DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

California school near Nevada is caught up in conflicting policies on transgender athletes

December 19, 2025
in News
California school near Nevada is caught up in conflicting policies on transgender athletes

SACRAMENTO — A Lake Tahoe school district is caught between California and Nevada’s competing policies on transgender student athletes, a dispute that’s poised to reorder where the district’s students compete.

High schools in California’s Tahoe-Truckee Unified School District near the border with Nevada have for decades competed in the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Assn., or NIAA. That has allowed sports teams to avoid making frequent and potentially hazardous trips in poor winter weather to competitions farther to the west, district officials say.

But the Nevada association voted in April to require students in sex-segregated sports programs to play on teams that align with their sex assigned at birth — a departure from a previous approach allowing individual schools to set their own standards. The move raised questions for how the Tahoe-Truckee district would remain in the Nevada association while following California law, which says students can play on teams consistent with their gender identity.

Now, California’s Department of Education is requiring the district to join the California Interscholastic Federation, or CIF, by the start of next school year.

District Superintendent Kerstin Kramer said at a school board meeting this week the demand puts the district in a difficult position.

“No matter which authority we’re complying with, we are leaving students behind,” she said. “So we have been stuck.”

There are currently no known transgender student athletes competing in high school sports in Tahoe-Truckee Unified, district officials told the education department in a letter. But a former student filed a complaint with the state in June after the board decided to stick with Nevada athletics, Kramer said.

A national debate

The dispute comes amid a nationwide battle over the rights of transgender youth in which states have restricted transgender girls from participating on girls sports teams, barred gender-affirming surgeries for minors and required parents to be notified if a child changes their pronouns at school. At least 24 states have laws barring transgender women and girls from participating in certain sports competitions. Some of the policies have been blocked in court.

Meanwhile, California is fighting the Trump administration in court over transgender athlete policies. President Trump issued an executive order in February aimed at banning transgender women and girls from participating in female athletics. The U.S. Justice Department also sued the California Department of Education in July, alleging its policy allowing transgender girls to compete on girls sports teams violates federal law.

Gov. Gavin Newsom, who has signed laws aimed at protecting trans youth, shocked party allies in March when he raised questions on his podcast about the fairness of trans women and girls competing against other female athletes. His office did not comment on the Tahoe-Truckee Unified case, but said Newsom “rejects the right wing’s cynical attempt to weaponize this debate as an excuse to vilify individual kids.”

The state education department said in a statement that all California districts must follow the law regardless of which state’s athletic association they join.

At the Tahoe-Truckee school board meeting this week, some parents and one student said they opposed allowing trans girls to participate on girls teams.

“I don’t see how it would be fair for female athletes to compete against a biological male because they’re stronger, they’re taller, they’re faster,” said Ava Cockrum, a Truckee High School student on the track and field team. “It’s just not fair.”

But Beth Curtis, a civil rights attorney whose children attended schools in Tahoe-Truckee Unified, said the district should fight NIAA to stop it from implementing its trans student athlete policy, saying it violates the Nevada Constitution.

Asking for more time

The district has drafted a plan to transition to the California federation by the 2028-2029 school year after state officials ordered it to take action. It’s awaiting the education department’s response.

Curtis doesn’t think the state will allow the district to delay joining CIF, the California federation, another two years, noting the education department is vigorously defending its law against the Trump administration: “They’re not going to fight to uphold the law and say to you at the same time, ‘Okay, you can ignore it for two years.’”

Tahoe-Truckee Unified’s two high schools with athletic programs compete against both California and Nevada teams in nearby mountain towns — and others more distant. If the district moves to the California federation, Tahoe-Truckee Unified teams may have to travel more often in bad weather across a risky mountain pass to reach schools farther from state lines.

Coleville High School, a small California school in the Eastern Sierra near the Nevada border, has also long been a member of the Nevada association, said Heidi Torix, superintendent of the Eastern Sierra Unified School District. The school abides by California law regarding transgender athletes, Torix said.

The school has not been similarly ordered by California to switch where it competes. The California Department of Education did not respond to requests for comment on whether it’s warned any other districts not in the California federation about possible noncompliance with state policy.

Assemblymember Heather Hadwick (R-Alturas), who represents a large region of northern California bordering Nevada, said Tahoe-Truckee Unified shouldn’t be forced to join the CIF.

“I urge California Department of Education and state officials to fully consider the real-world consequences of this decision — not in theory, but on the ground — where weather, geography and safety matter,” Hadwick said.

Austin writes for the Associated Press.

The post California school near Nevada is caught up in conflicting policies on transgender athletes appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

ICE Separates Boy, 6, From Father During Effort to Deport Them to China
News

Immigration Officials Deport Queens 6-Year-Old and Father Who Fled China

by New York Times
December 19, 2025

A father and his 6-year-old son who were separated by immigration officials in New York City have been deported to ...

Read more
News

Epstein Files Include 1996 Child Porn Complaint That F.B.I. Ignored

December 19, 2025
News

‘What a surprise’: Internet scoffs as ‘everyone except Clinton’ redacted in Epstein dump

December 19, 2025
News

Justice Dept. Will Appeal Dismissal of Comey and James Indictments

December 19, 2025
News

Trump’s Name Is Rarely Mentioned in New Epstein Files

December 19, 2025
Will ‘Avatar’ become a 7-film saga? James Cameron ‘always has something up his sleeve’

Will ‘Avatar’ become a 7-film saga? James Cameron ‘always has something up his sleeve’

December 19, 2025
‘I’m with her all the way!’ Trump doles out well-wishes to exiting lawmaker he snubbed

‘I’m with her all the way!’ Trump doles out well-wishes to exiting lawmaker he snubbed

December 19, 2025
Suspect in Brown and M.I.T. Killings Died 2 Days Before He Was Found, Autopsy Shows

Suspect in Brown and M.I.T. Killings Died 2 Days Before He Was Found, Autopsy Shows

December 19, 2025

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025