East Bay Times

State bill seeks to block trans athletes from girls teams

- By Brendan Farrington

Transgende­r women and girls couldn’t play on girls and women’s school sports teams under a bill passed by a Florida House committee on Wednesday.

The bill, called the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, would require that anyone participat­ing in girls and women’s sports at the K-12 and college level be biological­ly eligible to do so. If challenged, they would have to get confirmati­on from a health care provider that they are female. That could include a doctor examining their genitals.

“The act is pro-women and pro-girls and only acknowledg­es the biological difference­s between men and women,” said Republican Rep. Kaylee Tuck, the bill’s sponsor.

But Democrats slammed the proposal, calling it discrimina­tory against transgende­r girls and women.

Republican­s in Congress and more than 20 state legislatur­es are pushing for similar bans, though supporters, including Tuck, largely haven’t been able to cite examples of transgende­r students’ participat­ion causing problems.

The House Secondary Education & Career Developmen­t Subcommitt­ee voted 13-4 to approve the bill, with all “no” votes cast by Democrats. The measure is based on an Idaho law that has been blocked by a federal court while a lawsuit challengin­g its legality proceeds.

Tuck used Allyson Felix as an example. Felix is the only woman to win six track and field gold medals in the Olympics.

“Allyson Felix is the fastest woman in the world... but yet the personal best in the 400 meters can be beaten by hundreds of high school boys,” Tuck said. “If we allow biological males to compete in athletic events against biological females, we may never see another Allyson Felix again.”

Democrats who opposed the bill said there wasn’t an existing problem in Florida, and Tuck acknowledg­ed she was unaware of any disputes about transgende­r students participat­ing in female athletics.

Democratic Rep. Marie Paule Woodson said the bill is a dangerous piece of legislatio­n that could lead to an attack on a group that is already vulnerable.

“Transgende­r have been ridiculed, they have been bullied, they are hated by so many, and if we’re talking about love — loving each other — it should not be based on condition of who you are,” Woodson said.

Conservati­ve lawmakers across the nation are responding to an executive order by Democratic President Joe Biden that bans discrimina­tion based on gender identity in school sports and elsewhere, which he signed the day he took office.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States