Current:Home > NewsGeorgia university leaders ask NCAA to ban transgender women from sports -Wealth Navigators Hub
Georgia university leaders ask NCAA to ban transgender women from sports
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:26:25
ATLANTA (AP) — The regents who govern Georgia’s 26 public universities and colleges voted on Tuesday to ask the NCAA and another college athletic federation to ban transgender women from participating in women’s sports.
The unanimous vote came after Georgia Lt. Gov. Burt Jones, a Republican, vowed in August to pass legislation that would ban transgender women from athletic events at public colleges.
The regents asked the NCAA and the National Junior College Athletic Association to conform their policies with those of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. That federation voted in April to all but ban transgender athletes from competing in women’s sports at its 241 mostly small colleges.
Of the 25 schools governed by the regents that have sports programs, four are members of the National Junior College Athletic Association, five are members of the NAIA, and the remaining 16 are NCAA members. The University of Georgia and Georgia Tech are NCAA members.
All athletes are allowed to participate in NAIA-sponsored male sports. But the only athletes allowed to participate in women’s sports are those whose biological sex assigned at birth is female and have not begun hormone therapy.
The much larger NCAA began in August to follow the standards of national and international governing bodies for each sport. Before that, the NCAA policy for transgender athlete participation in place since 2010, called for one year of testosterone suppression treatment and documented testosterone levels submitted before championship competitions.
Board of Regents Secretary Chris McGraw said that the junior college federation allows some transgender students to participate in women’s athletics in some circumstances.
Of the 25 schools governed by the board that have intercollegiate sports programs, five are NAIA members, four are members of the junior college federation and 16 are members of various NCAA divisions.
“Those are three very different sets of rules that our institutions’ athletic programs are governed by at this point,” said McGraw, also the board’s chief lawyer, who briefly presented the resolution before it was approved with no debate. Kristina Torres, a spokesperson, said board members and Chancellor Sonny Perdue had no further comment. Perdue is a former Republican governor while board members have been appointed by Republican Gov. Brian Kemp.
The NCAA didn’t immediately respond to an email seeking comment on Tuesday.
Opponents say those seeking bans on transgender participation in women’s and girls’ sports are seeking political gain.
Jeff Graham, the executive director of LGBTQ+ rights group Georgia Equality, said the university system “should recognize the importance of diversity at many levels and should be there to care about the educational experience of all of their students regardless of their gender or gender identity.”
“I’m certainly disappointed to see the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia is spending its time passing resolutions that only serve to stigmatize transgender students and perpetuate misinformation about the reality of what is happening within athletic competitions involving transgender athletes,” Graham told The Associated Press in a phone interview.
Jones, a possible Republican contender for governor in 2026, thanked the regents for their vote in a Tuesday statement. Senate Republicans showcased the issue in August when they heard from five former college swimmers who are suing the NCAA and Georgia Tech over a transgender woman’s participation in the 2022 NCAA women’s swimming championships at the Atlanta university.
“The work female athletes put into competing should be protected at all cost, no matter the age,” Jones said. “This action brings us one step closer toward achieving that ultimate goal.”
Transgender participation in women’s sports roiled Georgia’s General Assembly in 2022, when lawmakers passed a law letting the Georgia High School Association regulate transgender women’s participation in sports. The association, mostly made up of public high schools, then banned participation by transgender women in sports events it sponsors.
That law didn’t address colleges. According to the Movement Advancement Project, a group that lobbies for LGBTQ+ rights, 23 states have banned transgender students from participating in college sports, although a court ruled that Montana’s ban was unconstitutional in 2022.
The August state Senate hearing focused on the participation in the 2022 NCAA swimming championships by Lia Thomas, a transgender woman who swam for the University of Pennsylvania and won the 500-meter freestyle. The witnesses and senators also took aim at Georgia Tech, arguing that the host of the event shared blame for allowing Thomas to participate and share a locker room with other swimmers.
Georgia Tech and the university system have denied in court papers that they had any role in deciding whether Thomas would participate or what locker room she would use.
veryGood! (114)
Related
- Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
- A lawsuit accuses a Georgia doctor of decapitating a baby during delivery
- Save $50 on the PlayStation 5 and shop deals on PS5 games now
- 3-month-old baby dies after being left alone in car in Houston
- At site of suspected mass killings, Syrians recall horrors, hope for answers
- Taylor Swift reveals '1989' as next rerecorded album at Eras tour in LA
- Officers in Washington state fatally shoot man who fired on them, police say
- China is edging toward deflation. Here's what that means.
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- US probing Virginia fatal crash involving Tesla suspected of running on automated driving system
Ranking
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Russia hits Ukraine with deadly hypersonic missile strike as Kyiv claims local women spying for Moscow
- Virgin Galactic all set to fly its first tourists to the edge of space
- Report: Few PGA Tour-LIV Golf details in sparsely attended meeting with Jay Monahan
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Retired Col. Paris Davis, Medal of Honor recipient, receives long-overdue recognition
- Karlie Kloss Attends Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour Despite Rumored Rift
- Emmy Awards rescheduled to January 15 due to Hollywood strikes
Recommendation
Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
Lahaina, Hawaii, residents share harrowing escape from devastating wildfires: 'Everything is gone'
Massachusetts joins a small but growing number of states adopting universal free school meals
Dating burnout is real: How to find love while protecting your mental health
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
How did the Maui fires start? What we know about humans making disasters worse
Inside Russia's attempts to hack Ukrainian military operations
Pink Barbie cheesesteak a huge hit in central N.Y. eatery