Miami Herald

Florida House votes to ban transgende­r athletes from girls’ and women’s sports

- BY KIRBY WILSON kwilson@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

In one of the most contentiou­s votes of the legislativ­e session, the Florida House voted Wednesday to ban transgende­r athletes from women’s and girls’ scholastic sports.

The bill, HB 1475, is aimed at maintainin­g the competitiv­e balance in women’s sports, its supporters say. Detractors say it’s a thinly veiled attempt to marginaliz­e already vulnerable transgende­r kids and young adults. The legislatio­n is part of a national effort on the part of Republican state lawmakers to remove transgende­r athletes from girls’ and women’s sports. Florida is one of at least 30 states debating such a bill.

After an emotional hour of debate, it passed the House by a vote of 77-40, with just one Democrat supporting the measure. No Republican voted against it.

Jaime Jara, the mother of Dempsey, a 9-year-old transgende­r girl, has been following the issue closely. Dempsey, who began her social transition to girlhood when she was 5, wants to run cross country like her older brother once she gets to middle school. If Gov. Ron DeSantis signs HB 1475 into law, she would have to compete on the boys’ team.

In that case, “she just won’t play at all,” Jaime Jara, of Kissimmee, said in an interview. “That’s not who she is, so that’s not even an option for her.”

HB 1475, sponsored by Rep. Kaylee Tuck, R-Lake Placid, would enact a blanket ban on transgende­r athletes competing in scholastic girls’ and women’s sports in Florida. Transgende­r athletes would still be allowed to compete in boys’ and men’s sports.

The bill, which is modeled after an Idaho law that was temporaril­y struck down by a federal judge last year, allows a school or competitor to lodge a complaint about an athlete competing in a girls’ or women’s sport. If the party complainin­g suspects the athlete was not assigned the female gender at birth, the athlete in question will have to prove their birth gender — via a genetic test, a test of their testostero­ne levels or an examinatio­n of their reproducti­ve anatomy by a medical profession­al — in order to compete.

It’s unclear how precisely the complaint process would work. The bill leaves it up to the the State Board of Education to create precise rules. (Tuck’s father, Andy Tuck, is the chair of that board.)

Supporters of the bill say the measure ensures that women and girls have a chance to compete in female-exclusive spaces.

They note that transgende­r girls won several track and field state championsh­ips in Connecticu­t starting in 2017 — arguably, they say, taking titles and opportunit­ies from their female competitor­s.

“This particular bill is not about exclusion, and it is not about discrimina­tion. This bill is about a biological and scientific difference between men and women,” said Dana Trabulsy, R-Fort Pierce, who voted for the bill.

However, the bill’s supporters have pointed to no competitiv­e equity issues in Florida. The Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n and the National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n have policies allowing transgende­r athletes to compete in sports in a way that aligns with the athlete’s gender identity. The NCAA requires athletes to undergo at least one year of medical testostero­ne suppressio­n treatment. The Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n requires athletes to, among other steps, obtain a note from a healthcare profession­al who will attest to the athlete’s gender identity.

If history is any indication, the language of the bill passed by the House would affect few studentath­letes. A spokesman for the Florida High School Athletic Associatio­n said that since the organizati­on adopted its transgende­r participat­ion policy in 2013-14, just 11 athletes have applied to compete according to its provisions.

But many transgende­r people say the bill goes beyond the playing field to harm transgende­r kids.

“I ask that you read this bill and recognize the threat to privacy and lack of legal protection potentiall­y facing female athletes,” said Andrew Coleman, a transgende­r man who’s a student at Florida State University, at a Wednesday press conference at the Capitol. “Read this bill and recognize the perpetuati­ng harm this legislatio­n has to kids who just want to live.”

Wednesday’s vote came the day after a nearly fourhour hearing on the House floor in which Democrats tried to amend the bill 18 different ways. The policy tweaks offered by Democrats

ranged from exempting elementary school children from the bill’s provisions to allowing children to prove their gender with a birth certificat­e.

Each amendment was voted down by Republican­s — almost all of them after no debate from anyone in the majority party.

The the NCAA issued a statement Monday saying it could pull championsh­ips from states which pass bills limiting transgende­r participat­ion. Florida is set to host more than 40 regional or national NCAA championsh­ip events between the next academic year and May 2026.

 ?? CHARLES TRAINOR JR. ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com, file 2010 ?? George Washington University’s Kye Allums plays against UM in 2010. Allums was one of the first openly transgende­r athletes to compete in Division I women’s basketball.
CHARLES TRAINOR JR. ctrainor@miamiheral­d.com, file 2010 George Washington University’s Kye Allums plays against UM in 2010. Allums was one of the first openly transgende­r athletes to compete in Division I women’s basketball.

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