Marin Independent Journal

Bathroom law gets Newsom signature

- By Mackenzie Mays

All California schools will be required to provide gender-neutral bathrooms under a law signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom on Saturday.

The new legislatio­n expands a decade-old law that requires K-12 schools to allow students to use the bathroom that aligns with their gender identity.

The bill, which explicitly requires an additional gender-neutral option, was inspired by an attempt by Chino Valley Unified to restrict transgende­r students' access to certain bathrooms and sports facilities.

The law is part of a package of bills aiming to protect LGBTQ+ youth and comes amid proliferat­ing culture wars in districts with conservati­vecontroll­ed school boards, whose focus has become “parental rights” and student gender identity.

“These measures will help protect vulnerable youth, promote acceptance and create more supportive environmen­ts in our schools and communitie­s,” Newsom said in a statement, adding that California is “proud” to have among the “most robust” LGBTQ+ rights laws.

In 2021, the Chino Valley school board introduced a resolution that would have restricted transgende­r students' use of the restrooms and locker rooms of their choice.

State Superinten­dent of Public Instructio­n Tony Thurmond warned the school district then that the resolution was unlawful.

The proposal failed but was cited as the impetus for the bill signed Saturday, which was sponsored by Thurmond and state Sen. Josh Newsom, D-Fullerton, was author of it.

“While states across the nation are passing legislatio­n that puts LGBTQ+ people and especially youth at risk, California is sending a clear message today — hate-filled attacks will not be tolerated and we will continue protecting and ensuring the safety of all members of the LGBTQ+ community,” Equality California Executive Director Tony Hoang said in a statement, noting “growing attacks from far-right extremists.”

Chino Valley Unified, in San Bernardino County, became the first district this summer to approve a controvers­ial policy that requires schools to notify parents of students' decisions regarding gender identity, such as the use of preferred pronouns.

Other bills signed by Newsom on Saturday include a new requiremen­t for schools to provide “cultural competency” training regarding LGBTQ+ student issues and the creation of a statewide task force to “identify the needs” of LGBTQ+ pupils.

Newsom's signing of the bills on Saturday came one day after he faced backlash from his fellow Democrats — and rare praise from state Republican­s — for vetoing a bill that would have required courts to consider a parent's support of a child's gender identity in custody fights.

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