The largest secondary school district in California votes to protect women’s sports



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The largest secondary school district by registration and earthly surface in the state of California voted on Monday 3-2 to adopt a resolution of the title IX that would only allow women to participate in women’s sports.

The vote occurs while the educational agencies of the State face a demand from the US Department of Justice.

The Kern Secondary School District regularly enrolls more than 40,000 students and uses more than 1,700 employees per year in its 31 schools. Now, it becomes the School District number 16, Individual School or Board of Education of California to adopt an amendment to comply with Title IX, rejecting the current state policy that protects trans athletes in women’s sports.

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The resolution was written by the president of the Education Board of the Unified School District of Chino Valley, Sonja Shaw. The Shaw district is one of the 16 in California that also approved a resolution on the subject.

“I wrote this resolution to be the voice of our communities, to support our girls and protect the truth that should never have been silenced,” Shaw said. “Boys are boys. Girls are girls. God made them beautiful as they are. It is time to return justice, truth and common sense to education.”

The Kern County School District, which is separated from the Kern Secondary School district but shares a county, was one of the other districts that proposed its own resolutions in August.

Trans athletes have been legally allowed to compete in women’s sports according to California state law that dates back to 2013. President Donald Trump signed the executive order “to keep men out of women’s sports” in February, but the California Interest Federation (CIF) became one of the first sports leagues of secondary schools in the country in announcing that it would not comply with the order.

The Trump Department of Justice announced that it would sue the State for the issue in July, weeks after an athlete was winning two state titles in female athletics on May. The Department of Justice is involved in a similar demand with Maine’s educational agencies on the same subject, and has given as a deadline on October 10 to Minnesota to change its policies on the subject; Otherwise, a lawsuit will also be initiated there.

The continuous authorization by the State of Trans athletes in women’s sports has resulted in several related incidents controversial throughout the State, and some have given rise to separate demands.

Within the transgender volleyball crisis of Gavin Newsom

In Riverside County, two Cross Country runners sued the Riverside Unified School District after a Trans athlete occupied one of its places in the university team. Demand partially advanced in previous dismissal motions in September. In that same county, the women’s volleyball players sued the Unified School District of Jurupa after spending the previous three seasons sharing a court and costumes with a Trans teammate, the same athlete who won the female athletics titles in the spring.

Governor Gavin Newsom has openly said that he agrees that the men who compete in women’s sports is “unfair”, and has even said that he has heard complaints about the subject in his state of parents “of related ideas” in the football matches of their children.

The Newsom Office previously provided a statement to Pak Gazette Digital suggesting that the current problem of trans athletes in the state is not their responsibility.

“CIF is an independent non -profit organization that governs the sports of secondary schools. The California Department of Education is a separate constitutional office. None of the two are under the authority of the governor. CIF and the CDE have declared that they follow the existing state law, a law that was approved in 2013 and signed by Governor Jerry Brown (not Newsom) and in line with another 21 states. Legislature would need to send a bill to the governor.

TO Bipartisan survey The California Public Policy Institute found that the majority of California residents oppose that biological trans athletes compete in women’s sports.

That figure included more than 70% of The parents of the State School.

“Most Californians support to demand that transgender athletes compete in teams that coincide with the sex assigned to birth,” says the survey.

“Solid adult majorities (65%) and probable voters (64%) support to demand that transgender athletes compete in teams that coincide with the sex assigned to them at birth, not with the genre with which they identify themselves. An overwhelming majority of parents of public schools (71%) supports such a requirement.”

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