“All students deserve the opportunity to participate equally in school programs and activities — this is a basic civil right.”
The
U.S. Department of Education is threatening sanctions against an
Illinois school district that it says violated anti-discrimination laws
when it refused to allow a female transgender student to use the girls’
locker room.
Officials say
there was a "a preponderance of evidence” that Township High School
District 211, which is based in Palatine, Illinois, failed to comply
with Title IX, the federal law that prohibits sex discrimination.
The
student filed a complaint with the Department of Education’s Office for
Civil Rights in 2013 after she was denied the right to have unlimited
use of the girls’ locker room, the Chicago Tribune reports.
A solution appeared to be in the works, until school officials put up
privacy curtains in the locker room and said the student would be
required to use the private area while changing.
Officials
in the Township High School District change names, genders, and
pronouns for transgender students on school records, and allow those
students to use the bathrooms of the gender with which they identify, as
well as play on the sports teams for that gender.
However,
they dug their heels in at the locker room because of what they say are
privacy violations of other students in the district. As a compromise,
the district installed privacy curtains, but were found to be in
violation of federal law because they would require the student to use
them (as opposed to giving her the option).
The
Department of Education says the decision is the first of its kind on
the rights of transgender students. Previous cases have resulted in a
settlement that gives proper access to transgender students; In this
case, the school district, which says it will take the fight to court,
has not yet come to an agreement.
“All
students deserve the opportunity to participate equally in school
programs and activities – this is a basic civil right,” Catherine
Lhamon, assistant secretary for civil rights at the Department of
Education says in a statement to Yahoo Health. “Unfortunately, Township
High School District 211 is not following the law because the district
continues to deny a female student the right to use the girls’ locker
room. The district can provide access to this student while also
respecting all students’ privacy. We encourage the district to comply
with the law and resolve this case.”
Mara Keisling, executive director of the National Center for Transgender Equality,
tells Yahoo Health that, while the Department of Education’s very
public stance is “really great,” it simply backs up what they’ve already
said. “The Department of Education has said for some time that
discrimination against transgender students is Title IX sex
discrimination,” she says. “That very much comports with what courts are
saying with discrimination against transgender people.”
However,
Keisling says the finding is helpful for schools. “It’s one thing to
say it’s sex discrimination to discriminate against transgender
students,” she says. “It’s another to say, what does that mean in terms
of practical decisions schools have to make like sex segregated sexual
education classes, sports teams, and facility usage — everybody gets
hung up on facility usage.”
School
restrooms and locker rooms have become a battleground for transgender
students and school officials in recent years, despite federal law that
prohibits denying any student the right to use facilities based on the
gender with which they identify.
The Obama administration even said last week
that schools that prevent transgender students from using the restroom
affiliated with their gender identity are violating federal law.
The
announcement came on the heels of a friend-of-the-court brief submitted
by the U.S. Department of Education and the Department of Justice that
supports Virginia teen Gavin Grimm, who is fighting for access to his
high school’s boys’ bathroom.
Lila Perry, a transgender teen in Missouri, made headlines in September over her fight to use the girls’ locker room at her high school. A court ruled
also ruled in 2013 that a transgender student in California be allowed
to use the appropriate bathroom in school after he was previously denied
access. A transgender teen in Maine was also awarded $75,000 after suing her school for the right to use the girls’ bathroom.
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