Monday, April 11, 2022

Hofmeister spox: public schools must allow students to use bathroom of their choice, can't restrict based on biology

HOFMEISTER: SCHOOL TRANSGENDER BATHROOM POLICIES MANDATORY
by Ray Carter, Center for Independent Journalism

A spokesperson for State Superintendent of Public Instruction Joy Hofmeister says Oklahoma public schools must allow students to use the bathroom of their choice, based on the student’s self-professed gender identity, and cannot restrict bathroom access based on biological gender.

Carrie Burkhart, executive director of communications for the Oklahoma State Department of Education, said the agency recently affirmed to Stillwater Public Schools that “legal precedent has addressed the need for equal access, including facilities.”

She cited a decision handed down in 2020 by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals that held that a school district could not prohibit transgender persons from using bathrooms that align with their gender identity and noted the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal of that case.

The statement was issued following conflicting reports in the Stillwater school district regarding Hofmeister and the Oklahoma State Department of Education’s interpretation of laws governing student access to sex-segregated facilities, including bathrooms.

Hofmeister is currently a candidate for governor, running as a Democrat after having switched parties [Blogger's note: read my article, Hofmeister's Long Con: running for Gov as the Dem she's always been].

The Stillwater district has faced pushback from parents after a transgender girl—a male who identifies as a female—began using the middle-school girls’ bathroom, causing reported distress for some female students.

As recently as Jan. 8, 2021, a memorandum from the U.S. Department of Education Office of the General Counsel stated schools were not prevented from having separate bathrooms facilities based on biological gender, despite a 2020 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Bostock v. Clayton County, Georgia that held discrimination based on sex includes discrimination based on gender identity when it comes to employment-law issues.

The U.S. Department of Education memo noted that federal Title IX law, which applies to schools that receive any federal funding, contains “numerous exceptions authorizing or allowing sex-separate activities and intimate facilities” based on biological sex as that phrase was understood in “the plain ordinary public meaning” of the time the law was enacted.

However, the Biden administration has since issued guidance indicating that schools must allow student access to bathroom facilities based on gender identity, not biology.

Oklahoma Attorney General John O’Connor recently joined with 13 other state attorneys general in sending an April 5 letter to the U.S. Department of Education opposing that change. The attorneys general wrote that redefining discrimination “on the basis of sex” to include gender identity “would plainly exceed the Department’s rulemaking authority” and ignores the fact that the “ordinary public meaning of the term ‘sex’ at the time of Title IX’s enactment could only have been biological distinctions between male and female.”

Some entities have apparently encouraged Oklahoma public schools to authorize bathroom access based on gender identity, not biology, for years, preceding the court decisions now cited to justify those policies.

A presentation on “Transgender Students & Schools,” provided at the Oklahoma State School Boards Association’s Annual Conference in 2016, indicated that school officials should adopt new transgender policies that could allow access to bathrooms based on gender identity even though the presentation acknowledged there was no state law “specifically referring to gender identity or expression.”

Read the rest of Carter's article here.

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