Connect with us

Virginia

Va. House passes two anti-transgender bills

Measures likely to die in Democratic-controlled state Senate

Published

on

(Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

The Republican-controlled Virginia House of Delegates on Tuesday approved two anti-transgender bills.

State Del. Karen Greenhalgh (R-Virginia Beach)’s House Bill 1387, which would ban trans athletes from school sports teams that correspond with their gender identity, passed by a 51-47 vote margin. State Del. Dave LaRock (R-Loudoun County)’s House Bill 2432, which would require school personnel to out trans students to their parents, passed by a 50-48 vote margin.

“We are dealing with forcibly outing kids regardless of the safety of their home,” said state Del. Danica Roem (D-Manassas) on Monday when she spoke against HB 2432. “You have no idea of the harm you’re causing. Do better for them.”

Roem, who is the first openly trans woman seated in a state legislature in the U.S., also spoke against HB 1387 on the House floor.

Equality Virginia and the Human Rights Campaign are among the groups that condemned the bills’ passage.

ā€œIt can be hard for people to understand what it means to be a transgender or nonbinary young person if theyā€™ve never met one. But trans and nonbinary young people are our friends, family members and neighbors, and like all young people, they deserve safe and inclusive learning environments where they can thrive and be supported as they are,ā€ said Kasey Suffredini, vice president of advocacy and government affairs at the Trevor Project, in a statement. ā€œThese bills would only contribute to further isolation and stigma at a time when trans young people are already struggling.”

The two bills will now go before the Democratic-controlled Virginia Senate.

The Senate Education Committee last week killed six measures that would have banned transition-related health care for minors in Virginia and prevented trans athletes from school teams that correspond with their gender. It is likely HB 1387 and HB 2432 will meet a similar fate.

Advertisement
FUND LGBTQ JOURNALISM
SIGN UP FOR E-BLAST

Virginia

Federal judge denies motion to dismiss gay student’s complaint against Va. school district

Complaint alleges Prince William County School District did not stop bullying

Published

on

(Bigstock photo)

A gay former Prince William County middle school student alleges the county’s school board and school district failed to stop bullying against him because of his sexual orientation.

InsideNoVa.com reported the student’s mother filed the Title IX complaint in June 2023.

The website notes the complainant was a student at Ronald Reagan Middle School in Haymarket from 2019-2022, and his classmates subjected him to “regular and relentless anti-LGBTQ+ bullying.” InsideNoVa.com reports the complaint states the student and his mother “were met with victim blaming and inaction” when they approached the school’s principal and assistant principal.

The complainant is no longer a student in the school district.

U.S. District Court Judge Rossie D. Alston, Jr., in Alexandria on Aug. 22 denied motions to dismiss the complaint.

“PWCS remains committed to providing an inclusive and excellent education for every student and has no tolerance for harassment, bullying or intimidation of students,” Prince William County Public Schools Communications Director Diana Gulotta told the Washington Blade on Monday in an emailed statement. 

“Regarding this specific case, PWCS does not comment on active litigation,” she added.

Continue Reading

Virginia

Winsome Earle-Sears announces 2025 Va. gubernatorial campaign

Anti-LGBTQ Republican elected state’s lieutenant governor in 2021

Published

on

Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears speaks at CPAC in 2023. (Washington Blade photo by Michael Key)

Virginia Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears on Thursday announced she will run to succeed Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin in 2025.

ā€œI could have never believed growing up that I could be asking Virginians for their faith and confidence in me to serve them as governor of our great commonwealth,ā€ the Republican said in her announcement, according to the Washington Post. ā€œYes, this is an opportunity to make history, but our campaign is about making life better for every Virginian right here, right now.ā€

Earle-Sears, a former U.S. Marine who served in the Virginia House of Delegates from 2002-2004, in 2021 became the first woman elected Virginia’s lieutenant governor. Youngkin and Republican Attorney General Jason Miyares also won their respective races that year.

Activists have criticized Earle-Sears for her opposition to LGBTQ rights in Virginia.

Earle-Sears in 2023 spoke at the Conservative Political Action Conference in National Harbor, Md. She sparked criticism in February when she misgendered state Sen. Danica Roem (D-Manassas) on the Virginia Senate floor.

Roem in 2018 became the first transgender person seated in a state legislature in the country when she assumed her seat in the House of Delegates. Voters in the 30th Senate District last November elected Roem to the state Senate, thus becoming the first trans person to be seated in the chamber.

The Washington Post reported Miyares is likely to run against Earle-Sears in the Republican primary. The winner would likely face U.S. Rep. Abigail Spanberger (D-Va.), who is the only Democrat who has thus far declared themselves a gubernatorial candidate.

Earle-Sears would become Virginia’s first female governor if she wins. She would also become the first Black woman elected governor of any state.

Continue Reading

Virginia

Federal judge rules in favor of trans Va. student blocked from girls’ sports team

‘Janie Doeā€™ is 11-year-old middle schooler in Hanover County

Published

on

(Bigstock photo)

A federal judge has ruled in favor of a transgender student in Hanover County who was prevented from playing on her schoolā€™s girls’ tennis team because of her gender identity.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia, which filed a lawsuit last month on behalf of the 11-year-old middle school student who is identified as ā€œJanie Doe,ā€ notes on its website that U.S. District Court Judge M. Hannah Lauck issued her ruling on Aug. 16.

Lauck, according to the ACLU of Virginia, found the Hanover County School Board ā€œlikely violated Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitutionā€ when it prevented the student from joining her schoolā€™s tennis team in 2023.

ā€œJanie has established that the board excluded her, on the basis of sex, from participating in an education program when it denied her application to try out for (and if selected, to participate on) her schoolā€™s girlsā€™ tennis team,ā€ wrote Lauck.

The ACLU of Virginia notes Lauck added the school boardā€™s actions ā€œcontravene the strong public interest in educational institutions being free of discrimination of all kinds.ā€

The lawsuit that the ACLU of Virginia and WilmerHale, a Washington-based law firm, filed in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia in Richmond notes the school board voted not to allow Doe to ā€œparticipate inā€ the girlsā€™ tennis team, even though ā€œshe successfully qualified during tryouts, and her parents provided documentation requested by the school board to establish her eligibility.ā€

ā€œAt the heart of this case is an 11-year-old who loves tennis and just wants to try out with her friends for the team she already made last year,ā€ said ACLU of Virginia Senior Transgender Rights Attorney Wyatt Rolla on Monday in a press release. ā€œBy singling out a transgender student in their district, the adults on the Hanover County School Board bullied Janie and violated nondiscrimination protections that are there to make sure public schools include all students.ā€

The Biden-Harris administration earlier this year released its final Title IX rules that specifically protect discrimination against LGBTQ students based on their gender identity and sexual orientation. The new regulations took effect on Aug. 1. (The U.S. Supreme Court on Aug. 16 in a 5-4 ruling said the new regulations cannot take effect in states that have challenged them in federal court.)

Republican Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares is among the state attorneys general who pledged to block the new Title IX rules from taking effect.

“We are happy that the Supreme Court rejected the Biden-Harris administration’s attempt to narrow the district court’s ruling which prevented the administration’s Title IX rewrite from going into effect in Virginia,” said Miyares in a statement to Virginia Public Radio.

The Virginia Department of Education in July 2023 announced new guidelines for trans and nonbinary students for which Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin asked.Ā 

Advocacy groups maintain the guidelines, among other things would forcibly out trans and nonbinary students. Arlington County Public Schools, Fairfax County Public Schools, and Prince William County Schools are among the school districts that have refused to implement them. 

ā€œThis ruling should make every school board ā€” not just Hanover ā€” think twice before using VDOEā€™s model policies to justify discrimination against its students,ā€ said Rolla.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Advertisement

Sign Up for Weekly E-Blast

Follow Us @washblade

Advertisement

Popular