(Image" MSHSL)
The MSHSL said it will “continue to review the existing state laws alongside the new Presidential Executive Order and its timeline, processes for states, and requirements that are included.”
In addition to MSHSL, the United States Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights is launching a Title IX investigation into the California Interscholastic Federation.
The department claims both associations “publicly announced plans to violate federal antidiscrimination laws related to girls’ and women’s sports.”
“State laws do not override federal antidiscrimination laws, and these entities and their member schools remain subject to Title IX and its implementing regulations,” the Department of Education said in a statement about the investigations.
The order, titled “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports,” mandates that Title IX, the federal law banning sex discrimination in schools, be interpreted as prohibiting the participation of transgender girls and women in female sports. Schools that don’t comply with the order risk losing federal funding and could face legal action.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association updated its participation policy after the order, saying it “provides a clear, national standard” and its board of governors is reviewing the mandate and “will take necessary steps to align NCAA policy in the coming days.”
In December, NCAA President Charlie Baker said he was aware of “less than 10” transgender athletes among the more than half a million student-athletes governed by the NCAA.
Mr. Trump has signed multiple other executive orders targeting transgender people: one asserting the federal government recognizes only two sexes — male and female — and that “these sexes are not changeable and are grounded in fundamental and incontrovertible reality,” and another aiming to restrict transgender people from serving in the military.
The Trump administration previously made claims that it may dismantle the Department of Education. The department is estimated to allocate over $1.2 billion to Minnesota this year. If it closed, experts warn it would have significant impacts on the state.


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