Governor Glenn Youngkin
delivers remarks during a 'Back to School Rally' for midterm election
Republican candidates in Annandale, Virginia, in August.
Virginia
is attempting to roll back major protections for school students who are
transgender, according to the latest set of guidelines announced by the state’s
education officials.
The
state’s department of education announced on Friday that it had rewritten a
number of policies around the treatment of transgender students, issuing
guidance for school districts to follow that ease up accommodations from the
previous administration.
Under the Republican governor, Glenn Youngkin, the policy reversal would require students to use bathrooms and locker rooms that match their biological sex, the Associated Press reported.
The new
policy also makes it more difficult for students to change the names and
pronouns that are used for them. Students who are minors must now be referred
to by names and pronouns listed in official records unless a parent gives their
approval.
The most
recent guidance will go through a 30-day public comment period, which will
begin later this month. Afterwards, the state’s education department will go
through comments and submit a final version approved by the state’s
superintendent, according to the New York Times.
The
proposed policies are a stark contrast from protections passed under former
Democratic governor Ralph Northam’s administration. Last year’s policies told
schools to call students by names and pronouns that reflected their gender
identity without “any substantiating evidence”, the AP reported.
The
previous guidelines also allowed students to participate in any programs or
facilities that matched their gender identity and cautioned schools to consider
a student’s safety and health before sharing information with parents.
But many
school districts did not implement Northam’s more LGBTQ+ friendly policies,
with no state enforcement mechanism if school districts failed to comply, the Virginia Mercury reported.
A
representative of Youngkin’s office has said that the adjusted policies are
about preserving parental rights, but advocates have criticized the new
guidance as harmful to transgender students.
Anthony
Belotti, a 22-year-old queer and trans college student who attended high school
in Virginia, told the Washington Post that during his time attending
Stafford county schools, he was banned from using the men’s bathroom, having to
wait hours to use the restroom at home. As a result, Belotti now has chronic
kidney and urinary tract infections.
Belotti
warned that rolling back protections will be especially harmful for transgender
students who have gotten used to previously established accommodations.
“This
is going to mean less protections from bullying,” Belotti said. “It’s going to
be especially devastating for students who know what it is like to have access
to support and respect, and now have that taken away from them.”
There
is also confusion on how much power Youngkin has to enforce certain provisions
in the updated school guidelines, particularly given federal protections for transgender students that
mandate they access the bathroom that matches their gender identity.
In the
past year, states across the US have passed or proposed legislation targeting
trans minors, inside and outside the classroom.
The
Republican governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, told the state’s child protection
services to investigate parents providing their children with
gender-affirming care, calling those actions “abuse”.
In March,
the Republican governor of Iowa, Kim Reynolds, signed a bill into law that banned trans
girls and women from participating in high school and college sports, despite
critics saying that the bill was discriminatory.
Louisiana’s
governor, John Bel Edwards, allowed a similar legislative ban to become law by
not vetoing it despite also not signing it. Edwards is a Democrat, but
Louisiana’s legislature is controlled by Republicans.
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