Federal Funding Threatened Over Transgender Policy

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The U.S. Department of Education is threatening to withhold federal funding from Connecticut school districts if they follow a state policy that allows transgender girls to compete as girls in high school sports, the Associated Press reported.

In response to a complaint filed last year by several cisgender female track athletes who argued that two transgender female runners had an unfair physical advantage, the federal agency's Office for Civil Rights determined in May that Connecticut's policy violates the civil rights of athletes who are not transgender.

School districts including New Haven, as well as the Capitol Region Education Council, were asked around the beginning of September to sign a document to receive grants from a program for magnet schools that states they will ''not participate in any interscholastic sporting events'' unless the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference changes its policy on transgender athletes.

The Federal Magnet Schools Assistance Program Grants are worth about $3 million a year to New Haven and the education council. The athletic conference has said its policy is designed to comply with a state law that requires all students to be treated as the gender with which they identify, but the OCR argues the policy violates the civil rights of girls who are not transgender under Title IX, the federal law that guarantees equal opportunities in education.

Timothy Sullivan Jr., the superintendent of schools for the education council, said it has no intention of signing the document, according to the AP.

ā€œIt is unconscionable that the federal government would threaten to take away funds that support Hartford area children during a pandemic, and we will fight to keep the money in our community,ā€ he said. ā€œHowever, no amount of money will deter us from accepting all children for who they are and providing equitable access to programs and services.ā€

The state's congressional delegation also sent a letter Thursday to Kimberly Richey, the U.S. Education Department's acting assistant secretary for civil rights, calling the department's action ā€œan unprecedented overreach."

ā€œThis case is anything but normal, and it is clear that OCR is unwilling to enter conversations with (grant) recipients, even to discuss reasonable options such as waiting until the court ruling on CIACā€™s policy,ā€ the delegation wrote.

ā€œNeither federal law nor Connecticut law tolerates discrimination against transgender students,ā€ said Dan Barrett, legal director at the ACLU of Connecticut, which is representing the transgender athletes in this case. ā€œTransgender girls are girls, and the Office of the Attorney General will continue to protect every woman and girl in this state against discrimination.ā€

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