­y injunction from the judge in that case, barring that district from enacting the notificati­on policy while the case is ongoing.

The alert cited three different ways that forced outing policies violate state law and students’ rights. In the memo, Bonta’s office argued that the policies violate the Equal Protection Clause of the California Constituti­on.

“Because gender identity is an aspect of gender, transgende­r or gender nonconform­ing individual­s constitute a protected class under California’s equal protection clause,” the memo said.

The memo also said that the parental notificati­on policy violates statutory prohibitio­ns on discrimina­tion based on gender, gender expression and gender identity.

“Forced outing policies target one group, and “that group alone” for discrimina­tory treatment, which violates state anti-discrimina­tion law,” the memo said.

Finally, the memo said that the policy violates California students’ constituti­onal right to privacy with regard to how and when they disclose their gender identity.

“In sum, by singling out transgende­r and gender nonconform­ing students for different, adverse treatment that puts them at risk of harm, forced disclosure policies violate their constituti­onal right to equal protection and privacy, as well as their statutory protection from discrimina­tion under California law,” the memo concluded.

In a statement accompanyi­ng the memo, Bonta said that these school district policies “endanger the psychologi­cal and emotional well-being of transgende­r and gender-nonconform­ing students” and that such policies “have no place in our classrooms.”

A 2021 study published in the medical journal Pediatrics found that transgende­r and gender-nonconform­ing adolescent­s are more likely to experience abuse than their peers.

A 2022 survey from LGBTQ advocacy group the Trevor Project found that fewer than a third of trans and nonbinary youths view their home as a safe and affirming place.

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