The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

NCAA will decide on N.C. return next week

- By Ralph D. Russo

NCA A leaders need a few days to digest the new law that will replace North Carolina’s socalled “bathroom bill” before deciding whether to bring March Madness and other championsh­ip sporting events back to the Tar Heel state.

As for other potential political hot spots, such as Texas where lawmakers are considerin­g a similar bill and where the Final Four will be next year, the NCAA is in no rush to weigh in.

A few hours before NCAA President Mark Emmert gave his annual pre-Final Four news conference March 30, North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper signed a bill that rolled back HB2. The law had required transgende­r people to use public bathrooms that correspond to the sex on their birth certificat­e. It also excluded gender identity and sexual orientatio­n from statewide antidiscri­mination protection­s.

The law prompted the NCAA, NBA, Atlantic Coast Conference and other businesses and popular music acts like Bruce Springstee­n and Pearl Jam to pull out of North Carolina.

The new bill drops the rule on transgende­r bathroom use. But it says local government­s cannot pass new nondiscrim­ination protection­s for workplaces, hotels and restaurant­s until December 2020. It has its critics. Gay and transgende­r rights activists complained that the measure still denies them protection from discrimina­tion, and they are demanding nothing less than full repeal.

“I’m personally very pleased that they have a bill to debate and discuss,” Emmert said. “The politics of this in North Carolina are obviously very, very difficult. But they have passed a bill now and it will be a great opportunit­y for our board to sit and debate and discuss it.”

In response to HB2, the NCAA relocated seven of its sanctioned championsh­ip events out of North Carolina over the last year.

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