The Standard Journal

Judge in Texas temporaril­y blocks Obama’s transgende­r rules

- By PAUL J. WEBER

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — A federal judge in Texas has blocked the Obama administra­tion’s order that requires public schools to let transgende­r students use the bathrooms and locker rooms consistent with their chosen gender identity.

In a temporary injunction signed on Aug. 21, U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor ruled that the federal education law known as Title IX “is not ambiguous” about sex being defined as “the biological and anatomical difference­s between male and female students as determined at their birth.”

Texas and 12 other states challenged the White House directive as unconstitu­tional.

The judge also sided with Republican state leaders who argued that schools should have been allowed to weigh in before the White House directive was announced in May.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a Republican, had argued that halting the Obama order before school began was necessary because districts risked losing federal education dollars if they did not comply. Federal officials did not explicitly make that threat upon issuing the directive, although they also never ruled out the possibilit­y.

“This president is attempting to rewrite the laws enacted by the elected representa­tives of the people and is threating to take away federal funding from schools to force them to conform,” Paxton said. “That cannot be allowed to continue, which is why we took action to protect states and school districts.”

The Justice Department issued a brief statement saying it was disappoint­ed in the ruling and was now reviewing its options.

The ruling does not prohibit schools that allow transgende­r students to use the facilities of their choice from continuing to do so.

Transgende­r rights in public schools are a growing legal battlegrou­nd. Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a Virginia school board can block for now a transgende­r male from using the boys’ restroom while justices decide whether to fully intervene.

Paul Castillo is a Dallas attorney for the gay rights group Lambda Legal, which had urged the court to let the White House directive stand. He said the latest ruling was a continuati­on of attacks on transgende­r people.

“I think today is going to be a hard day for transgende­r students,” Castillo said. “The decision is certainly emotional and certainly an attack on transgende­r students’ dignity.”

The federal government issued the mandate days after the Justice Department sued North Carolina over a state law that requires people to use public bathrooms that correspond with the sex on their birth certificat­e, which U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch likened to policies of racial segregatio­n. Republican­s have argued such laws are commonsens­e privacy safeguards.

The Obama administra­tion had told the court that recipients of federal education dollars were “clearly on notice” that anti-discrimina­tion polices must be followed. Texas alone gets roughly $10 billion in federal education funds.

The lawsuit was filed in May by Texas, Alabama, Wisconsin, West Virginia, Tennessee, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Utah and Georgia, and the Republican governors of Maine, Mississipp­i and Kentucky. Two small school districts in Arizona and Texas, which have fewer than 600 students combined and no transgende­r persons on their campuses, also joined the effort to prevent the directive from being enforced.

Last year, O’Connor granted an order that temporaril­y blocked federal rules that would have expanded medical leave benefits to some gay couples.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States