San Francisco Chronicle

Transgende­r rights get boost as Supreme Court rejects appeal.

- By David G. Savage David G. Savage is a Los Angeles Times writer.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday took another step toward ending discrimina­tion against transgende­r students by turning down an appeal from a conservati­ve Virginia school board.

Over two dissents, the justices refused to hear a case filed by the Gloucester County school board and left intact rulings by lower courts that said Gavin Grimm was denied equal rights when high school officials prohibited him from using the boys’ bathroom.

His discrimina­tion suit against the school district had bounced back and forth in the courts since 2015. The Obama administra­tion had taken his side, but the Trump administra­tion switched course and backed the school board.

Monday’s court action is not a final ruling on the issue of transgende­r students, but it is consistent with a series of rulings forbidding such discrimina­tion, including last year’s Supreme Court decision outlawing workplace discrimina­tion against LGBTQ employees.

Last year, the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Virginia ruled that the Gloucester County school board policy violated both federal education law and the Constituti­on’s guarantee of equal treatment.

“At the heart of this appeal is whether equal protection and Title IX can protect transgende­r students from school bathroom policies that prohibit them from affirming their gender. We join a growing consensus of courts in holding that the answer is resounding­ly yes,” wrote 4th Circuit Judge Henry Floyd.

Undeterred, the school board filed an appeal urging the high court to reconsider that decision. The board’s policy had required Grimm to use the bathroom that matched his biological sex at birth — female — or a special multiuse bathroom.

As usual, the justices did not explain why they turned down the appeal. Since Grimm is long gone from high school, they may have thought his was not the right case for deciding the issue.

But they also may have agreed with the lower courts and, now, with the Biden administra­tion, that federal law forbids discrimina­tion against transgende­r students.

Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito said they voted to hear the case.

“I am glad that my yearslong fight to have my school see me for who I am is over,” Grimm said in a statement.

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