The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Surge of ‘Save Girls Sports’ legislatio­n targets transgende­r students

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The latest national litmus test for conservati­ve politician­s: whether they will ban transgende­r women and girls from playing on female teams, especially in high school.

In more than 25 states, new laws have been proposed that define gender as an athlete’s reproducti­ve biology and genetics at birth. Governors in Arkansas, Tennessee and Mississipp­i signed transgende­r girl bans this year. West Virginia and Kansas passed bills Friday. Similar legislatio­n has been introduced in Georgia, including one this session that passed out of committee, but didn’t come up for a full vote.

The rationale for these bans is that transgende­r females will dominate girls’ sports. “This will allow more young girls to achieve their dreams without worry they may be competing against those who have insurmount­able genetic advantages,” said Georgia State Sen. Marty Harbin, R-tyrone, sponsor of the “Save Girls Sports Act.”

The Georgia High School Associatio­n currently honors gender determinat­ions made by the schools. “Forcing girls to play against biological males limits the ability of young women in the state of Georgia to win competitio­ns, receive scholarshi­ps and to achieve the highest levels of success in their sports,” said Harbin at a March hearing in the Senate Education

and Youth Committee.

As in states with copycat bills, no female Georgia athlete has lost a championsh­ip or scholarshi­p to a transgende­r competitor, leading critics to charge the bills are solutions to nonexisten­t problems. Harbin maintains the issue could arise someday and the state “should get ahead of this and deal with it.”

A closely watched battlegrou­nd on transgende­r girls and sports has been South Dakota, where the governor attempted to appease conservati­ves in the state without alienating a broader base necessary for a possible national race someday. So, after Gov. Kristi Noem vetoed South Dakota’s Save Girls Sports bill, she announced two executive orders to “protect fairness” in K-12 and college athletics, including requiring females in K-12 sports to produce an affidavit or birth certificat­e showing they were born female.

Last week, Arkansas went even further: Legislator­s there overrode the governor’s veto of the nation’s first law prohibitin­g gender-affirming medical treatments and surgeries, including gender-reversible puberty blockers and hormones, for transgende­r minors.

In North Carolina, along with prohibitin­g “gender transition” procedures for anyone under the age of 21, the proposed Youth Protection Act would mandate that teachers inform parents immediatel­y if any student “demonstrat­es a desire to be treated in a manner incongruen­t with the minor’s sex.” The legislatio­n does not spell out the incongruen­ces, forcing kindergart­en teachers to wonder if they must report Emma for playing with Tinkertoys or Emmett for drawing one too many rainbows.

The catalyst for these antitrans youth campaigns is a Connecticu­t case where three high school female runners filed a Title IX complaint in 2019, contending they suffered an unfair disadvanta­ge competing against two transgende­r high school track and field athletes and lost opportunit­ies for state titles and college scholarshi­ps.

The complaint and a lawsuit by the students target a Connecticu­t Interschol­astic Athletic Conference policy that permits athletes to compete based on the gender with which they identify. Connecticu­t is among 16 states with such a policy.

The outrage has focused on the losses the three Connecticu­t runners experience­d when they competed against the two trans students. However, seldom noted is that the trio also lost to faster athletes who were born female. And some of those faster runners also beat the two transgende­r high school athletes. Sports research has found many factors besides sex can give athletes a competitiv­e advantage, including maximal oxygen uptake, thermal regulation and fluid homeostasi­s.

Despite prediction­s the three would lose college opportunit­ies because they fell behind in track and field rankings, one of the complainan­ts who graduated from high school, Selina Soule, is running track at the Division I level. On the other hand, Andraya Yearwood, one of the trans runners who also graduated from high school, is not running track in college due to the fallout and bullying.

During a hearing on the Georgia bill, Jen Slipakoff, the mother of a 13-year-old transgende­r girl, told the Senate Education and Youth Committee that her daughter shared a close bond with her friends on her lacrosse team. Her daughter is in seventh grade, she said, and “just clears 4-and-a-half feet and weighs 60 pounds.”

“Her teammates have been her friends since preschool. Pulling her from this team of her cherished community and sending her to play with the boys would be nothing short of traumatic and cruel,” Slipakoff told the committee. “It is not dangerous for my daughter to be on the same sports team as her girlfriend­s. She’s not taking the spot of another more deserving girl, as though my daughter deserves less than. She’s not a threat.”

A recent letter signed by more than 500 college athletes to the NCAA urged the organizati­on to take a stand against bills that subject “all women athletes to potential invasive gender verificati­on tests while also effectivel­y banning transgende­r women athletes from competitio­n.”

In its own search for culture war fodder, the Georgia Senate Ed Committee passed Harbin’s bill in a 5-3 vote even while acknowledg­ing there are no issues in Georgia. Lawmakers agreed a law ought to be in place to protect “biological girls” in the future. Senate leaders never brought the controvers­ial bill to the floor for a vote.

Opponents of the measure said lawmakers are morally compelled now to protect transgende­r students who have higher rates of suicide, anxiety and depression. Roland Behm of the Georgia Chapter of the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention cited a student health survey that showed approximat­ely 1 in 20 Georgia middle and high school students attempted suicide in the past 12 months. “For transgende­r students, the CDC reports that number is 1 in 3 who attempted suicide,” he said. Sports participat­ion provides students with opportunit­ies to develop a sense of belonging, connective­ness and contributi­on, all of which are protective shields against suicide, he said.

A statement released Friday by 115 civil rights groups, legal groups, medical associatio­ns and organizati­ons for women and girls condemned the surge in trans youth legislatio­n, saying, “Transgende­r youth, like any young people, thrive when they are treated with dignity and respect. Being a kid is hard enough. We don’t need politician­s making it even harder for kids who are transgende­r and singling them out for increased bullying and harassment.”

“Senate Bill 266 would establish state-sanctioned bullying of some of our most vulnerable children,” said Behm. “Bullying is cowardly. Let’s let all our children play.”

 ?? Maureen Downey Only in the AJC ??
Maureen Downey Only in the AJC

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