Gov. Abbott directs TEA to ignore new Title IX protections for LGBTQ+ students
By Hannah Norton
Community Impact
May 2, 2024
Gov. Greg Abbott directed the Texas Education Agency on April 29 to
ignore new Title IX rules aimed at protecting LGBTQ+ students from
discrimination.
The Biden administration expanded Title IX—a
1972 nondiscrimination law—to prevent discrimination based on sexual
orientation, gender identity and pregnancy at federally funded colleges
and K-12 schools.
In a letter
to President Joe Biden, Abbott argued the expanded rules exceed the
federal government’s authority, calling them a “ham-handed effort to
impose a leftist belief.”
Attorney General Ken Paxton also sued
the Biden administration in an attempt to block the changes, which are
set to take effect Aug. 1. Texas joins several other Republican-led
states that have filed legal challenges to the policy.
What’s happening?
Abbott said the new rules undermine Texas laws barring transgender
student athletes from joining teams that align with their gender
identity in K-12 schools and public universities. The U.S. Department of Education does not directly reference sports in the updated regulations.
“Texas will fight to protect those laws and to deny your abuse of authority,” Abbott wrote in the letter.
The
rules say schools cannot discriminate against LGBTQ+ students and
employees, must provide reasonable accommodations for pregnant students,
and must offer support for people experiencing sexual violence and
harassment.
“For
more than 50 years, Title IX has promised an equal opportunity to learn
and thrive in our nation's schools free from sex discrimination,” U.S.
Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a news release.
“These final regulations build on the legacy of Title IX by clarifying
that all our nation’s students can access schools that are safe,
welcoming and respect their rights.”
Paxton argued the changes would “put women at risk.”
“Texas
will not allow Joe Biden to rewrite Title IX at whim, destroying legal
protections for women in furtherance of his radical obsession with
gender ideology,” he said in a statement. “This attempt to subvert federal law is plainly illegal, undemocratic and divorced from reality.”
Zooming in
In the lawsuit,
Paxton said the Department of Education is “obstructing [Texas’]
sovereign authority to enforce and administer its laws and by imposing
substantial pressure on Texas to change its laws and policies.”
The changes to Title IX also conflict with policies in several Dallas-Fort Worth-area school districts—including Grapevine-Colleyville ISD, Frisco ISD and Carroll ISD—that separate bathrooms and locker rooms by students’ sex assigned at birth.
Paxton
filed the suit in a federal district court based in Amarillo. His
office has been accused of “judge shopping,” or strategically filing
cases so they are assigned to a judge who will be friendly to the
state’s argument. The case will likely be heard by U.S. District Judge
Matthew Kacsmaryk, a conservative Donald Trump appointee.
The Judicial Conference of the United States, which sets policies for federal courts, recently said
judges should be randomly assigned to civil cases that “seek to bar or
mandate state or federal actions.” However, judges in the Northern
District of Texas, including Amarillo, said they did not plan to follow
the conference’s policy.
What they’re saying
“Civil rights laws create a baseline of respect for our fellow Texans that allows us to peacefully exist with our neighbors,” Equality Texas
CEO Ricardo Martinez said in a statement. “Paxton and Abbott want to
ignore and undermine federal protections designed to safeguard students
and families, including LGBTQIA+ students, survivors of sexual assault
and pregnant students. These kids deserve safe spaces and support.”
ADDENDUM: From Texas Values
The new Title IX rule would do the following:
- Force girls and women of all ages to share restrooms, locker rooms, and showers with men who claim to identify as women
- The use of the wrong pronoun is considered “sexual harassment”
- Affect parental rights to the extent that if your child is undergoing a gender identity transition or crisis, the school can keep it secret from the parents
- Redefines “pregnancy” to include “termination of pregnancy” or abortion, meaning, if your school takes federal dollars in K-12 and college, schools can be forced to help students get abortions or get information about abortions, sometimes without notifying the parents
Additionally, the new rule violates Texas laws to protect girls and
women from being forced to compete against men in sports in both the
K-12 and collegiate level.

1 comment:
I've never been a huge Abbott fan, but he's starting to gain my support.
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