Current:Home > MarketsVirginia school boards must adhere to Gov. Youngkin’s new policies on transgender students, AG says -Capitatum
Virginia school boards must adhere to Gov. Youngkin’s new policies on transgender students, AG says
View
Date:2025-04-16 05:17:27
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — Republican Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s new model policies for the treatment of transgender students are in line with federal and state nondiscrimination laws and school boards must follow their guidance, the state’s attorney general said in a nonbinding legal analysis released Thursday.
“The Model Policies ensure that all students are treated with dignity and that parental involvement remains at the center. These policies are fully compliant with the law, and school boards across the Commonwealth should support and implement them,” Attorney General Jason Miyares, also a Republican, said in a statement.
The advisory opinion from Miyares comes as a growing number of school boards across the state are responding to the administration’s guidelines, which were finalized last month after a lengthy review and deal with issues ranging from athletics to pronoun use in the classroom. The guidelines, which under state law are supposed to offer something of a road map for local school districts to form their own similar policies, roll back many accommodations for transgender students urged by the previous Democratic administration. They have won praise from conservative and religious groups and sparked criticism from Democrats and LGBTQ advocates.
Some school boards in red-leaning areas of the state have begun to adopt policies consistent with the governor’s. Others, mostly in blue areas, have said they plan to defy them.
For instance, Fairfax County Public Schools — the state’s largest district — recently told parents it had no plans to change its guidelines for transgender students, which do not align with Youngkin’s.
A similar dynamic, in political reverse, played out under previous Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam’s administration. The Department of Education told local districts at the time that they assumed “all legal responsibility for noncompliance” and did not even track which divisions were meeting the standards, the Virginia Mercury reported at the time.
Youngkin has been making the case in recent public appearances that school boards have no choice but to fall in line. But he has declined to say exactly what tools his administration thinks it has to attempt to get noncompliant districts on board. The 2020 state law that led to the creation of the model policies is silent on enforcement.
Pressed Wednesday on the issue when speaking with reporters, he responded: “Just stand by.” He went on to add that he expects schools board to “fully to get to the right place.”
Miyares’ 10-page opinion was issued later that day and released publicly Thursday morning. It addresses a handful of questions that have been raised about the legality of the guidelines and whether they are in alignment with the U.S. Constitution or state or federal law.
Miyares wrote that the athletics policies — which say participation should be based on biological sex rather than gender identity — are not in conflict with the Virginia Human Rights Act’s prohibition against discrimination on the basis of gender identity.
The model policy “draws no distinctions of any kind on the basis of gender identity,” rather both sides of the classification, biological males and biological females, include trans students and treat them like other students of the same sex, the opinion says.
Regarding the section dealing with student identification in the classroom, including pronoun selections, it says: “Because the model policy ultimately vests the decision of pronoun reference with a student’s parents, (the policy) does not discriminate on the basis of sex.”
The previous Northam era-guidance said schools should let students use names and gender pronouns that reflect their gender identity without “any substantiating evidence.”
The opinion also addresses the legal case of Gavin Grimm, the transgender former Virginia high school student whose lawsuit over his district’s transgender bathroom ban led to a ruling that the policy was unconstitutional.
Miyares found that the policies are not in conflict with the 4th U.S Circuit Court of Appeals ruling, which “does not impose a blanket rule forbidding sex-separate facilities in all situations, let alone govern policies related to athletics, access to information, or pronoun usage.”
In conclusion, the analysis found that the model policies “offend neither the Equal Protection Clause, Title IX, nor the (Virginia Human Rights Act).”
“School boards therefore must adopt model policies consistent with those developed by the Department,” it said.
Opinions by the attorney general are only advisory and are not binding on the courts, Eden Heilman, the ACLU of Virginia’s legal director, noted in a statement.
Heilman called Miyares’ opinion ‘’every bit as cruel and misguided as the policies themselves.”
veryGood! (14)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Clint Eastwood's Daughter Francesca Eastwood Arrested for Domestic Violence
- RFK Jr. suggests he’ll have a significant role on agriculture and health policy if Trump is elected
- Hayley Erbert Returns to DWTS Alongside Husband Derek Hough After Near-Fatal Medical Emergency
- NCAA hits former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh with suspension, show-cause for recruiting violations
- Dunkin' Munchkins Bucket and Halloween menu available this week: Here's what to know
- Republicans challenge more than 63,000 voters in Georgia, but few removed, AP finds
- Supporting Children's Education: Mark's Path of Philanthropy
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- ReBuild NC Has a Deficit of Over $150 Million With 1,600 People Still Displaced by Hurricanes Matthew and Florence
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Emily Osment Reveals Role Brother Haley Joel Osment Had at Her Wedding
- See Kelli Giddish's Sweet Law & Order: SVU Reunion With Mariska Hargitay—Plus, What Rollins' Future Holds
- The son of a South Carolina inmate urges the governor to save his father from execution
- Billy Bean was an LGBTQ advocate and one of baseball's great heroes
- Alabama to execute Derrick Dearman for murder of 5 five family members. What to know
- Horoscopes Today, October 15, 2024
- Navy parachutist crash lands on mother and daughter during San Francisco Fleet Week
Recommendation
$1 Frostys: Wendy's celebrates end of summer with sweet deal
Ozzy Osbourne makes special appearance at signing event amid health struggles
Liam Payne's family mourns One Direction star's death at 31: 'Heartbroken'
Under $50 Perfumes That Actually Smell Really Good
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Idaho will begin using deep veins as backup for lethal injection executions, officials say
Sean Diddy Combs Accused of Raping Woman Over Suggestion He Was Involved in Tupac Shakur's Murder
Kristen Bell Admits to Sneaking NSFW Joke Into Frozen