Houston Chronicle

NCAA issues warning about Texas’ transgende­r sports bill

- By Jeremy Wallace

Amid all the talk of boycotts and corporate criticism of election bills going through the Texas Legislatur­e, major resistance is shaping up to another top priority of Republican state lawmakers.

With the Texas Senate set to debate a bill to ban transgende­r girls from competing in girls’ interschol­astic sports, the NCAA recently issued a warning that it is watching the legislatio­n. NCAA policies allow transgende­r athletes to participat­e without limitation.

“The NCAA continues to closely monitor state bills that impact transgende­r student-athlete participat­ion,” NCAA officials said in a statement to the Houston Chronicle. “The NCAA believes in fair and respectful studentath­lete participat­ion at all levels of sport. The associatio­n’s transgende­r studentath­lete participat­ion policy and other diversity policies are designed to facilitate and support inclusion.”

The stakes are high for Texas, as the NCAA has major financial commitment­s in the state. The men’s basketball Final Four is scheduled to be in Houston in 2023 and in San Antonio in 2025. Dallas hosts the women’s Final Four in 2023, and the College Football Championsh­ip is set for Houston in 2024.

In 2017, studies suggested Texas could lose nearly $250 million if the Final Four were taken away then. With three Final Fours and the football championsh­ip, Texas would be looking at more than $1 billion in potential economic impact.

The NCAA’s statement about the Texas laws is similar to statements it put out just before Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson signed a transgende­r bill similar to the one Texas is considerin­g and one that South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem backed away from while warning of an unwinnable showdown with the college sports associatio­n.

‘Moment of national crisis’

Senate Bill 29, sponsored by Sen. Charles Perry, R-Lubbock, would ban a student from participat­ing in a sport “opposite to the student’s biological sex as determined at the student’s birth.”

Perry said the bill is about safety and fairness for female athletes, and he worries about them facing a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge.

“There has been a steady increase in the number of biological­ly born males competing in female sports,” he said.

However, the University Interschol­astic League, which sets rules for Texas high school and middle school sports, says it already has rules in place that prevent biological males from competing in girls’ sports.

Critics of the legislatio­n say it’s part of a wave of bills in statehouse­s around the nation that are not only discrimina­tory against transgende­r children but dangerous to them.

“This is a moment of national crisis where the rights and the very existence of transgende­r young people are under attack,” said Alphonso David, president of the Human Rights Campaign, a national group that fights violence, discrimina­tion and fear of LGBTQ people. “Like the bathroom bills and the bills targeting marriage equality before them, these bills are nothing more than a coordinate­d effort by antiLGBTQ extremists spreading fear and misinforma­tion about transgende­r people in order to score cheap political points.”

On the other hand, Save Women’s Sports, a national group that advocates for barring transgende­r girls from girls’ sports, says its effort is about “protecting female sports.”

“Women and girls deserve the rights that generation­s of women fought hard for them to obtain,” said the group’s founder, Beth Stelzer. “When we ignore biology and science in sports, women and girls lose.”

Already, Mississipp­i and Arkansas have passed legislatio­n Stelzer’s group is championin­g in dozens of other states, including Texas.

Patrick’s priority

Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, who oversees the Senate, has made SB 29 one of his priority bills and has hinted at the opposition it will face. After American Airlines came out in opposition to a Senate bill that would cut early voting hours in some major Texas cities, Patrick slammed the company for its statement and reminded people that American also opposed a 2017 bill that similarly aimed to ban transgende­r girls from competing in girls’ sports.

“By the way, this is the same American Airlines that in 2017 led the fight to try to force us to allow boys to play girls’ sports in Texas and take away their scholarshi­ps,” Patrick said in a statement April 1. “They are probably still fighting for that today, and it is likely they have not read Senate Bill 29 either.”

In 2017, Patrick was a driving force behind the so-called bathroom bill, which would have barred school districts from allowing transgende­r girls to use bathrooms and locker rooms that do not correspond to the sex on their birth certificat­es. That bill faced opposition from dozens of Texas companies, some of which threatened to boycott Texas. While the bill passed the Senate, the Texas House declined to advance it.

The NCAA has been a notable voice against anti-transgende­r legislatio­n. In 2017, it pulled major sporting events out of North Carolina after a version of the bathroom bill passed there. Eventually, North Carolina lawmakers amended the legislatio­n to end the boycott. A year earlier, Indiana was the target of threats based on the state’s Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act. The NCAA joined in that effort, getting the legislatio­n changed to assure people could not be discrimina­ted against based on “race, color, religion, ancestry, age, national origin, disability, sex, sexual orientatio­n, gender identity or United States military service.”

“The NCAA believes diversity and inclusion improve the learning environmen­t, and it encourages its member colleges and universiti­es to support the well-being of all student-athletes,” the NCAA said in its statement about Texas’ transgende­r legislatio­n.

Further isolation for kids

Perry’s bill has already cleared the Senate’s State Affairs Committee and can be brought up for debate whenever Patrick chooses. In the House, similar legislatio­n, House Bill 4042, is still in committee. Both chambers have to pass identical versions of the bill for Gov. Greg Abbott to allow it to become law.

Transgende­r advocacy groups say the legislatio­n could further isolate transgende­r children who already are subject to bullying and exclusion.

Napheesa Collier, a forward for the WNBA’s Minnesota Lynx, has joined transgende­r groups in calling for state government­s to back off anti-transgende­r legislatio­n for the sake of the children trying to find a place where they might fit in better.

“Transgende­r inclusion is so crucial for the health, safety and wellbeing of transgende­r kids who are already at a higher risk of anxiety, depression and suicide,” she said in a conference call with reporters.

Collier said the NCAA needs to take a strong stand against states pushing anti-transgende­r bills. She has joined with others trying to push the NCAA to remove events from states that enact them.

It was that concern that made Noem, the South Dakota governor, oppose a similar anti-transgende­r bill in her state.

“If South Dakota passes a law that’s against their policy, they will likely take punitive action against us,” Noem said last month. “That means they can pull their tournament­s from the state of South Dakota, they could pull their home games, they could even prevent our athletes from playing in their league.”

The NCAA never issued a public threat to do so.

 ?? Melissa Phillip / Staff file photo ?? Critics of the bill say it’s discrimina­tory and dangerous for transgende­r children such as Mack Beggs, right.
Melissa Phillip / Staff file photo Critics of the bill say it’s discrimina­tory and dangerous for transgende­r children such as Mack Beggs, right.
 ?? Jon Shapley / Staff file photo ?? Basketball fans file into NRG Stadium for the 2016 NCAA men’s championsh­ip. The Final Four is scheduled to return in 2023.
Jon Shapley / Staff file photo Basketball fans file into NRG Stadium for the 2016 NCAA men’s championsh­ip. The Final Four is scheduled to return in 2023.

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