Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Transgende­r pupil, district seek high court ruling

White House decision undoes Obama policy

- By MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — Both the transgende­r teen who sued to use a boys’ bathroom and the Virginia school board that won’t let him still want the Supreme Court to issue a definitive ruling in their dispute, even after the Trump administra­tion retreated from an Obama-era policy on bathroom use.

The big issue for both sides is whether the main federal law barring sex discrimina­tion in education protects high school senior Gavin Grimm and other transgende­r students.

Grimm was born a girl but identifies as a boy. The Virginia teen has been issued an amended birth certificat­e identifyin­g him as a male, received hormone treatments and underwent chest reconstruc­tion surgery.

His lawyers said in court papers filed Thursday that prohibitin­g him from using the boys’ restroom is discrimina­tion “on the basis of sex.”

The Gloucester County school board said the law known as Title IX was “intended to erase discrimina­tion against women in classrooms, faculties and athletics.” It does not include gender identity, the board said.

But the withdrawal on Wednesday of joint Education and Justice Department guidance to school systems gives the high court an easy out if it is seeking to avoid a major ruling on transgende­r rights.

The appeals court that sided with Grimm relied on the Obama administra­tion’s reading of the anti-discrimina­tion law and an Education Department regulation to hold that Grimm should be allowed to use a restroom that conforms to his chosen gender.

The Trump administra­tion’s decision to abandon Obama’s restroom guidance set off tensions within the Cabinet. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos expressed reluctance to rescind protection­s for transgende­r students and clashed with Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who supported it, according to a person familiar WASHINGTON — with the conversati­ons but not authorized to speak publicly about internal discussion­s.

After Wednesday’s announceme­nt, DeVos released her own statement stressing that the administra­tion has a “moral obligation” to protect LGBT students, which she said was “not only a key priority for the department but for every school in America.” Speaking Thursday to the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, however, she framed it as a legal matter, “a very huge example of the Obama administra­tion’s overreach.”

The court on Thursday asked both sides to say what they think it should do following the administra­tion’s action.

Now that the basis for the appellate ruling has disappeare­d, the justices could return the case to the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia, and direct it to decide for itself what the law and regulation require. No appeals court has yet to do so, and the high court typically won’t take up a major legal issue until after several courts around the country have weighed in.

Similar cases are making their way through other courts of appeal.

The temptation to wait may be even stronger because the court has been one justice short for more than a year, since Justice Antonin Scalia’s death. President Donald Trump has nominated Judge Neil Gorsuch, but there is no chance Gorsuch could join the court in time for the March 28 argument in the Virginia case.

“If I were a justice on the court, my inclinatio­n would be to say that I’d much rather be reviewing a lower court opinion that looked at the Title IX question,” said Case Western Reserve University law professor Jonathan Adler. Adler signed on to a legal brief in support of the school board that dealt with when courts should defer to federal agencies. That issue is no longer part of the case.

There are some reasons the justices might want to resolve the issue before the court breaks for the summer. Joshua Block, the American Civil Liberties Union lawyer who is representi­ng Grimm, said the administra­tion’s actions have created confusion and “only underscore the need for the Supreme Court to bring some clarity here.”

The outcome is likely to divide the liberal and conservati­ve justices. The four liberal justices would need Justice Anthony Kennedy’s vote to form a majority. It’s not clear he’s with them.

In August, five justices voted to block the 4th circuit ruling ordering the school district to allow Grimm to use the boys’ restroom, at least until the high court finished its review of the case. At the time, Justice Stephen Breyer said he was providing the necessary fifth, majority-making vote as a courtesy to Kennedy and the other more conservati­ve justices.

Fourteen states already prohibit discrimina­tion against transgende­r students, according to the Human Rights Campaign.

 ?? JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION/AP ?? Caitlyn Jenner, seen Nov. 14 arriving at the Glamour Women of the Year Awards in Los Angeles, is taking President Donald Trump to task for his administra­tion’s reversal of a directive on transgende­r access to public school bathrooms.
JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION/AP Caitlyn Jenner, seen Nov. 14 arriving at the Glamour Women of the Year Awards in Los Angeles, is taking President Donald Trump to task for his administra­tion’s reversal of a directive on transgende­r access to public school bathrooms.

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