The Columbus Dispatch

Ark. limits school bathroom use

Law joins wave of actions targeting trans people

- Andrew Demillo

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders on Tuesday signed a law prohibitin­g transgende­r people at public schools from using the restroom that matches their gender identity, making the state the first of several expected to enact such bans this year amid a flood of bills nationwide targeting the trans community.

The bill signed by the Republican governor makes Arkansas the fourth state to place such restrictio­ns at public schools, and it comes as bills in Idaho and Iowa also await their governors’ signatures. And it might be followed by an even stricter Arkansas bill criminaliz­ing transgende­r adults using public restrooms that match their gender identity.

Arkansas’ law, which won’t take effect until later this summer, applies to multiperso­n restrooms and locker rooms at public schools and charter schools serving prekinderg­arten through 12th grade. The majority-republican Legislatur­e gave final approval to the bill last week.

“The Governor has said she will sign laws that focus on protecting and educating our kids, not indoctrina­ting them and believes our schools are no place for the radical left’s woke agenda,” Alexa Henning, Sanders’ spokespers­on, said in a statement. “Arkansas isn’t going to rewrite the rules of biology just to please a handful of far-left advocates.”

Similar laws have been enacted in Alabama, Oklahoma and Tennessee, although lawsuits have been filed challengin­g the Oklahoma and Tennessee restrictio­ns.

Proposals to restrict transgende­r people using the restroom of their choice have seen a resurgence this year, six years after North Carolina repealed its bathroom law in the wake of widespread protests and boycotts. More than two dozen bathroom bills have been filed in 17 states, according to the Human Rights Campaign.

“They’re singling out transgende­r

people for no other reason than dislike, disapprova­l and misunderst­anding of who transgende­r youth are,” said Paul Castillo, senior counsel and students’ rights strategist for Lambda Legal. “And the entire school population suffers as a result of these types of bills, particular­ly schools and teachers and administra­tors who are dealing with real problems and need to focus on creating a welcome environmen­t for every student.”

The proposals are among a record number of bills filed to restrict the rights of transgende­r people by limiting or banning gender-affirming care for minors, banning transgende­r girls from school sports and restrictin­g drag shows. Transgende­r people have also faced increasing­ly hostile rhetoric at statehouse­s.

Another bill pending in Arkansas goes even further than the North Carolina law by imposing criminal penalties. That proposal would allow someone to be charged with misdemeano­r sexual indecency with a child if they use a public restroom or changing room of the opposite sex when a minor is present.

“It’s a flagrant message from them that they refuse to respect (transgende­r people’s) rights and humanity, to respect Arkansans’ rights and humanity,” said Holly Dickson, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas.

The new Arkansas law requires schools to provide reasonable accommodat­ions, including single-person restrooms. Superinten­dents, principals and teachers who violate the prohibitio­n could face fines of at least $1,000 from a state panel, and parents could also file private lawsuits to enforce the measure.

“Each child in our schools has a right to privacy and to feel safe and to feel comfortabl­e in the bathroom they need to go to,” Republican Rep. Mary Bentley, the bill’s sponsor, told lawmakers earlier this year.

But Clayton Crockett, the father of a transgende­r child, described to lawmakers earlier this year how a similar policy adopted at his daughter’s school made her feel further marginaliz­ed.

“She feels targeted, she feels discrimina­ted against, she feels bullied, she feels singled out,” Crockett said at a House panel hearing on the bill in January.

Opponents have also complained the legislatio­n doesn’t provide funding for schools that may need to build singlepers­on restrooms to provide reasonable accommodat­ions.

At least two federal appeals courts have upheld transgende­r students’ rights to use the bathroom correspond­ing with their gender identity. Supporters of the bill, however, have cited a federal appeals court ruling upholding a similar policy at a Florida school district last year.

The Arkansas measure won’t take effect until 90 days after the Legislatur­e adjourns this year’s session, which isn’t expected to happen until next month at the earliest.

Sanders signed the bill a week after she approved legislatio­n making it easier to sue providers of gender-affirming care to minors. That law, which also doesn’t take effect until this summer, is an effort to effectivel­y reinstate a ban on such care for minors that’s been blocked by a federal judge.

Sanders earlier this month also signed a wide-ranging education bill that prohibits classroom instructio­n on gender identity and sexual orientatio­n before fifth grade.

The restrictio­n is similar to a Florida measure that critics have called the “Don’t Say Gay” law.

 ?? AL DRAGO/POOL VIA AP, FILE ?? The bill signed by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders makes Arkansas the fourth state to prohibit transgende­r people at public schools from using the restroom that matches their gender identity.
AL DRAGO/POOL VIA AP, FILE The bill signed by Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders makes Arkansas the fourth state to prohibit transgende­r people at public schools from using the restroom that matches their gender identity.
 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP FILE ?? The U.S. is seeing a trend in legislatio­n prohibitin­g transgende­r people from using bathrooms and locker rooms consistent with their gender identity.
TED S. WARREN/AP FILE The U.S. is seeing a trend in legislatio­n prohibitin­g transgende­r people from using bathrooms and locker rooms consistent with their gender identity.

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