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JUDGE RULES IN FAVOR OF TRANS BOYS PLAYING IN GIRLS SPORTS
A federal judge has tossed out a high-profile lawsuit filed on behalf of four female athletes suing to stop a Connecticut high school athletics association policy allowing biological males who identify as females to compete in girlsā sports at the K-12 level.Ā . . .
Judge Robert Chatigny, a federal judge in the U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut, issued aĀ rulingĀ Sunday determining that the lawsuit filed against the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference and the Connecticut Association of Schools was ānot justiciable at this time.ā
He contends that ācourts across the country have consistently held that Title IX requires schools to treat transgender students consistent with their gender identity.ā
Appointed to the bench by former President Bill Clinton, ChatignyĀ faced criticism last year from Alliance Defending Freedom, the legal nonprofit representing the plaintiffs, for telling ADF attorneys to refer to biological male athletes as ātransgender females.ā His insistence that the attorneys avoid referring to the athletes as āmalesā led to demands that he be removed from the case due to a lack of impartiality.Ā . .
But those calls went unanswered.
The plaintiffs, who were all high school students when the lawsuit was filed, contend that allowing biological males to compete in womenās sports violates Title IX, which was designed to provide equal opportunities for females in education.
ADFĀ announcedĀ the intention to appeal the ruling Sunday, stating that its lawyers āwill continue to challenge the policy before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit.ā
āOur clients ā like all female athletes ā deserve access to fair competition; that means authentically equal opportunities to compete, achieve, and win. But competition is no longer fair when males are permitted to compete in girlsā sports,ā said ADF Legal Counsel Christina Holcomb.
āMales will always have inherent physical advantages over comparably talented and trained girls; thatās the reason we have girlsā sports in the first place. Unfortunately, this court has chosen to ignore our clientsā demoralizing experience of losing to male runners.ā
Holcomb argued that while the case centers on female athletes in Connecticut, there is more at stake.
According to the ADF, Selina Soule, Chelsea Mitchell, Alanna Smith and Ashley Nicoletti have been ādeprivedā of āhonors and opportunities to compete at elite levels.ā Mitchell would have won the 2019 state championship in the womenās 55-meter indoor track competition, ADF reports. However, two biological male competitors took first and second place. Meanwhile, Soule, Smith and Nicoletti āhave been denied medals and/or advancement opportunities.ā
The ruling states:
āChelsea Mitchell would have finished first in four elite events in 2019, and qualified for the 2017 New England Regional Championship in the Womenās 100m; (2) Selina Soule would have advanced to the next level of competition in the 2019 CIAC State Open Championship in the Womenās Indoor 55m; (3) Ashley Nicoletti would have qualified to run in the 2019 CIAC Class S Womenās Outdoor 100m; and (4) Alanna Smith would have finished second in the Womenās 200m at the 2019 State Outdoor Open.ā
ADF states that due to CIACās policy, two males were permitted to compete in girlsā athletic competitions starting in the 2017 track season, who have taken 15 womenās state championship titles previously held by nine different girls between 2017-2019. The law group contends that the two athletes have taken away 85 opportunities to participate in higher-level competitions from female track athletes from 2017 to 2019.Ā . . .
āI donāt want any other girl to experience the pain and heartbreak I had to go through, and I will continue to stand up for fairness in womenās sports for as long as it takes,ā she vowed.
Smith, another plaintiff, described the decision as ādisheartening for athletes like me who train hard every day to be our physical and mental best at the starting block.ā
According to Smith, ābiological unfairness does not go away because of what someone believes about gender identity.ā . . .
Mitchell called the ruling ādiscouraging,ā claiming the judge āruled to dismiss my right to compete on a level playing field.ā
āTodayās ruling ignores the physical advantages that male athletes have over female athletes,ā she argues. āFemale athletes like me should have the opportunity to excel and compete fairly. No girl should have to settle into her starting blocks knowing that, no matter how hard she works, she doesnāt have a fair shot at victory.ā
Nicoletti warned that girls like her āhave suffered countless losses because of the CIACās policy.ā . . .
While female athletes decried Sundayās decision, LGBT activists reacted very favorably to Chatignyās ruling.
āThis is good news for transgender students in Connecticut and around the country,ā declared ACLU Staff Attorney Joshua Block in aĀ statement. āTodayās ruling shows that allowing transgender students to participate in school ā including sports ā is consistent with existing federal law. This is yet another sign that lawmakers attacking trans youth in states around the country have no legal basis for their claims.ā
Additionally, Rahsaan Yearwood, the father of one of the two biological male athletes who now identify as females who are also named defendants in the lawsuit,Ā cheeredĀ the decision.
āOne of our most marginalized communities has the opportunity to rejoice in their authentic being and feel affirmed in doing so,ā Yearwood was quoted as saying.
As the debate about womenās sports continues across the U.S., several states have passed laws restricting participation in womenās sports to biological females.
This year alone, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee haveĀ already passedĀ such laws. State lawmakers in more than two dozen other states have introduced similar legislation.
Meanwhile, Democrats in Congress want to pass the Equality Act, which would codify nondiscrimination protections for the LGBT community into federal law. . . .
Even though the Equality Act has failed to become law because of opposition from bothĀ RepublicansĀ andĀ DemocratsĀ in the U.S. Senate, President Joe Biden has already signed an executive order prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
āChildren should be able to learn without worrying about whether they will be denied access to the restroom, the locker room, or school sports,ā the order stated.
Share your prayers in the comment below about other lawsuits like this to rule in favor of truth and justice!
(Excerpt from The Christian Post. Article by Ryan Foley. Photo Credit: Canva.)
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