From Newsgroup: alt.education
The Trump administration sued California on Wednesday for allegedly
violating federal law with policies that allow transgender student
athletes to compete on school sports teams that align with their gender identities.
The lawsuit is the latest escalation of the administrationrCOs
back-and-forth with the state, which has refused to follow an executive
order President Donald Trump signed in February that would bar federal
funding from schools that allow trans girls and women to compete on
female school sports teams.
The Justice Department alleges in its complaint that the California
Department of Education (CDE) and the California Interscholastic
Federation (CIF), a nonprofit independent sports governing body, have
violated Title IX, a civil rights law that prohibits sex-based
discrimination in federally funded education programs and activities.
rCLThe Governor of California has previously admitted that it is rCydeeply unfairrCO to force women and girls to compete with men and boys in
competitive sports,rCY Attorney General Pamela Bondi said in a statement, referring to a comment Gov. Gavin Newsom made on his podcast in March.
rCLBut not only is it rCydeeply unfair,rCO it is also illegal under federal law. This Department of Justice will continue its fight to protect equal opportunities for women and girls in sports.rCY
The Department of Education has allocated $44.3 billion in funds to CDE
for 2025, according to the complaint, of which $3.8 billion is still
available for the CDE to withdraw.
Scott Roark, the CDErCOs public information officer, and Christina
Shannon, the assistant to the executive director for the CIF, both said
in emails that they cannot comment on legal matters.
Newsom is not a named plaintiff in the lawsuit. However, Elana Ross, a spokesperson for his office, said the CIF and the CDE are following
existing state law, rCLa law that was passed in 2013, signed by Governor
Jerry Brown, and in line with 21 other states.rCY
rCLNO COURT HAS ADOPTED THE INTERPRETATION OF TITLE IX ADVANCED BY THE
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, AND NEITHER the Governor, nor THEY, get to wave a
magic wand and override it rCo unlike Donald Trump, California follows the law,rCY Ross said in an emailed statement. rCLAt a time when the Trump administration is withholding billions in funds for education, this
ongoing attack is a cynical attempt to distract from the Trump administrationrCOs defunding of nearly 3 million girls enrolled in CaliforniarCOs public school.rCY
TrumprCOs executive order regarding trans athlete participation is based
on his administrationrCOs interpretation of Title IX and essentially
reversed a rule the Biden administration issued last April clarifying
that Title IX protects LGBTQ students from discrimination based on
sexual orientation and gender identity. BidenrCOs administration proposed
a different rule under Title IX in 2023 that would have prohibited
blanket bans on trans athlete participation. However, after repeated
delays, the administration withdrew the proposal in December 2024 and
then issued the broad rule protecting LGBTQ students in April.
More than half of states have enacted measures restricting trans
studentsrCO participation in school sports, according to the Movement Advancement Project, an LGBTQ think tank. California is one of 21 states
that does not and has had a state law allowing trans students to compete
on school sports teams that align with their gender identities since 2013.
The back-and-forth between the Trump administration and California began
just after Trump signed the executive order regarding trans athletes in February. That same month, the CIF said it would follow state law and
not TrumprCOs executive order. Then, days later, the Education Department opened an investigation into the CIF and then began investigating the California Department of Education in April.
The administration said last month that its investigation found both the
CDE and the CIF violated Title IX, and it gave both organizations 10
days to voluntarily change the policies rCLor risk imminent enforcement action,rCY including referral to the Justice Department for rCLproceedings.rCY The Education Department also proposed a resolution agreement with a
list of actions the organizations would need to take to bring the state
into compliance with TrumprCOs executive order.
On Monday, the CDE told the Education Department in a letter that it
disagreed with the investigationrCOs findings and would not sign the
proposed resolution agreement. The CIF said it agreed with the CDE and
would also not sign the agreement. That same day, Education Secretary
Linda McMahon threatened the state with legal action in a post on social media.
The heated exchanges were fueled in part by TrumprCOs criticism of AB Hernandez, a trans track-and-field athlete whose participation he
described as rCLNOT FAIR, AND TOTALLY DEMEANING TO WOMEN AND GIRLSrCY on
Truth Social in May.
At the state championships that month, Hernandez placed first in the
triple jump, tied for first with two competitors in the high jump and
placed second in the long jump. Due to a new pilot entry process from
the CIF, which it announced shortly after TrumprCOs criticism, Hernandez shared each podium with cisgender girls who wouldrCOve placed after her if
not for the new policy.
https://www.nbcnews.com/nbc-out/out-politics-and-policy/justice-department-sues-california-transgender-athlete-policies-rcna217758
--- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2