The Guardian (USA)

Civil rights groups file suit against Idaho ban on trans athletes in women's sports

- Associated Press

Two civil rights groups filed a federal lawsuit on Wednesday challengin­g a new Idaho law banning transgende­r women from competing in women’s sports, the first such law in the nation.

The American Civil Liberties Union and Legal Voice filed the lawsuit contending the law violates the US constituti­on because it is discrimina­tory and an invasion of privacy. The groups also said the law scheduled to take effect on 1 July is a violation of Title IX, the 1972 law that bars sex discrimina­tion in education. The groups in the 60-page lawsuit ask the court to permanentl­y prevent Idaho from enforcing the law.

Last month Idaho’s Republican governor, Brad Little, signed the ban into law. It received overwhelmi­ng support in the state’s Republican-dominated house and senate, but no support from Democrats.

The ban applies to all sports teams sponsored by public schools, colleges and universiti­es. A girls’ or women’s team will not be open to transgende­r students who identify as female. Backers said the law, called the Fairness in

Women’s Sports Act, is needed because transgende­r female athletes have physical advantages.

Wednesday’s lawsuit contends the law violates the 14th amendment’s equal protection clause because it is discrimina­tory and the fourth amendment’s protection­s against invasion of privacy because of tests required should an athlete’s gender be challenged.

Two plaintiffs are bringing the lawsuit. One is an unnamed Boise high school student who is cisgender. The other is Lindsay Hecox, a student at Boise State University who hopes to qualify for the women’s cross-country team. She competed on the boys’ team at a Moorpark, California, high school before transition­ing after graduating.

“I would like to compete as a female,” she said. “We shouldn’t have our privacy invaded. If people started questionin­g me, I wouldn’t want to be subjected to multiple tests.”

College sports’ governing body, the NCAA, has a policy allowing transgende­r athletes to compete. But the sponsor of the Idaho law, Republican Barbara Ehardt, has called the NCAA policy “permissive.”

The Idaho law is one of two anti-transgende­r bills signed into law by Little in March. The other, which takes effect this summer, prohibits transgende­r people from changing the sex listed on their birth certificat­es, and is almost certain to be challenged in court.

A third proposed Idaho law that would have criminaliz­ed treating transgende­r youth for gender dysphoria died in a house committee after the chairman decided to not have a vote on the measure.

 ??  ?? Idaho governor Brad Little signed the ban into law last month. Photograph: Darin Oswald/AP
Idaho governor Brad Little signed the ban into law last month. Photograph: Darin Oswald/AP

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