California鈥檚 attorney general on Monday sued a school district over its policy that requires principals, teachers, or counselors to notify parents when students change their gender identity or pronouns.
The , a Democrat, asks a state court to declare the policy of the 26,000-student Chino Valley Unified school district east of Los Angeles to be in violation of the California Constitution鈥檚 guarantee of equal protection, privacy, and the fundamental right to education.
鈥淓very student has the right to learn and thrive in a school environment that promotes safety, privacy, and inclusivity鈥攔egardless of their gender identity,鈥 Bonta said in a statement. 鈥淭he forced outing policy wrongfully endangers the physical, mental, and emotional well-being of non-conforming students who lack an accepting environment in the classroom and at home.鈥
The California dispute is the latest flash point over transgender students in schools鈥攁n issue that has brought widespread policymaking and legislation in conservative-leaning states and school districts to restrict teaching about sexuality and gender identity, as well as policies such as which restrooms trans students can use and which sports teams they can play on.
The Chino Valley school board voted 4-1 on July 23 to adopt the policy after a public hearing in which numerous LGBTQ+ students testified against it, as did California Superintendent of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond. The lawsuit cites alleged 鈥渁nimus鈥 by board members who voted for the policy, including statements that transgender identity was 鈥渁n illusion鈥 and a sign of mental illness.
The policy requires a school principal, teachers and other certified staff members, or school counselors to notify parents or guardians 鈥渋n writing, within three days鈥 whenever 鈥渁ny district employee, administrator, or certificated staff, becomes aware鈥 that a student request to be identified or treated as a gender 鈥渙ther than the student鈥檚 biological sex or gender listed on the student鈥檚 birth certificate or any other official records.鈥
The policy also requires such notifications when trans students seek to join sex-segregated athletic teams and competitions or use bathrooms or changing facilities that align with their gender identity.
The lawsuit says an investigation by the attorney general鈥檚 office determined that at least one school in the Chino Valley district offered training in advance of the Aug. 7 start of the 2023-24 school year that said principals would arrange a meeting with a student seeking a change in gender identity, as well as the student鈥檚 parents.
鈥淭he principal would 鈥榗all the child out of class,鈥 inform the student of 鈥榳hat was going to happen,鈥 and attempt to persuade the student to 鈥榳alk it back鈥欌攊.e., to disclaim their gender identity鈥攂efore the meeting,鈥 the suit says.
During the same training, the suit says, 鈥渢he principal informed teachers that if they did not report a student鈥檚 name, gender, or bathroom request to the school administration, it will be 鈥榓n HR issue.鈥 鈥
The suit cites evidence that the policy is causing harm to transgender students and creating 鈥渁n environment of fear.鈥
The Chino Valley district did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but a spokesperson told the Associated Press that the district and its lawyers were reviewing the suit.
Bill Essayli, a Republican member of the California state Assembly from Riverside, which is near Chino, said in a statement that Bonta鈥檚 lawsuit 鈥渄eclared war on parents.鈥
鈥淭he fact that he is spending taxpayer resources on suing school districts for providing information to parents is remarkable and inconsistent with a century of [U.S.] Supreme Court precedent holding that parents have a constitutional right to raise their children without government interference,鈥 said Essayli, who sponsored state legislation similar to the Chino Valley policy. His legislation did not succeed in the overwhelmingly Democratic state legislature.
A handful of other California districts have adopted similar policies, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, is supporting an effort to introduce state legislation that would bar school boards from adopting such policies, .
Research shows that transgender adolescents feel less safe at school, have higher rates of suicide ideation, and are disproportionately represented among homeless youth, at least partly due to rejection at home. Research also shows that accepting and affirming transgender students can improve their mental health and academic performance.
Some states taking the opposite viewpoint on transgender students
California鈥檚 dispute over transgender students represents the inverse of what is happening in several conservative-led states.
In Florida, under rules adopted by the state board of education in July and supported by Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis, teachers don鈥檛 have to use pronouns that align with transgender students鈥 gender identity, and such students must use restrooms that align with their gender assigned at birth.
In Virginia, the state education department in July issued model guidance that makes it harder for transgender students to change their names or pronouns in school, and calls for them to use restrooms aligning with their gender assigned at birth. Those policies were issued at the direction of Republican Gov. Glenn Youngkin. Some school districts, particularly in the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., are resisting the state guidelines.
The legal terrain, too, is still largely undecided. Parents in at least a half-dozen states have sued either in state or federal court alleging that districts allowed or encouraged students to assume new names or identities without their knowledge.
In Maryland, a federal judge threw out a lawsuit brought by three parents who challenged the Montgomery County school district鈥檚 policy for responding when a student discloses they are trans. The policy calls for school personnel to respect students鈥 gender identities and pronouns, protect their privacy in terms of disclosing their pronouns and identities to other students and their families, and support them if the student doesn鈥檛 feel safe at home. But it also directs school personnel to use a student鈥檚 legal name and pronouns aligned with their assigned sex at birth until the student or their guardian specifies otherwise.