Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Panel backs ban on transgende­r girls, women in school sports

- By Dara Kam

TALLAHASSE­E — Despite impassione­d pleas from LGBT advocates, a Florida House panel on Wednesday approved a controvers­ial proposal that would ban transgende­r girls and women from competing in women’s high-school and college sports.

The move by the House Secondary Education & Career Developmen­t Subcommitt­ee put Florida among the ranks of at least two-dozen other Republican-dominated state legislatur­es that have considered or approved measures requiring student athletes to compete according to their sex assigned at birth.

Bill sponsor Kaylee Tuck, R-Lake Placid, said the transgende­r athletic ban is necessary to establish parity for biological­ly female athletes.

“There are inherent biological difference­s between men and women. The ‘Fairness in Women Sports Act’ supports women and girls by ensuring they have the same opportunit­ies as men and boys to showcase their skill, strength and other athletic abilities,” Tuck said before the panel’s 13-4 vote in favor of the bill (HB 1475).

But critics of measures targeting transgende­r student athletes argue the proposals are rooted in fear, misunderst­anding and politics.

“This bill would only marginaliz­e and demonize the transgende­r community. If anything, this bill will create more unfairness, while we are trying to call it the ‘Fairness in Women Sports Act,’ ” Rep. Marie Paule Woodson, D-Hollywood, said. “We have to treat people the way we want to be treated. We need to focus on other matters that are critical to our state, to our youth, to our seniors, to our family.”

Currently, the Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n has a process for transgende­r students “to participat­e in interschol­astic athletics in a manner consistent with their gender identity and expression,” a staff analysis of the bill said. The associatio­n is “neutral” on Tuck’s proposal, lobbyist Ron Book said in a text.

Rep. Carlos Guillero Smith, an Orlando Democrat who is gay, is among the LGBT activists condemning the legislatio­n.

“It’s motivated by bigotry. It’s motivated by transphobi­a. And it’s not motivated, certainly, by any problems we’ve had in Florida,” Smith told The News Service of Florida on Wednesday.

Transgende­r students have openly participat­ed in athletics in Florida since 2012, Smith said.

“Florida Republican­s are re-declaring the social wars against LGBT people in the Florida Legislatur­e. They’ve lost on every other front in the courts, in the Florida Commission on Human Relations, and so they’re inventing new things to be upset about,” said Smith, who does not serve on the panel that approved the bill.

Facing questions from Democrats on Wednesday, Tuck conceded that Florida does not have any reported complaints about the current process. “We don’t need to wait until there is a problem to have a policy against it,” she said.

But numerous speakers urged lawmakers to vote against Tuck’s proposal. Nathan Bruemmer, a transgende­r man who is a former teacher and coach, warned that the bill would harm students.

“There are so many lessons in sports, but the barrage of attacks and attempts to erase through misunderst­anding and false rhetoric are abhorrent,” he said. “I have watched their pain and I have watched their suffering, and this will bring more of that. Celebrate play. Don’t let hate become part of the lessons of sport.”

Paul Arons, a physician, argued that the proposal fails to take into account the “scientific, medical, emotional and social realities of the young people whom it would most directly impact.” The transgende­r ban would “inflict stigma and humiliatio­n and injustice” on vulnerable students, Arons said.

But Rep. Jason Shoaf, R-Port St. Joe, defended the bill, pointing to biological difference­s between his son and daughter, who are 12-yearold twins.

“Folks, this is common sense. If my son decided tomorrow that he’s now a girl, he could use his natural biological advantages to take opportunit­ies away from biological girls,” he said. “So, it does have a terrible impact on girls. This is wokeness versus science, and it’s time for common sense to come back into the room.”

Rep. Susan Valdés, D-Tampa, noted that Tuck’s bill is identical to a 2020 Idaho law that a federal judge blocked from going into effect.

Before voting against the bill, Valdés offered a message to transgende­r students.

“You are loved. You are valued, and your humanity is not defined by a vote of the Florida Legislatur­e,” she said.

The staff analysis also noted that three female high-school athletes in Connecticu­t have filed a lawsuit arguing that a policy allowing transgende­r females to compete against biological females has deprived them of track titles and scholarshi­p opportunit­ies.

The lawsuit remains pending, as does the legal challenge to Idaho’s law. But Florida and other Republican-led states are pushing ahead with the bans.

For example, Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves signed a similar bill into law last week. A measure passed by South Dakota lawmakers is awaiting action by Gov. Kristi Noem.

LGBT activists throughout the country are decrying the proposals, which Equality Florida characteri­zed as “nothing short of an attack on at-risk youth designed to spread hateful stereotype­s and further demonize a group of young people who need additional support and care.”

Transgende­r young people “need to be affirmed and empowered, not used as political pawns,” Gina Duncan, Equality Florida director of transgende­r equality, said in a prepared statement opposing Tuck’s bill.

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