Oregon high school athletes demand after protest for the transgender competitor

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Oregon faces its second demand in a month on the issue of biologically male trans athletes that compete in the sports school sports of girls.

Two of the state’s female athletics stars, Alexa Anderson and Reese Eckard, filed a lawsuit against the Athletics Association of the Oregon School (OSAA) after an incident on May 31 when they refused to stand on a medal podium with a transgender competitor at a state meeting.

The images of the trick became viral, since Anderson then told Pak Gazette that the officials told them to move away from the podium and leave the photos of the photos.

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His demand alleges that Osaa not only excluded them from the official photos, but also retained his medals. The lawsuit argues that officials violate the officials of the first amendment of girls.

“I recently competed against a biological man at my state athletics meeting, another girl and I decided to give up the podium in protest to the unfair competition environment,” Anderson told Pak Gazette Digital. “I am struggling to maintain XX female sports and prevent biological men in women’s sports are normal. In doing so, I hope that all future athletes generations have a safe and fair opportunity to excel within their sports.”

Pak Gazette Digital contacted the OSAA to get an answer.

The girls are being represented by the America First Policy Institute (AFPI).

“These young women won their place on the podium, and the right to express themselves,” said Jessica Hart Steinmann, AFPI Executive General Advisor. “Instead of respecting their point of view, girls’ sports should be for girls onlyOregon officials left them aside. The first amendment protects the right to dissent: school officials cannot rebuke students who refuse to agree with their beliefs. “

Monitoring of sports controversies of the high school of the high school of Trans athletes shaking the nation during the last year

AFPI also represents athletics athletes from Oregon girls Maddie Eischen and Sophia Carpenter In a separate lawsuit against the Oregon Education Department for its policies that allow biological men to compete in girls’ sports.

Carpenter and Eischen cited their experience in retiring from a meeting that presented a Trans competitor on April 18.

“For [Carpenter] The psychological and emotional weight of that moment became overwhelming: he felt helpless, demoralized and betrayed by the institutions and adults accused of protecting their equal opportunities for clean play. Finally, he realized that he could not participate in the height jump that day and withdrew from the event, “says that demand.

Both Carpenter and Eischen previously told Pak Gazette Digital that the experience was “traumatic.”

“My experience in the Chehalem track encounter and scratching the meeting was traumatic, something I never imagined having to do,” said Eischen.

Carpenter added: “It was emotionally traumatic trying to know what I should do and how I should respond to compete with [the trans athlete]”

Carpenter said he found himself so overwhelmed by the emotion by the experience, that he cried on the trip home after the encounter. Now, despite facing a “fear” of potential reprisals for submitting a lawsuit, the two girls are officially in it and advance with a legal battle that could attract a lot of national attention.

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