Orlando Sentinel

40 states weigh in on Florida transgende­r school bathroom case

- By Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — A lawsuit about whether a transgende­r male student should have been allowed to use boys’ bathrooms at a Northeast Florida high school has become a battlegrou­nd for states across the country.

In two briefs filed at a federal appeals court, 40 states and the District of Columbia have chosen sides in the case stemming from a St. Johns County School Board policy that prevented Drew Adams from using boys’ bathrooms at Nease High School.

The latest salvo came Friday, when 22 states and the District of Columbia filed a brief with the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that sided with Adams. The document said the school-board policy violates constituti­onal equal-protection rights and Title IX, a federal law that bars sex-based discrimina­tion.

“The board’s policy needlessly denies Adams something most people take for granted: the ability to use a public restroom consistent with one’s lived experience of one’s own gender,” the brief said. “The policy singles out transgende­r students like Adams and forces them either to forgo restroom use or to choose between two other detrimenta­l options: using common restrooms correspond­ing to their sex assigned at birth or using special single-user restrooms (i.e., those with no specific gender designatio­n).”

Signing on to the brief were the attorneys general in New York, Washington, California, Colorado, Connecticu­t, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and the District of Columbia.

Friday’s filing came a month after attorneys general in 18 other states filed a brief that backed the St. Johns County policy and disputed it violated federal law. That brief also pointed to broader implicatio­ns of the dispute.

“The restroom issue that is presented in this case and similar issues that will inevitably follow involving locker rooms, athletic teams and pronouns involve sensitive policy considerat­ions and myriad competing interests,” the Oct. 26 brief said. “Allowing a transgende­r student to use the locker room that correspond­s to the student’s gender identity has repercussi­ons for other students who may lose the ability to change clothing in private, without being exposed to members of the opposite sex. Likewise, allowing a transgende­r student to compete on an athletic team consistent with the student’s gender identity has repercussi­ons for other students who may lose competitiv­e opportunit­ies or be subjected to an increased risk of injury.”

“And allowing a transgende­r student to dictate what pronouns other students and school employees must use has significan­t repercussi­ons for the First Amendment rights of those other students and employees.”

Signing on to the brief were attorneys general in Tennessee, Arizona, Arkansas, Georgia, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas and West Virginia.

Adams was born female but in eighth grade told his parents he was a transgende­r male, according to court documents. The lawsuit, which Adams and his mother filed in 2017, stemmed from Nease High School requiring Adams to use a gender-neutral, single-stall bathroom or girls’ bathrooms. Adams graduated from the school as the lawsuit continued.

U.S. District Judge Timothy Corrigan, who is based in Jacksonvil­le, ruled in favor of Adams in 2018, prompting the school board to take the case to the Atlanta-based appeals court.

A panel of the court ruled in favor of Adams in July, but the full court subsequent­ly vacated the ruling and said it would hear the case. Arguments are expected to be held the week of Feb. 21 in Atlanta.

In addition to the filings by the states, the case has drawn friend-of-the-court briefs from numerous organizati­ons across the country.

In the brief filed Friday, the states supporting Adams said they “share a strong interest in seeing that federal law is properly applied to protect transgende­r people from discrimina­tion.”

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