The Mercury News

Tennessee lawmakers pass transgende­r athlete penalty bill

- By Kimberlee Kruesi

NASHVILLE, TENN. >> Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee will soon decide whether to sign off on adding harsh penalties against public schools in his state that allow transgende­r athletes to participat­e in girls' sports.

The GOP-controlled Legislatur­e finished advancing the proposal Monday, with Senate Republican­s approving the measure 26-5. The House had previously approved the bill last month.

Lee, a Republican, hasn't said publicly whether he supports the legislatio­n. However, he signed a measure last year mandating that student athletes must prove their sex matches that listed on the student's “original” birth certificat­e. If a birth certificat­e was unavailabl­e, then the parents must provide another form of evidence “indicating the student's sex at the time of birth.”

This year, lawmakers decided to add penalties to that ban — which is in effect even as a lawsuit challengin­g its constituti­onality makes it way through court. A trial has been tentativel­y set for March 2023.

“What this bill does is put teeth in that legislatio­n,” said Republican Sen. Joey Hensley.

Under the legislatio­n headed to Lee's desk, Tennessee's Department of Education would withhold a portion of a state funds from local school districts that fail to determine a student's gender for participat­ion in middle or high school sports. The measure does not specify exactly how much money should be withheld by the state.

To date, none of the Tennessee supporters backing a transgende­r athlete ban in K-12 schools have cited a single instance of transgende­r girls or boys in middle or high school sports. A 2021 review by The Associated Press found only a few instances nationwide in which it has been an issue among the hundreds of thousands of American teens who play high school sports.

Separately, the Republican-supermajor­ity Senate approved legislatio­n banning transgende­r athletes from participat­ing in female college sports.

The proposal still awaits House considerat­ion.

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