Education Dept. probes Michigan districts on trans policies

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Federal officials opened Title IX investigations into three Michigan districts over trans-inclusive sports and locker room policies.

Why this matters

The investigations show how the Trump administration is using Title IX enforcement to challenge school policies on transgender students. The outcome could affect how districts nationwide handle sports participation and access to school facilities.

The Trump administration opened investigations into three Michigan school districts over policies that allow transgender students to play sports and use locker rooms based on their gender identity.

On Thursday, the Education Department said its Office for Civil Rights had opened investigations into Ann Arbor Public Schools, Monroe Public Schools, and Chippewa Valley School District. The department alleged the districts violated the rights of cisgender students by allowing transgender students to use teams and locker rooms that align with their gender identity rather than the sex assigned at birth.

“The convoluted practice of allowing students to participate on sex-segregated athletic teams and make use of locker rooms based on ‘gender identity’ is not only known to be unsafe for students, but is a direct violation of federal law,” Kimberly Richey, assistant secretary for civil rights at the Education Department, said in a statement.

“The Trump Administration has consistently upheld Title IX, as it was written and intended by Congress, enforcing the law to protect students across America from discrimination on the basis of sex rather than to perpetuate a radical ideology that risks the safety and wellbeing of students. We will continue to fight for what is right, fully investigate these alarming allegations, and enforce the law to the fullest extent.”

Chippewa Valley officials told the Detroit Free Press the district would comply with any investigation, but had not received official notice before the department issued a press release.

The administration announced a similar investigation a day earlier into Buncombe County Schools in North Carolina.

Buncombe County Schools said it would cooperate with any investigation.

“BCS follows the law regarding students’ rights, ensuring all students have access to safe restrooms, locker rooms, and other school facilities,” the district told local ABC affiliate WLOS. “Our schools work with all students and families to ensure every student has access to facilities that meet their needs in a safe and private manner.”

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