The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

GHSA will vote today on gender proposal

If approved, athletes would not be allowed choice in competitio­n.

- By Todd Holcomb

The Georgia High School Associatio­n will vote today on a proposal to define an athlete’s gender based on birth certificat­es and ban transgende­r athletes from choosing sports consistent with their gender identity.

If passed by the GHSA’S 75-member executive committee, the proposal would replace bylaw 1.47 (b), which allows each GHSA member school to make its own rule determinin­g gender for sports.

“We’re approachin­g this as a competitiv­e-balance issue,” said GHSA Executive Director Robin Hines, who submitted the proposal. “We don’t want to discrimina­te against anybody, but that includes biological girls. There are competitiv­e imbalances generally between biological females and biological males.”

The Georgia legislatur­e last month passed a Republican-sponsored education bill that establishe­d a 10-member oversight committee to study transgende­r high school sports participat­ion.

The bill, which passed on a party-line vote, did not settle the transgende­r participat­ion issue but effectivel­y pressured the GHSA to take a stronger stand. At least a dozen state legislatur­es, includ

ing Tennessee’s last week, have passed measures to limit transgende­r participat­ion in school sports during the past two years.

Critics say the laws are discrimina­tory and address competitiv­e imbalance issues that rarely exist. “This is a solution in search of a problem,” Jeff Graham, executive director of Georgia Equality, the state’s largest advocacy group on LGBTQ issues, said after the Georgia bill passed.

The GHSA does not track participat­ion among transgende­r

students. Hines said he was aware only anecdotall­y of a couple of transgende­r athletes participat­ing in boys cross country.

The GHSA’S policy until 2016 had been to use birth-certificat­e assignment to determine sports gender, but the associatio­n changed course to allow individual schools and school boards to make those decisions. That change came months after North Carolina’s controvers­ial bathroom bill that prevented transgende­r people from using public bathrooms that aligned with their gender identity.

The GHSA’S executive committee is meeting at the Thomaston-upson County Civic Center beginning at 10 a.m.

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