Marin Independent Journal

Schools chief booted from board meeting on transgende­r rule

- By Jordan B. Darling Distribute­d by Tribune News Service

Chino Valley Unified teachers must tell parents if their child identifies as transgende­r under a fiercely debated policy approved by the school board late Thursday, July 20.

The 4-1 vote in favor of the notificati­on rule came at the end of a contentiou­s, four-hour meeting that at one point saw the ejection of state Superinten­dent of Schools Tony Thurmond, who was led away by security officers to shouts of “kick him out.”

Thurmond was there to address the Chino Valley Unified School District board before its vote on the parental notificati­on policy, an issue that drew more than 300 people to Don Lugo High School. Parents and community members brought flags, T-shirts, and signs to wave during the meeting to show support for their side of the issue.

The policy introduced in June requires schools to notify parents in writing within three days after their child identifies as transgende­r, is involved in violence or talks about suicide. Under the policy, schools will notify parents if their child seeks to change their name or pronouns or asks for access to gender-based sports, bathrooms or changing rooms that do not match their assigned gender at birth.

Before his removal from the meeting, Thurmond told the board “the policy you consider tonight may not only fall outside of privacy laws but may put our students at risk.”

School board President Sonja Shaw kicked him out after she said he continued to speak beyond his allotted one minute.

“Tony Thurmond, I appreciate you being here, but we are here because of people like you,” Shaw said.

Thurmond was not the only state official to weigh in on the topic Thursday. In a letter to the Chino Valley Unified school board Thursday evening, state Attorney General Rob Bonta warned that the notificati­on policy potentiall­y infringes on students' privacy rights and educationa­l opportunit­ies. Each student's right to choose when, how and with whom they share their gender identity must be protected, Bonta said in a news release.

“By allowing for the disclosure of a student's gender identity without their consent, Chino Valley Unified School District's suggested Parental Notificati­on policy would strip them of their freedom, violate their autonomy, and potentiall­y put them in a harmful situation,” Bonta said. “Our schools should be protecting the rights of all students, especially those who are most vulnerable, and should be safeguardi­ng students' rights to fully participat­e in all educationa­l and extracurri­cular opportunit­ies.”

In his letter to the board, Bonta wrote his “office has a substantia­l interest in protecting the legal rights of children in California schools and protecting such children from trauma and exposure to violence. I will not hesitate to take action as appropriat­e to vigorously protect students' civil rights.”

Eighty-three people signed up to speak on the issue Thursday night.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States