Rome News-Tribune

Most lawmakers can’t cite local examples of trans girls in sports

- By David Crary and Lindsay Whitehurst

Legislator­s in more than 20 states have introduced bills this year that would ban transgende­r girls from competing on girls’ sports teams in public high schools. Yet in almost every case, sponsors cannot cite a single instance in their own state or region where such participat­ion has caused problems.

The Associated Press reached out to two dozen state lawmakers sponsoring such measures around the country as well as the conservati­ve groups supporting them and found only a few times it’s been an issue among the hundreds of thousands of American teenagers who play high school sports.

In South Carolina, for example, Rep. Ashley Trantham said she knew of no transgende­r athletes competing in the state and was proposing a ban to prevent possible problems in the future. Otherwise, she said during a recent hearing, “the next generation of female athletes in South Carolina may not have a chance to excel.”

In Tennessee, House Speaker Cameron Sexton conceded there may not actually be transgende­r students now participat­ing in middle and high school sports; he said a bill was necessary so the state could be “proactive.”

Some lawmakers didn’t respond to AP’S queries. Others in places like Mississipp­i and Montana largely brushed aside the question or pointed to a pair of runners in Connecticu­t. Between 2017 and 2019, transgende­r sprinters Terry Miller and Andraya Yearwood combined to win 15 championsh­ip races, prompting a lawsuit.

Supporters of transgende­r rights say the Connecticu­t case gets so much attention from conservati­ves because it’s the only example of its kind.

“It’s their Exhibit A, and there’s no Exhibit B — absolutely none,” said Shannon Minter, legal director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights and a prominent trans-rights attorney.

The multiple sports bills, he says, address a threat that doesn’t exist.

There’s no authoritat­ive count of how many trans athletes have competed recently in high school or college sports. Neither the NCAA nor most state high school athletic associatio­ns collect that data; in the states that do collect it, the numbers are minimal: No more than five students currently in Kansas, nine in Ohio over five years.

Transgende­r adults make up a small portion of the U.S. population, about 1.3 million as of 2016, according to the Williams Institute, a think tank at the UCLA School of Law that specialize­s in research on LGBTQ issues.

The two dozen bills making their way through state legislatur­es this year could be devastatin­g for transgende­r teens who usually get little attention as they compete.

In Utah, a 12-year-old transgende­r girl cried when she heard about the proposal, which would separate her from her friends. She’s far from the tallest girl on her club team, and has worked hard to improve her times but is not a dominant swimmer in her age group, her coach said.

“Other than body parts I’ve been a girl my whole life,” she said.

The girl and her family spoke with The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity to avoid outing her publicly.

Those who object to the growing visibility and rights for transgende­r people, though, argue new laws are needed to keep the playing field fair for cisgender girls.

“When the law does not recognize difference­s between men and women, we’ve seen that women lose,” said Christiana Holcomb, an attorney for the Alliance Defending Freedom, which filed the Connecticu­t lawsuit on behalf of four cisgender girls.

One of those girls, Chelsea Mitchell, defeated Terry Miller — the faster of the two trans sprinters — in their final two races in February 2020.

The ADF and others like it are the behind-the-scenes backers of the campaign, offering model legislatio­n and a playbook to promote the bills most of them with common features and even titles, like the Save Women’s Sports Act.

When asked for other examples of complaints about middle or high school transgende­r athletes, ADF and the Family Policy Alliance, cited two: One involved a Hawaii woman who coaches track and filed a complaint last year over a trans girl competing in girls’ volleyball and track. The other involved a cisgender girl in Alaska who defeated a trans sprinter in 2016, then appeared in a Family Policy Alliance video saying the trans girl’s third-place finish was unfair to runners who were further behind.

Only one state, Idaho, has enacted a law curtailing trans students’ sports participat­ion, and that 2020 measure is blocked by a court ruling.

Chase Strangio, a transgende­r-rights attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, notes that in several states with proposed sports bans, lawmakers also are seeking to ban certain gender affirming health care for transgende­r young people

“This is not about sports,” he said. ”It’s a way to attack trans people.”

 ?? Christian Abraham/hearst Connecticu­t
Media via AP, File ?? In this 2020 photo, Canton High School’s Chelsea Mitchell, left, runs to beat Terry Miller, center, of Bloomfield, in the CIAC Class S track and field championsh­ips at Floyd Little Athletic Center in New Haven, Conn. Between 2017 and 2019, transgende­r sprinters Miller and Andraya Yearwood combined to win 15 championsh­ip races, prompting a lawsuit on behalf of four cisgender girls.
Christian Abraham/hearst Connecticu­t Media via AP, File In this 2020 photo, Canton High School’s Chelsea Mitchell, left, runs to beat Terry Miller, center, of Bloomfield, in the CIAC Class S track and field championsh­ips at Floyd Little Athletic Center in New Haven, Conn. Between 2017 and 2019, transgende­r sprinters Miller and Andraya Yearwood combined to win 15 championsh­ip races, prompting a lawsuit on behalf of four cisgender girls.
 ?? Ap-matt Rourke, File ?? Rebekah Bruesehoff, 14, poses for a portrait in Cherry Hill, N.J. “I know what it’s like to have my gender questioned,” the transgende­r teenager said. “It’s invasive, embarrassi­ng. I don’t want others to go through that.”
Ap-matt Rourke, File Rebekah Bruesehoff, 14, poses for a portrait in Cherry Hill, N.J. “I know what it’s like to have my gender questioned,” the transgende­r teenager said. “It’s invasive, embarrassi­ng. I don’t want others to go through that.”

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