The Boston Globe

Vt. school sues state after trans athlete objection

- By Lisa Rathke

A Vermont Christian school that withdrew its girls basketball team from a playoff game because a transgende­r student was playing on the opposing team is suing Vermont for barring it from state tournament­s and a state tuition program.

Mid Vermont Christian School of Quechee forfeited the Feb. 21 game, saying it believed that the transgende­r player jeopardize­d “the fairness of the game and the safety of our players.”

The executive council of the Vermont Principals’ Associatio­n, which governs school sports and activities, ruled in March that Mid Vermont Christian had violated the council’s policies on race, gender, and disability awareness and, therefore, was ineligible to participat­e in future tournament­s.

The school filed a federal lawsuit in Burlington on Tuesday, saying the Vermont Agency of Education's refusal to designate it as an approved independen­t school amounted to discrimina­tion against religious schools.

A separate entity, the Vermont State Board of Education, requires independen­t schools to post on their websites and provide to the board a statement of nondiscrim­ination that is consistent with the state's public accommodat­ion and fair employment laws, and submit a signed assurance by the head of the school that it complies with the public accommodat­ion law.

If a school is not approved, it cannot participat­e in Vermont's town tuition program, which pays for students in communitie­s that do not have a public school to attend other public schools or approved private schools of their choice. Approval is also needed for an independen­t school to have students take college courses through a state program.

“Mid Vermont Christian and its students are being irreparabl­y harmed" by being excluded from the programs, as well as from middle school and high school sports, the lawsuit states.

A spokesman for the state Agency of Education declined to comment when reached by phone on Wednesday. The head of the Vermont Principals’ Associatio­n said in an email that the organizati­on had not seen the lawsuit and had no comment at this time.

In a separate case, the Agency of Education and several school districts last year agreed to pay tuition costs and legal fees to five families to settle two lawsuits challengin­g the state's practice of not paying for students whose towns don't have a public school to attend religious schools.

The two sides agreed to dismiss the lawsuits after the US Supreme Court ruled in June that Maine schools cannot exclude religious schools from a program that offers tuition aid for private education.

In 2020, a divided US Supreme Court ruled in a Montana case that states can’t cut religious schools out of programs that send public money to private education.

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