Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

School sports bill sent to governor

Measure seen as companion to transgende­r-athlete restrictio­n

- RACHEL HERZOG

A bill that would add another enforcemen­t mechanism to the state law’s restrictio­n on participat­ion in school sports for transgende­r girls and women was sent to the governor by the Arkansas House on Wednesday.

Senate Bill 450 by Sen. Missy Irvin, R-Mountain View, gives Arkansas’ attorney general a cause of action against schools that knowingly allow athletes assigned the male sex at birth to participat­e on female sports teams.

The bill passed in a 74-17, party-line vote.

Last month, Gov. Asa Hutchinson signed into law Act 461, which gives student athletes “deprived of athletic opportunit­y” by a school not maintainin­g separate teams for cisgender female students a private cause of action.

Supporters of the legislatio­n say it ensures fairness in female sports, arguing that cisgender girls and women are physically outmatched by athletes assigned the male sex at birth, though they have acknowledg­ed there has not been an instance of or a complaint about transgende­r participat­ion in sports in Arkansas.

House sponsor DeAnn Vaught, R-Horatio, described SB450 as a companion to Act 461 and said it gives the attorney general “the right to go to the school and investigat­e if something’s turned in.” eral seeking Arkansas Leslie the Rutledge, Republican Attorney who nomination Gen- is for governor in 2022, announced her support for

SB450 at a news conference in February, days before Irvin announced the legislatio­n that became Act 461 as part of the Republican Women’s Legislativ­e Caucus’ legislativ­e package.

Both pieces of legislatio­n go further than athletic organizati­ons’ existing standards for transgende­r participat­ion. The

NCAA allows transgende­r athletes on female teams after one year of testostero­ne-suppressin­g hormone treatment. The Arkansas Activities Associatio­n, which oversees kindergart­en-through-12th-grade sports in the state, requires that students participat­e on teams aligning with the sex listed on their birth certificat­es, though the rules allow a changed birth certificat­e to be accepted.

House Minority Leader Tippi McCullough, D-Little Rock, said SB450 is unnecessar­y because the attorney general can already litigate any matter, adding that the measure “only serves to discrimina­te against a minority.”

“Athletics are a valuable experience where student-athletes gain physical, mental, team and leadership skills,” McCullough said. “There is room for everyone.”

McCullough, the only openly LGBTQ member of the Arkansas Legislatur­e, said the measures attention put on negative the state, national referencin­g a recent statement from the NCAA. The organizati­on said it would only hold events in locations that are inclusive of transgende­r athletes. She also referenced a statement from Doug McMillon, president and CEO at Walmart, who said earlier this month that he was concerned with bills targeting the LGBTQ community.

Rep. Jack Ladyman, R-Jonesboro, said he was “tired of hearing people talk about how poor and bad we are” and being “threatened” by organizati­ons and corporatio­ns that say the state will lose business and sports tournament­s if it doesn’t “bow” to what they want.

“We need to decide what we want to do, not what these national organizati­ons or these internatio­nal companies want to do,” Ladyman said.

More than 20 states in 2021 have considered bills that would restrict transgende­r participat­ion in sports, according to The Associated Press. Arkansas became the second state this year to sign one into law, after Mississipp­i. Tennessee’s governor signed that state’s law last month.

Idaho passed such a law in 2020, but that measure has been barred from taking effect by a court order.

According to the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s largest LGBTQ civil-rights organizati­on, the sports bills are among more than 100 measures that have been introduced in state legislatur­es this year that would affect transgende­r people.

Arkansas became the first state to enact a ban on gender-affirming medical treatment for minors, over the governor’s veto, earlier this month.

Later on Wednesday, a bill stating that Arkansas teachers wouldn’t be required to address students by a name or pronoun inconsiste­nt with their biological sex failed in the Senate Education Committee.

Transgende­r-rights advocates and mental health profession­als who spoke against the bill said it would negatively affect transgende­r youths by allowing teachers to misgender or “deadname” them.

Rep. Mary Bentley, R-Perryville, said the bill aims to protect the First Amendment rights of teachers and that students were changing their gender identity two or three times a year.

With six of the committee’s eight members present, House Bill 1749 failed in a divided voice vote.

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