Houston Chronicle

DeVos to deny aid to schools in Conn. over trans athletes

- By Luke Broadwater and Erica L. Green

WASHINGTON — The Education Department is preparing to withhold millions of dollars from Connecticu­t schools over their refusal to withdraw from an athletic conference that allows transgende­r students to compete on teams that correspond with their gender identity.

The move to withhold about $18 million intended to help schools desegregat­e could have national implicatio­ns for both transgende­r athletes and students of color.

The department’s Office for Civil Rights has warned officials at three Connecticu­t school districts that it will not release desegregat­ion grants as planned Oct. 1 unless the districts cut ties with the Connecticu­t Interschol­astic Athletic Conference over its transgende­r policies. Negotiatio­ns among the parties continued Thursday evening.

Officials with the conference, which governs high school athletics in the state, say their policies conform to Connecticu­t law.

The five-year grants totaled about $45 million, and the remaining $18 million was destined for districts in New Haven, Hartford and southeast Connecticu­t that operate magnet schools under a federally approved voluntary desegregat­ion plan. The money generally allows students from Black and Hispanic communitie­s to attend high-performing schools outside their neighborho­ods.

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has championed similar school choice programs for decades, and President Donald Trump has highlighte­d the issue in his re-election campaign.

But that drive is colliding with the administra­tion’s intent to broadly deny legal protection­s to transgende­r Americans. The Education Department has already withdrawn Obama administra­tion guidance that encouraged schools to allow transgende­r students to choose bathrooms that match their gender identity.

But some district officials said withholdin­g money to coerce schools into withdrawin­g from an athletic conference was the administra­tion’s most forceful move yet to end protection­s for transgende­r students.

“It’s effectivel­y extortion,” said New Haven’s mayor, Justin Elicker. “The federal government is trying to force us to take a side against transgende­r individual­s.”

Angela Morabito, a spokeswoma­n for the Education Department, said the administra­tion gave the three school districts several opportunit­ies to quit the sports league before threatenin­g to pull the grant funding.

“It’s not extortion to require school districts to follow federal law,” Morabito said. “In fact, it’s the opposite. Congress requires the department to withhold funds from schools that aren’t in compliance with the law.”

The issue of transgende­r athletes on female high school sports teams is the subject of a federal lawsuit in Connecticu­t. But well before a ruling, the Education Department in May warned the Connecticu­t Interschol­astic Athletic Conference that it considers allowing biological­ly male athletes to participat­e in girls’ sports a violation of Title IX, the 1972 law that prohibits sex discrimina­tion in programs that receive federal funding.

“Connecticu­t applicants declined — on multiple occasions — to assure the Office for Civil Rights that they are in compliance with Title IX,” Morabito said.

The potential withholdin­g of desegregat­ion grants by the administra­tion has broader implicatio­ns, said Sarah Hinger, a senior staff lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union’s Racial Justice Program; 16 states have policies similar to Connecticu­t’s.

“The intent and the impact here is to send a message to try to influence how other school districts will act, and that is deeply concerning,” Hinger said. “

The grants are intended to encourage districts to create magnet schools that offer challengin­g academic content or distinct teaching approaches. New Haven Public Schools has received the funds for more than 20 years, helping students attend any school in the district and attracting some students from the suburbs, said Michele Bonanno, the district’s magnet school coordinato­r.

“The intent of the magnet grant is to carry out the intent of Brown v. Board of Education,” Bonanno said, citing the landmark 1954 Supreme Court case that declared racial segregatio­n in public schools unconstitu­tional. “You can imagine how heartbroke­n we’ve been. To pit a minority community against the LGBT community is disgracefu­l.”

The Education Department has told districts the grant funding will come through as scheduled if they sign an “assurance” form attesting that they will not participat­e in the athletic conference.

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