Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Sports ban sought for transgende­r females

Arizona Republican cites fairness concerns

- By Bob Christie

PHOENIX — Transgende­r girls and women would be barred from participat­ing in sports on the team that aligns with their gender identity under a proposed Arizona law.

The proposal announced by GOP Rep. Nancy Barto on Friday is co-sponsored by 22 other Republican House members and is the latest in a growing list of bills in more than a dozen states that focus on transgende­r young people.

The Arizona bill would allow only biological women or girls to play on female teams and requires a doctor’s note to prove a person is female if their birth sex is disputed. It would allow lawsuits by students who believe they’ve missed opportunit­ies because a transgende­r person is on a school team.

The measure is intended to prevent female athletes from being forced to compete against biological males, Barto said in a statement. It would apply to K-12 schools, community colleges and state universiti­es but only to female teams.

She said most people view the issue as one of basic fairness.

“When this is allowed, it discourage­s female participat­ion in athletics and, worse, it can result in women and girls being denied crucial educationa­l and financial opportunit­ies,” Barto’s statement said.

Republican­s make up the majority in the state House and Senate.

Similar legislatio­n has been proposed in Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, Missouri, New Hampshire, Tennessee and Washington state, according to the American Civil Liberties Union.

The measures are part of a national campaign backed by the Scottsdale-based Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservati­ve religious freedom group.

Barto said she is working with the ADF and the Center for Arizona Policy, a group at the state Capitol that lobbies for religious freedom and anti-abortion legislatio­n, to push the proposal.

Several national women’s rights and sports organizati­ons are pushing back, saying in a letter distribute­d by the ACLU that barring transgende­r people from sports teams aligning with their gender identity often means they are “excluded from participat­ing altogether.”

The Alliance Defending Freedom has filed a federal discrimina­tion complaint on behalf of Connecticu­t girls who competed in track-andfield. The girls say the state’s inclusive policy on transgende­r athletes has cost them top finishes and possibly college scholarshi­ps.

“Forcing female athletes to compete against biological males isn’t fair and destroys their athletic opportunit­ies,” attorney Matt Sharp, the ADF’s state government relations director said in an interview for a recent news report. “Likewise, every child deserves a childhood that allows them to experience puberty and other natural changes that shape who they will become.”

Conservati­ve groups are also pushing bills that would bar doctors from providing them certain gender-related medical treatment.

The proposed laws, if enacted, “would bring devastatin­g harms to the transgende­r community,” Chase Strangio, a transgende­r-rights lawyer with the ACLU.

The measure doesn’t apply to males, Barto said, because they are “biological­ly different from females in terms of bone density, lung capacity, strength, and other respects, are not disadvanta­ged by females in boys’ sports.”

She had no Arizona examples of girls or young women affected but pointed to issues in Connecticu­t and the ADF lawsuit.

 ??  ?? Nancy Barto
Nancy Barto

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States