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JEFFERSON CITY — Maplewood Richmond Heights School District administrators on Monday called a new state law restricting transgender athletes discriminatory and didn’t shut the door on future legal action.
The new law, which the St. Louis County district called an attack on transgender students, requires athletes to play on sports teams corresponding with the sex on their birth certificate — a requirement at odds with a resolution on which the district school board had signed off two months before legislators approved the law in May.
The law took effect Monday.
The district said in a Monday message to parents that it had received rules from the Missouri State High School Activities Association “enforcing this discriminatory legislation,” which also applies to public and private colleges.
“It is especially disappointing that so much energy and hatred was directed at an issue that involved fewer than 10 students in the entire state who were participating in sports under MSHSAA’s former regulations,” the administrators said in a Monday message to parents.
District administrators said there weren’t currently any transgender students in the district wishing to play sports.
“However, when and if a student does decide to participate,” the administrators said, “MRH will work with the student and their parents/guardians to consider any and all options — legal and otherwise — necessary to support that student’s desire to participate in sports and any other activities available to MRH students.”
MSHSAA’s policy prior to the new law said a transgender girl couldn’t play on a girls sports team “until one calendar year of documented medical/hormone treatment and/or suppression is completed.”
The policy said that to maintain eligibility, the athlete would have to “provide continuing medical documentation” of “appropriate hormone levels.”
The past MSHSAA policy also allowed transgender boys to participate on boys teams without the transgender boys undergoing hormone therapy.
Though supporters of the new law have focused on transgender women and girls, Missouri’s restrictions also apply to transgender boys, who will no longer be able to play on all-boys teams.
Girls and transgender boys are still allowed to play on teams designated for boys if there is no girls team, such as in football or baseball.
The administrators said they would “continue to promote an environment that affirms our students’ identities, which ultimately will contribute to their overall well-being and success.”
The Missouri law, which follows the lead of other conservative states, expires in four years, on Aug. 28, 2027.
While opponents have characterized the legislation as a discriminatory attack on a small group of transgender young people, proponents say they are protecting girls contests from athletes who have an unfair advantage because of their sex designated at birth.
A poll released last week by St. Louis University and YouGov suggested a majority of Missourians were in agreement with restrictions.
The poll of 900 likely voters found that 67% opposed allowing transgender student-athletes to play on sports teams that match their gender identity, rather than the gender they were assigned at birth.
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