Thu. Feb 6th, 2025

Penn, SJSU under scrutiny over trans athletes

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The Trump administration is investigating potential civil rights violations at two universities and a high school sports league that allowed transgender athletes to compete on women’s teams, the Education Department said Thursday.

The agency is opening reviews at San Jose State, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association.

The reviews come a day after President Donald Trump signed an executive order intended to ban transgender athletes from competing in girls’ and women’s sports. The order calls for penalties against schools and leagues, saying competing against transgender athletes deprives female students of equality.

The Education Department said it opened the cases over suspected violations of Title IX, the 1972 law barring sex discrimination in education. Opening an inquiry isn’t meant to indicate a finding of wrongdoing, according to department policy. Additionally, the agency said it is reviewing athletics policies at a number of other schools.

San Jose State is being investigated over a player’s participation on the women’s volleyball team. A lawsuit filed by players against the Mountain West Conference argued that letting her compete poses a safety risk, but San Jose State has not confirmed it has a transgender woman on the volleyball team.

The investigation at Penn focuses on Lia Thomas, who swam on the women’s team and was the first openly transgender athlete to win a Division I title in 2022. Thomas graduated that year.

According to the Education Department, the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association allowed a transgender athlete to compete on a girls’ high school basketball team, prompting an opposing team to forfeit after three players were reportedly injured. The department did not identify the schools or give further details.

Athletic associations typically don’t receive federal money from the Education Department, and it was not immediately clear what authority the agency had to investigate the Massachusetts league.

The Education Department has shifted its civil rights priorities as it aligns with Trump’s agenda to target antisemitism and gender identity issues. The investigations also build on Trump’s campaign rhetoric, which pledged to end “transgender insanity.”

“The previous administration trampled the rights of American women and girls — and ignored the indignities to which they were subjected in bathrooms and locker rooms — to promote a radical transgender ideology,” said Craig Trainor, the department’s acting assistant secretary for civil rights.

The universities and association did not immediately provide comment.

Advocates for transgender students condemned the investigations.

“Utilizing the Title IX enforcement process to discriminate against trans women and girls is such a gross abuse of power and it’s unlawful,” Shiwali Patel, the senior director of Safe and Inclusive Schools at the National Women’s Law Center, said in a statement. “Courts have affirmed that trans women and girls have civil rights protections when it comes to playing sports, and sports bans targeting trans women harm every woman or girl — including those who are cis — who doesn’t fit sex-based stereotypes of how a woman or a girl should look, play, or act.

“Instead of targeting trans people, the Trump administration should focus on promoting policies that actually benefit women and girls in sports.”

Title IX has been at the center of a political tug-of-war in recent years. Under former President Joe Biden, new federal rules expanded the law to protect LGBTQ+ students. A federal judge overturned Biden’s rules this year, calling them an overstep.

The Trump administration has been using Title IX to push against schools that provide accommodations for transgender students. Last month, the Education Department opened an investigation into Denver public schools after an all-gender restroom replaced a girls’ restroom while leaving another exclusive to boys.

In his order, Trump directed federal agencies to “rescind all funds from educational programs that deprive women and girls of fair athletic opportunities.” The Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights can move to cut federal money for institutions that violate civil rights, but only if it’s approved by a judge and if the office fails to negotiate a resolution.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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