The United States Department of Education has given Maine a final warning to comply with the executive order of President Donald Trump to ban trans athletes from girls’ sports.
The DOE sent a letter to the Department of Education of Maine (MDOE) on Monday advising a final deadline of April 11 to address the problem or risk a second derivation to the Department of Justice. The Department of Health and Human Services has already sent Maine to the Department of Justice last week.
“The Maine Department of Education’s Indifference to its Past, Current, and Future Female Athletes Is Astonishing. By Refusing to Comply With Title IX, MDOE ALLOWS -INDEED, FINURAGES – MALE COMPETITORS TO THREATEN THE SAFETY OF FEMAL Hard-Earned Accolades, and Deny Females Equal Opportunity in Educational Activities to Which They Are Guaranteed Under Title IX, “The Letter Read.
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“According to previous administrations, the application was an illusory proposal. No more. The Trump-McMahon Department of Education is moving rapidly to ensure that federal funds no longer support obviously illegal practices that damage women and girls.”
Pak Gazette Digital has communicated with MDOE to comment.
The HHS Civil Rights Office announced Friday that MAINE’s “breach” had sent Title IX Rules To the Department of Justice for its application, including MDOE, Association of the Principal of Maine and Grelyly High School, where a Trans athlete attends that won a female pole jump competition.
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The administrative district of the Maine 51 School, Grelyly High School’s home, where a transgender athlete prompted the national controversy after winning a girl pole jump competition in February, said on Thursday It It It. I wasn’t fulfilling And instead, “it will continue to follow state law and the human rights law of Maine.”
The Association of Directors of Maine said in a statement that it is also “bound by law, including the Maine Human Rights Law, which reflects our participation policy.”
Maine has become a national battlefield on the subject shortly after the State indicated in early February that Trump’s executive order would not follow.
The situation that involved the Trans athlete in Grelyly High School attracted national attention after Maine’s Republican state representative, Laurel Libby, identified the athlete by name with a photograph in a publication on social networks. Libby was later censored by Maine’s legislature, and since then has filed a lawsuit to revoke it.
The problem with Maine reached a critical point at a meeting of the National Association of Governors on February 20, when Trump threatened to reduce federal funds to the State for not prohibiting biological men of girls and women’s sports.
The next day, Mills’s office responded with a statement that threatened the legal actions against the Trump administration if it retained federal state funds. Then Trump and Mills headed verbally on a widely publicized argument in the White House during a bipartisan meeting of governors.
Since then, multiple protests against Mills have been held outside the State Capitol, and Maine’s university system has cooperated with the Trump administration to ensure that Trans athletes compete in women’s sports after a temporary financing break.