Lawmakers define male, female in Nebraska law for school sports
LINCOLN — All Nebraska student-athletes will soon be legally required to play on interscholastic sports teams based on the student's sex at birth under a legislative bill passed Wednesday at the governor's urging.
Legislative Bill 89, the 'Stand With Women Act' from State Sen. Kathleen Kauth of the Millard area, passed 33-16 after a one-hour debate. Speaker John Arch of La Vista limited the length of time for the third round of debate by labeling the bill as 'controversial and emotionally charged.'
Nebraska will join more than two dozen states with similar laws already on the books. While LB 89's passage is good, Kauth said, it's not the finish line.
'We're kind of in a marathon,' Kauth told the Nebraska Examiner. 'We're at mile three or four.'
Gov. Jim Pillen after the vote confirmed he would sign the bill into law. He said the 'legislative win' would lead to 'many more victories for Nebraska's female athletes, as we ensure a level and fair playing field for all girls who compete.'
State Sen. Megan Hunt of Omaha, who again led opposition to LB 89, said the bill was about 'exploiting women's sports as a proxy to attack transgender people,' particularly children, and a push for 'authoritarianism.'
'It signals that we are willing to prioritize political theater over actual governance, that we are willing to criminalize difference, that we will twist Title IX, which was meant to expand opportunity for everybody, into a tool of exclusion,' Hunt said. 'This bill is not about sports, and it's not about protecting women.'
Under the bill, 'sex' would be defined as whether someone 'naturally has, had, will or would have, but for a congenital anomaly or intentional or unintentional disruption, the reproductive system that at some point produces, transports and utilizes' either eggs (female, woman or girl) or sperm (male, man or boy) for fertilization.
Public school competitive sports would be restricted to students' sex at birth, for males or females only, unless the sport is coed/mixed. There would be an exception for sports with no female equivalent team, such as football.
Private schools would need to adopt a similar policy if student-athletes compete against public institutions.
A student-athlete would need to verify sex at birth with a doctor's note before participating in single-sex sports. Kauth said she envisions such verification coming during a student's physical exam.
State Sen. John Cavanaugh of Omaha said seventh grade physicians don't include a 'genital inspection' — which Kauth repeats her bill does not require — and that the bill 'does not specify that the doctor has to adhere to the definition of sex that you put into this.'
'It just says that they have to answer that question,' Cavanaugh said. 'In your rush to get this done, to get something to check a box, you haven't even done it well.'
All 245 public school districts in the state, as well as community colleges, state colleges and the University of Nebraska, would need to adopt a policy complying with the new law. Enforcement of the new law would be left up to each individual school district.
The bill mirrors the current status quo for Nebraska schools after the Nebraska School Activities Association ended a Gender Participation Policy that had been in place since 2016. Fewer than 10 students had applied and been approved under the policy, which offered a narrow path for transgender students to participate in sports matching their gender identity.
The National Collegiate Athletic Association made a similar change earlier this year.
Both athletic associations changed their policies following executive orders from President Donald Trump to administratively define sex as binary. Pillen issued a similar executive order in 2023 that continues to apply to most state agencies.
Kauth's LB 89 would have originally applied to school and college bathrooms and locker rooms, but at the request of State Sen. Merv Riepe of Ralston, a decisive vote for overcoming a filibuster, the bill was limited to sports.
'Sometimes making incremental steps is the best way to go,' Kauth said May 14, when the Riepe amendment moved forward to keep LB 89 moving.
The bill required at least 33 votes to move forward in the face of opposition, meaning Kauth needed Riepe or one Democratic lawmaker in his place. All Democratic lawmakers opposed the bill, as did Hunt, a nonpartisan progressive.
State Sen. Loren Lippincott of Central City, the only LB 89 supporter to speak during the limited debate, said the law 'protects fairness, safety and opportunity for our female athletes.'
'This isn't about exclusion,' he said. 'It's about ensuring our daughters, sisters and friends have a level playing field to compete, succeed and shine.'
Kauth said she was 'a bit disappointed' about not being able to address school bathrooms or locker rooms this year but that she would bring those issues back in 2026. She said she and Riepe have discussed what comes next and that he has mentioned he wants to watch and see what happens in the next year, which would help determine Kauth's next steps.
Riepe said May 14 that he would not support bathroom restrictions because he was against turning the Legislature into a 'vehicle for fear, overreach and culture war crusades.'
'I did not run for office to become part of the 'Nebraska State Potty Patrol,'' Riepe said during the most recent debate.
Pillen, speaking with the Nebraska Examiner in April, said he would accept the pared-back LB 89 'if that's where it ends up.' He said if a boy goes into a woman's restroom, 'the rest of the boys will take care of him.'
Kauth said LB 89 would prevent self-policing and that a 'high-trust society' would give faith that someone under her law is on the 'right' sports team, or as in her larger bill, the 'right' bathroom.
Some opponents, such as Hunt and Cavanaugh, have said Kauth's bill would lead to questions of whether anyone is allowed in the 'right' bathroom or locker room, regardless of their sex or gender identity, based on their appearance.
State Sen. John Fredrickson of Omaha said that someday soon the 'fog' against transgender Nebraskans would lift and supporters of Kauth's bill would move on to the next 'craze.'
However, he said, lawmakers would be left with the 'rubble' and how they voted.
'It's a political football. It's using a community as a pawn, and it's doing so at a time when frankly the house is on fire and it's essentially saying, 'Don't look over here, let's talk about this.' And real people, real Nebraskans, are the collateral damage of that type of activity.'
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USA Today
2 days ago
- USA Today
Judge rules against Stephen F. Austin in Title IX case: What are national implications?
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Defendant lawyers urged the court to disregard the policy interpretation handed down by the U.S. Department of Education 46 years ago, citing a 2024 Supreme Court case between Loper Bright Enterprises and Raimondo. If the court declined, however, defendant lawyers claimed SFA still complies with Title IX under the 1979 guidance. After two days in court, spanning 17 hours and 14 witnesses, Judge Truncale issued a written ruling in favor of the plaintiffs. SFA has been ordered to reinstate all three women's teams. Truncale affirmed that the Loper Bright case cannot be applied to Title IX in what plaintiff attorney John Clune called an "incredibly important" win for gender equity in sports. "If a court were to find that Loper Bright meant that the Department of Education was not allowed to rely on policy interpretations of their own regulations, the entire framework for compliance with gender equity in sports would be thrown out the window," Clune told USA TODAY. "You'd still be required to have gender equity in sports, but what that means and how you decided would no longer exist. "... Really happy about the ruling, but we're not surprised by the ruling. If you follow the law, this is what the outcome should be." SFA has 30 days to file an appeal to the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, according to federal rules of appellate procedure. Spokespersons for the athletic department and university did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Should SFA file an appeal, it would likely seek expedited or emergency treatment of this appeal, as fall classes begin Aug. 25. What is the three-part test? Under the Department of Education's three-part test, a school can be in compliance with the participation aspects of Title IX in any one of the following ways: The plaintiffs in this case argued that SFA violated all three prongs. The plaintiffs filed a report by former chief executive officer of the Women's Sports Foundation, expert witness Donna Lopiano, Ph.D., to prove such. Using EADA data and annual NCAA participation reports, Lopiano wrote that women made up 62.8% of SFA's enrollment during the 2023-24 academic year but less than 35% of SFA's varsity athletes. SFA cited a 2024 Supreme Court ruling between Loper Bright Enterprises and Raimondo in an effort to have the three-part test thrown out. The Supreme Court's decision made in favor of Loper Bright overturned a 40-year precedent known as 'the Chevron doctrine' directing courts to defer to government agency interpretations of "ambiguous" laws. But Judge Truncale wrote in his decision that Loper Bright is about an agency's interpretation of a statute, not an agency's interpretation of its own regulation. He also wrote that Loper Bright does not overturn any case law that previously interpreted policy. Thus, it does not apply to Title IX's 1979 policy interpretation. Breaking down the Title IX lawsuit against Stephen F. Austin State University Sophia Myers, Kara Kay, Ryann Allison, Elaina Amador, Berklee Andrews and Meagan Ledbetter filed a class action lawsuit on June 30 against Stephen F. Austin State University (SFA) after it announced the elimination of women's beach volleyball, women's bowling and men's and women's golf on May 22. The six plaintiffs, represented by renowned Title IX attorneys Clune and Arthur Bryant, are current athletes on the women's beach volleyball and bowling teams. They argued that the university violated Title IX by depriving them of equal opportunity in intercollegiate athletics and sought an emergency preliminary injunction to preserve the three women's programs 'and all other women's teams at SFA, until this case is resolved.' "Title IX mandates that schools provide equal participation opportunities for men and women to compete in intercollegiate sports," the initial complaint read. "Nonetheless, SFA has a long history of depriving female athletes of an equal opportunity to participate. Consistent with that history, SFA opted to further discriminate against women in violation of Title IX by eliminating three successful women's teams: beach volleyball, bowling, and golf. SFA's decision undercuts Plaintiffs' civil rights and, if permitted to move forward, will irreparably harm their academic and athletic careers." SFA, represented by Marlayna Marie Ellis and Sheaffer Kristine Fennessey of the attorney general's office, argued that the plaintiff's case is based "exclusively on a three-part test contained in guidance and interpretation documents, rather than the statute or 1975 implementing regulation.' Defendant lawyers urged the court to disregard the three-part test but affirmed that SFA is Title IX compliant regardless, citing the test's first and third prongs. The first prong requires 'the number of male and female athletes is substantially proportionate to their respective enrollments.' The third requires 'the institution is fully and effectively accommodating the interests and abilities of the underrepresented sex.' Defendant lawyers claimed there is 'no strict rule' defining "substantially proportionate,' and that SFA 'effectively accommodates the interest and abilities of women, despite the discontinuation of the women's beach volleyball, bowling, and golf teams.' Financial pressure from House settlement not valid defense for cutting women's sports SFA opted into the House settlement, where schools are able to pay athletes directly starting this athletic year with a $20.5 million cap per institution. These new financial pressures are why athletic director Michael McBroom said the decision to cut teams was made. The athletic department reported a $1 million surplus during the 2024 fiscal year, with about $24 million in institutional support out of $28.8 million in total operating revenue. In FY2023, SFA reported a $61,000 deficit, with $19.4 million in institutional support. And in FY2022, SFA reported a $275,000 deficit, with $17.7 million institutional support. Plaintiffs argued, successfully, that "budgetary constraints are not a legitimate defense to Title IX." "The funding of those revenue-sharing payments for football players and men's basketball absolutely cannot come at the expense of women's sports," Clune said. "So this is a huge message to schools across the country. Whatever you have to do to figure out how you're going to fund your revenue-sharing payments, it's not going to come at the expense of women's opportunities to participate in sports. That's a big deal." Reach USA Today Network sports reporter Payton Titus at ptitus@ and follow her on X @petitus25.


The Hill
2 days ago
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College at center of USA Fencing fight agrees to deal with Trump admin on trans athletes
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Fox News
2 days ago
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Trump admin comes to agreement with school of trans fencer seen in viral protest video
The U.S. Department of Education announced Friday it came to an agreement with Wagner College on the issue of biologically male trans athletes in women's sports. The agreement cites a viral incident where female fencer Stephanie Turner kneeled to protest a trans fencer who competed for Wagner, at a USA Fencing event. Wagner has agreed to apologize to all of its female athletes who competed against the trans athlete, Redmond Sullivan, per the DOE announcement. The school will also adopt new biological definition for male and female in its sports programs, per the announcement. Footage of Turner kneeling toward Sullivan at the Cherry Blossom Open in Maryland went viral in early April. Turner was given a black card, the harshest penalty in the sport, for her refusal to fence Sullivan, disqualified from the event and dealt a 12-month probation. Sullivan did not represent Wagner at the event. Wagner later told Fox News Digital that Sullivan was no longer on the fencing team. The NCAA had changed its gender eligibility policy to comply President Donald Trump's executive order on the issue in early February. But now Wagner is complying directly with Trump's administration to address the incident. The agreement comes just weeks after the University of Pennsylvania came to a similar agreement over the 2022 Lia Thomas controversy. "On the heels of our agreement with the University of Pennsylvania, the Trump Administration secured another historic Title IX agreement with Wagner College. After Stephanie Turner, a female athlete, bravely take a knee and forfeit a fencing match against a male competing in a female category, our Office for Civil Rights launched its investigation into Wagner College and the University of Maryland, where the event was hosted. Wagner has agreed to apologize for putting a male on their female fencing team and will revise its policies to comply with Title IX," Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said. "Because of President Trump's leadership, the tide is turning on our nation's campuses. We commend Wagner College for working with the Department to repair its harm to female athletes and ensuring future generations of women and girls have equal opportunities." The Department of Education provided a list of conditions: