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Workshop being held in Windsor to assist people with the legal name and gender marker change process in Ontario
Workshop being held in Windsor to assist people with the legal name and gender marker change process in Ontario

CTV News

time7 days ago

  • General
  • CTV News

Workshop being held in Windsor to assist people with the legal name and gender marker change process in Ontario

A workshop is being held in Windsor on Saturday for the 2SLGBTQIA+ community. Dana Rosamund Teagle is leading the workshop. Rosamund Teagle is a web and software developer for , a free online tool that helps navigate the legal name and gender marker change process in Ontario. The site offers guidance on required documents, fees and steps — with a focus on trans inclusion and reducing administrative barriers. Rosamund Teagle said they've been running ID clinics for teaching trans people how to change their name and gender markers in the province since 2021. 'If I can be a person who's like, hey not only have I been through this myself, I've also helped this huge pile of people go through it as well, and I think that gives people short of the confidence they need to tackle that,' says Rosamund Teagle. Rosamund Teagle said they've noticed how meaningful the workshops and website are to people. 'I really believe also very firmly in trans people helping trans people with solving trans problems whenever possible,' says Rosamund Teagle. Rosamund Teagle says it's free to attend the workshop. 'I've heard from the people who have been to these workshops and benefited from my site, that it's meant a lot to them for it to be lead by someone who is also trans themselves,' says Rosamund Teagle. The workshop begins at 6:30 p.m. at Hackforge HQ at 300 Ouellette Ave. Trans, non-binary, gender-diverse individuals and their allies are invited to connect with Rosamund Teagle and learn about the site plus have conversations about accessibility, identity and the power of self-determination. The event will include presentations, a question and answer period and open dialogue. - By Dustin Coffman, AM800

Trans athlete pioneer's new book refutes 'moral panic' over inclusion in women's sports
Trans athlete pioneer's new book refutes 'moral panic' over inclusion in women's sports

CBC

time12-06-2025

  • Sport
  • CBC

Trans athlete pioneer's new book refutes 'moral panic' over inclusion in women's sports

Social Sharing In the past couple of years, we've seen the incredible growth of women's sport. New leagues, expansion teams and a lot more media coverage. Growth is exciting, necessary and long overdue. But something that is less wonderful are the movements that claim to "protect" or "save" women's sport, alleging that trans women athletes are ruining the sanctity of women's sport. There have been recently enacted federal policies in the U.S., as well as organizations that seek to amplify the "injustices" against cis-gendered women in sports. A lot of these policies and campaigns seek to prohibit children from sports. On May 1, the Football Association in the U.K. banned trans women from playing amateur or professional football. According to the BBC, there are fewer than 30 trans women among millions of registered players, and currently no trans women playing professional football. Zero. It's completely nonsensical that there are policies being made against professional athletes in spaces where there are no trans athletes at all. Just a few days ago, Riley Gaines, a former U.S. collegiate swimmer (who once tied for fifth place with trans swimmer Lia Thomas ) was embroiled in an online battle with one of the most storied athletes of all time, U.S. multi-gold medallist gymnast Simone Biles. Biles was defending the inclusion of all women while Gaines is famously anti-trans. Former hockey player Harrison Browne talks new book on gender rights in sport 9 minutes ago Duration 21:03 CBC Sports senior contributor Shireen Ahmed is joined by Browne and his sister, investigative journalist Rachel Browne, to chat about their new book Let Us Play: Winning the Battle for Gender Diverse Athletes. "Straight up sore loser" is one of the comments Biles hurled at Gaines in a heated exchange on X. Kudos to Biles for taking a stand on what's become one of the defining issues of injustice in sport of our time. Two months ago, John Oliver had a hilarious bit on his comedy show about the far right (and others) weaponizing women's sport for their political agenda. The hysteria and moral panic about trans women in sport is not new, but seems at a boiling point. In response, the wider trans community is working hard to educate people and create safe spaces for their community. Harrison Browne, from Oakville, Ont., was the first trans athlete to play professional hockey. "Brownie" as he is known to teammates and fans, played in the NCAA and the now-shuttered Professional Hockey Federation with the Buffalo Beauts. Browne and his award-winning investigative journalist and producer sister, Rachel, co-wrote a book called Let Us Play: Winning the Battle for Gender Diverse Athletes. It's a brilliant piece of work and laid out in an accessible manner detailing data that refutes vacuous arguments from disingenuous people pretending to care about women's sports. It offers a personal perspective, but also a glossary of terms that are very helpful. Let Us Play provides salient points, including how concepts like "fairness" are being obscured to target a marginalized community. The book also points out that factors other than gender, biology or hormones, such as "socioeconomic status, race and sometimes sheer luck can help determine the success of an athlete wherever they live or compete." In the first chapter, the Browne duo write at length about "moral panics" and why they are harmful and have been used as weapons of oppression against many communities in sport, not just trans athletes. During the Paris 2024 Olympics 10,500 athletes competed and there were three transgender or non-binary athletes — Nikki Hiltz (U.S.), Hergie Bacyadan (Philippines) and Canada's Quinn. None of them won medals. We did, however, see a disgusting smear campaign launched at boxing gold medallist Imane Khelif of Algeria and Taiwan's Lin Yu-ting. Neither of those women identify as trans, they are just racialized women who don't fit a particular mold and were attacked for their success. The entire debacle was infuriating to witness. It exposed bad faith actors as not actually caring about preserving the integrity of women's sport but just attacking those who appear too masculine. The reality is that the numbers of trans participants are so low they don't affect the outcome of the landscape of women's sports. In Canada, U Sport does not ask the gender of an athlete that registers on their portal to play. They simply ask the individuals to register for the category and sport. A representative of U Sport said their policy allows participation in assigned birth or the gender that the athlete identifies with as long as they comply with Canadian Anti-Doping Program regulations. It's not that complicated. Meanwhile in Alberta, Danielle's Smith Conservative government announced a few days ago that birth certificates will be used as documentation to support the province's ban on trans athletes. It may also unfairly affect athletes who are not trans but have differences in sex development (DSD). Transgender women will be "harmed immensely" by the policy, along with female athletes who are not trans, Florence Ashley, an assistant professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Alberta, told CBC News. Instead of fairness in athletics, Ashley said, the ban will foster discrimination, harassment, fear and false challenges. "Even if that's not the intent, that will be the effect," she said. Both professional women's leagues in Canada (Northern Super League and Professional Women's Hockey League) celebrate Pride and have numerous athletes who identify as gay. Neither league has a policy on trans athletes, nor do they ask the players how they identify. "We don't have [an policy yet] and we might not have an official policy, but whatever we create, we want to build it with players at the table," said NSL founder Diana Matheson. The PWHL has faced some criticism for not yet having a gender policy, but in March, league executive Jayna Hefford said it is working on a policy, but wants to make sure they get it right. "We've really focused on education this season with our players and that started at our orientation camp with sessions where we made sure people feel educated enough to have an important discussion," Hefford said. One of the most poignant takeaways from my conversation with Browne and his sister was about the humanity of a trans person. The idea that people will transition to win a medal yet undergo attacks on their identity, their lives, and be exposed to hatred is wild. "Given the minuscule number of trans athletes, the swath of legislative efforts and hateful campaigns targeting youth and high school students is absurd," they write. Integrity in sports comes from protecting the entire ecosystem. Selective inclusion is not inclusion at all, and parroting nonsensical talking points from people who have rarely shown an interest in women's sport seems too convenient at this time. Sports need all women to thrive and play in safety and leagues, and communities must educate themselves and support. Fairness and respect are supposed to go hand in hand. I hope those things aren't compromised to gain favour with people who firmly perch on the wrong side of history.

Riley Gaines, activist athletes call for prosecution against officials letting males in women's sports
Riley Gaines, activist athletes call for prosecution against officials letting males in women's sports

Fox News

time05-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Fox News

Riley Gaines, activist athletes call for prosecution against officials letting males in women's sports

Thursday marked exactly four months since President Donald Trump signed the "Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports" executive order. But incidents of trans inclusion in girls' and women's sports continue to persist across the country. Democrat-stronghold states like California, Maine, Minnesota, Oregon and Washington have openly defied the order and deferred instead to their state laws on the issue, resulting in national controversies involving biological males competing in and often dominating high school girls' sports in recent months. The Trump administration has launched investigations and even filed lawsuits to counter this wave of incidents. But press secretary Karoline Leavitt has suggested the administration could go a step further. In an April 18 press conference, while discussing Maine's defiance on the issue, Leavitt asserted Trump's order and Title IX as federal law, noting that violators could be "prosecuted." Since then, many Democrat-controlled states like Maine and California have refused to acquiesce to Trump's demands. Former NCAA swimmer and conservative influencer Riley Gaines, the leading figure in the national movement to keep males out of women's sports, told Fox News Digital that she would support prosecution as a response to the issue. "I would love to see prosecution because I believe what is happening is criminal," Gaines said. "The way that we have been told that a man's feelings matter more than our physical safety, than our rights to participate, to call ourselves champions, I believe that is a criminal action, therefore I believe it is a criminal offense. "Someone somewhere has to be made an example of, otherwise you will have the woman-hating Democratic Party continue with full steam ahead. Gaines, who infamously tied with trans swimmer Lia Thomas in the 2022 NCAA women's championships, was only one of many women who were impacted by Thomas' participation. The event was hosted at the Georgia Institute of Technology and Gaines said she believes that the school's president, Angel Cabrera, is one of the first that should be in line for prosecution over the issue. "I believe university officials should be charged. I believe certainly that in the state of Georgia, that the Georgia Tech president, who has continued to be very smug, who has continued to not attest or answer to any of the claims that we are making that happened on his pool deck," Gaines said of those who should be prosecuted. Fox News Digital has reached out to Georgia Tech for comment. Gaines leads a lawsuit against the NCAA over her experience with Thomas alongside several other women's swimmers who competed in the 2022 championships. Those plaintiffs include former University of Kentucky swimmer Kaitlynn Wheeler and former University of North Carolina swimmer Kylee Alons. Wheeler and Alons both agree with Gaines in supporting criminal prosecution against officials who have allowed trans athletes to compete in women's sports. "I think that if schools, official states, whatever it is, are knowingly defying the law and violating Title IX especially by forcing girls to share locker rooms, change in front of boys, lose out on their opportunities, everything Title IX is supposed to stand for, I think there should be serious consequences," Wheeler told Fox News Digital. "We're not just talking about policy disagreements, this is about knowingly stripping rights away from women and girls. If you break federal law there should be consequences like Riley said, and if that means prosecution in some of these states, then yeah, bring it on." Alons questioned how one could not be in favor of prosecution against those officials. "When you see the harm that this is causing women and girls, how could you not want to support prosecuting defying this?" Alons told Fox News Digital. "There's just so much harm being done and obviously there is a law for a reason, because it is causing harm so I would definetely support more action than just empty threats." The attorney representing Gaines, Wheeler, Alons and other women in their lawsuit against the NCAA, William Bock of the Independent Council on Women's Sports, not only supports the notion of prosecuting officials letting the issue continue, but believes it's "necessary." "At this point there's no excuse, the executive order has been in place since February 5," Bock told Fox News Digital. "People have known for four months now, and if three-four months later, you're still knowingly defying federal law, then of course a prosecution makes sense, and it's evidently necessary to protect women." So far, Trump's enforcement of his executive order has only extended to a funding freeze to the University of Pennsylvania, where Thomas competed, temporary funding pauses against Maine that have since ended, and a Department of Justice lawsuit against Maine too. Trump's administration has launched investigations against three other state high school sports leagues (California, Minnesota and Massachusetts) and the DOJ has given California a deadline of this upcoming Monday to amend its policies that allow trans athletes in girls' sports. Gaines, Wheeler and Alons all find Trump's stance on the issue "refreshing" but would generally like to see more action. "Hopefully we'll see enough with the warnings, that's how I feel," Gaines said. "We're ready to see some action." Wheeler added, "The executive order is a good start, but we need more than that signature, we need really enforceable protection that will supersede his presidency… it's a step in the right direction, but we're not satisfied." At the college level, Trump's executive order resulted in a change to the NCAA's gender eligibility policy just one day after the order was signed. Unlike the old policy, the new policy asserts that only females can compete in the women's category in official competition. However, the new policy has come under heavy criticism by women's rights activists since it was signed for offering no tangible outline of how it will enforce the policy, and a lack of enforcing gender testing. In late March, Ithaca College in New York admitted to letting a trans athlete compete in a Division III rowing competition, telling Fox News Digital that the participation of the trans athlete was due to a "misunderstanding" by the coaching staff about what was considered an official NCAA event, and referenced the policy's allowing of male practice players. The NCAA has provided a statement to Fox News Digital, saying the competition the Ithaca trans athlete competed in "will be considered a mixed team and not eligible to compete against women's teams. Ithaca stated their intent to adhere to the policy which allows for practice opportunities and the NCAA appreciates Ithaca's responsiveness." But the NCAA did not indicate that the results of the event would be voided or that Ithaca would face any consequences. The initial goal of the Gaines vs. NCAA lawsuit was to force the governing body to keep biological males out of women's college sports entirely. In the wake of the policy change, the lawsuit's goal remains intact but also expanded. "We've reached out to the NCAA and their attorneys and we've given them the opportunity to resolve this matter at least, if we can't reach an agreement on accountability for the past, to put in place a policy that actually protects women and has some enforceability behind it and ensures that only women participate in college women's sports," Bock said. "We put that in writing and they haven't gone down that route with us… their policy is toothless and ineffective and doesn't protect the rights of women." Bock added that their lawsuit will also be seeking monetary damages for all the female athletes who have been affected. "These are significant damages and there were several hundred women were harmed and we think that a jury in Georgia is going to find that damage amount very significant." Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

New mom marathoner says Olympian helped spark threats and hate against her for opposing trans inclusion
New mom marathoner says Olympian helped spark threats and hate against her for opposing trans inclusion

Fox News

time24-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Fox News

New mom marathoner says Olympian helped spark threats and hate against her for opposing trans inclusion

On April 19, U.S. Olympic middle distance runner Nikki Hiltz posted a TikTok video that included footage of an interview with women's marathon runner Natalie Daniels. The post came just two days before Daniels was set to compete in the Boston Marathon, and just six months after she gave birth to her first child. Hiltz's TikTok opened with a clip of Daniels sharing how she considered not competing in the marathon because biologically male trans athletes would be competing in the women's field. The clip was originally from a promotional interview with the activist sportswear brand XX-XY Athletics. In the same post on the popular social media platform, Hiltz encouraged Daniels to drop out because of her concerns about trans inclusion, while disagreeing with the new mother's stance against it. For Hiltz, the post was in line with the athlete's regular TikTok content, which often shows the Olympian promoting pro-transgender beliefs and arguing against opposition to trans inclusion in sports. Hiltz is a biologically female athlete who competes in the women's category, while identifying as transgender and non-binary. Soon after Hiltz's TikTok post went live, the reaction from it was aimed at Daniels, who said many of Hiltz's followers and fans began to send her startling messages. "I didn't think there would be this rabid cruelty," Daniels told Fox News Digital of the response she received from the interview. "People were trying to find us when we were in Boston." Daniels alleges one person told her, "'I live in Boston, and if I see you on the street, I'm going to hunt you down.'" The new mother said the worst alleged comment she saw was from a person who said, "'I hope that your son comes out as trans and never speaks to you again.'" Her son was only six months old at the time. Daniels said she ultimately takes responsibility for the messages directed towards her and her family. Still, she cited Hiltz's TikTok for contributing to the backlash. "[Hiltz] has freedom of speech also. So [Hiltz's] opinion is just as valid to be shared as mine is," Daniels said. "I think [Hiltz] encouraged a pile-on that got really out of hand, probably, I think, very quickly … I think the fact that [Hiltz] didn't do anything about it is unsurprising. "I think I'm ultimately responsible for what I said. And I know that what I said was said out of love and a desire to continue supporting and encouraging women and women's sports." Still, it didn't make the experience any easier for Daniels. "The very hateful messages were upsetting. There were a few times where I would just be, I don't want to cry, but a few times I would just start crying," she said. "And I would tell my husband, 'I'm sorry, it's just like a lot, it's a lot to deal with, to have people being like 'You're this evil hateful bigot,' or 'You're stupid.'" "Instead of having this very rational engagement, they went straight to threats and violence." Fox News Digital reached out to Hiltz's talent agency, Hawi Management, for a response. When the day of the Boston Marathon came, April 21, Daniels was prepared for potential attacks and heckling against her on the course after getting messages warning her of it, she alleges. But instead, she only ever heard roaring chants of support, she claims. She even had one of her best finishes, reaching the finish line in 2:50:04 in 110th place. The love continued on social media, as she saw an outpouring of praise and respect that eventually overshadowed the support she was getting for standing up for women's sports and appearing in the XX-XY Athletics interview to begin with. For Daniels, it helped validate a decision that she made, partially due to the experience of becoming a new mother. Daniels said that during her pregnancy, a trip to an obstetrician included a survey that assumed the only reason she was pregnant was due to failed birth control, and not her own intentions. "In society, I just feel like there is this reductive definition of what it means to be a woman, and what it means to be a woman is basically one thing, and it's access to abortion. And in our culture, that just kinda seems like that's all any of us are supposed to care about," Daniels, a native of Virginia, said. She added that the survey, and the growing cultural stigmatization of pregnancy, fed right into her passion for protecting female athletes from trans inclusion as well. "I know those things may be different things, but it all ties into this dehumanization of women. To me it feels like in this culture, in this political climate, womanhood is this incredibly nebulous, undefinable thing," she added. The decision earned Daniels praise and support during the marathon and online but not from her running club, Light Horse Track Club in Washington, D.C., which she alleges was more aligned with Hiltz than her. Daniels said she was confronted by the decision to appear in the XX-XY Athletics interview by the club's leadership. Daniels said she offered to make a statement clarifying that her stance wasn't meant to attack trans people for their identities, but to stand up for women like herself. But that wasn't going to be enough, she said. She alleges they offered to let her continue running for the club if she would issue an apology and publicly recognize the ability for a biological male to become a woman, which she refused to do. Daniels alleges that she was told by the club that in order to appease its directors, she had to share a statement on social media that read: "'I now understand that a person can take hormones and surgery, and they can become a woman.'" "I was like, 'I am not going to do that. I cannot do that…' It goes completely against my Christian values," she said. "It goes completely against what I know about how God works." Daniels said she then found out about her removal from the team via a text message and email from the board while she was sitting on her patio. So now, she is starting her own running club with XX-XY Athletics and founder Jennifer Sey. And while she is still adjusting to the regular online hate, and even the occasional heckle from spectators at competitions, Daniels said she is looking forward to raising her family and embracing her new role in the movement to keep trans athletes out of women's sports. The Light Horse Track Club did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

High school girls allege track meet officials forced them to take off 'Protect Girls Sports' shirts
High school girls allege track meet officials forced them to take off 'Protect Girls Sports' shirts

Fox News

time13-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Fox News

High school girls allege track meet officials forced them to take off 'Protect Girls Sports' shirts

EXCLUSIVE: California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) track and field officials have been accused of forcefully telling teen track meet athletes to remove their shirts that read "Protect Girls Sports" at a postseason event. The CIF has acknowledged to Fox News Digital that the incidents did occur. The CIF Southern Section Division 3 Prelims at Yorba Linda High School on Saturday erupted into a political rally over the issue of trans inclusion in girls' sports with multiple competitors and attendees wearing the shirts, hoisting picket signs and speaking out at a press conference. The protests came in response to a biologically male trans athlete who competed in the girls' high jump, long jump and triple jump for Jurupa Valley High School. Multiple female competitors have told Fox News Digital that officials at the meet allegedly approached them and told them to remove the shirts, and did not give the girls the liberty to go and take them off elsewhere. The girls allege the officials made them take off the shirts immediately, under the officials' supervision, and didn't give them any additional time or opportunities to do it elsewhere. "They didn't let us go and do anything unless we removed the shirt," 15-year-old Brea Olinda High School student Lilly Ingallinera, said. "They said, 'you have to remove it right now!' … He didn't leave until we took it off." Ingallinera added that she found the official's orders "weird," and preferred it if he asked her coach or a female official to relay the message instead. "I thought it was a little weird that this grown man was coming up to us and persistently saying 'I need you to take it off.' I think they should have told our coaches to come tell us instead of this official that I know is older than us and a grown adult and I feel like either a woman should have done it or he should have done it on the speaker telling everyone and not just individually telling everyone," Ingallinera said. Fellow Brea Olinda student Julia Teven, 17, alleged that the official who confronted her wouldn't "take no for an answer." "You could tell he was not going to take no for an answer," Teven said. "He was standing right there watching us like 'you better take it off'. That's basically how it kind of felt." Teven and Crean Lutheran student Reese Hogan, 16, alleged that officials made them feel that if they did not take off their shirts, then they would be disqualified from the event. "It wasn't said but it was implied that if I didn't take my shirt off then and there, then something could potentially happen to my spot, it wasn't said but it was implied," Hogan said. "Throughout the day it was kind of getting a little bit more stricter… getting a little bit more hostile with their voices… they never said anything about getting disqualified, but it was kind of implied by the tone of their voice and the way that they said things." The girls alleged the officials at the meet went up to other athletes who wore the "Protect Girls Sports" shirts and made those athletes remove them as well. Hogan added that she was forced to remove her shirt on the field during warm-ups and then again at the gate after stepping out of the venue and trying to come back in, while her hands were full of other supplies. "I was like 'Is it okay if I walk in and take it off? I don't really have hands right now' and she was like 'No, you're going to have to take it off, you can't come in here with that shirt on,'" Hogan alleged. "They kind of were just making us take the shirts off wherever we were." Teven, Hogan and fellow Crean Lutheran student Olivia Viola said the officials told them the reasoning behind asking to remove the shirts was because the shirts weren't official school uniforms. However, the girls also said that other athletes wearing gear with college names or other brands that weren't official school uniforms weren't asked to remove their shirts. "I just found it really, like, really, it felt like it was unfair, just kind of targeted at, at what we were standing for, because the shirts weren't saying anything offensive. It wasn't derogatory. All it was saying was to protect women's sports," Viola said. "And it was really clear that they only wanted our shirts off because of what we were supporting and didn't care about the actual role because of the other athletes that we're wearing." The CIF provided a statement to Fox News Digital confirming that the girls were asked to remove the shirts. "Per the CIF Southern Section Playoff Bulletin, all athletes must be dressed in proper, school issued, track uniforms. The student-athletes were asked to comply with this while in the on-field event area, as they were wearing said shirts over their school issued uniform," the statement read. The trans athlete ultimately finished in the top 10 in the girls' high jump, long jump and finished in first place in the triple jump. By virtue of placing in the top-10 in all those events, the athlete will advance in the state semifinals, while the three female athletes who finished in 11th place in those events will all miss out. The girls who competed in those events had to wait through an hours-long intermission after temperatures exceeded 100 degrees Farenheit, putting the event in a weather delay due to dangerous heat levels. All four girls claim that the police presence at the meet was heightened to levels they had never seen at a high school track meet, as the event became a hotbed for debate over the national conflict over trans athletes in girls' sports. Jurupa Valley's trans competitor has prompted controversy throughout the season, breaking long-held girls' records at various meets. In addition to the shirts and a press conference where students, parents and community leaders spoke out against the CIF and California state government for continuing to protect trans inclusion, the crowd of spectators in attendance boisterously either cheered or jeered the trans competitor throughout the day. Footage on social media shows some spectators chanting "that's a boy!" at the athlete, while Viola said other fans only cheered for the trans athlete during the event while remaining silent for the female competitors. "I know it was like, really, really split, specifically, like when he was jumping, and it was like you could visibly see it, almost like it felt like half the stadium was, like, against it. And then there was like a little chunk of people over here that would, like, cheer really loudly for everything he did," Viola said. "It just was bothersome to me. It was a little bit sad to hear people cheering louder for the biological male competing in a female sport than the females competing in the female sports. That part was just a little bit, that part was saddening to me." However, the four girls also expressed sympathy for the athlete over the insults that were hurled at it by the other spectators. "I don't, I don't condone the like, the bullying, the yelling of this person. I think it's 100% on the people in authority who are allowing it to happen," Viola said. Teven and Ingallinera say they even spoke to the athlete during breaks on Saturday, and don't believe the athlete is at fault for the situation "I genuinely believe he doesn't have a harmful intent towards girls sports. I think it's the kind of like CIF allowing him that's kind of put him in his position," Teven said. "I think genuinely, he's just, like, being enabled by the CIF, and he's just taking his opportunity presented to him." Ingallinera even said the athlete was "very nice" and believes the CIF is putting the athlete in an unfair position. "I did talk to this guy, and he was very, he was very respectful, very kind. He didn't really say anything hurtful things. I didn't say anything rude to him. And I was just like, there he was very nice," Ingallinera said. "I think that if CIF didn't allow them to compete, they would be competing with the guys division instead of the girls." The CIF is currently under investigation by the U.S. Department of Education for allowing trans athletes to compete in girls' sports, and potential Title IX violations. California was one of the first states to openly defy President Donald Trump's "Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports" executive order after he signed it on Feb. 5. "The CIF provides students with the opportunity to belong, connect, and compete in education-based experiences in compliance with California law [Education Code section 221.5. (f)] which permits students to participate in school programs and activities, including athletic teams and competitions, consistent with the student's gender identity, irrespective of the gender listed on the student's records," the CIF previously said in a statement to Fox News Digital. California Governor Gavin Newsom addressed the issue during an episode of his podcast in early March. "Well, I think it's an issue of fairness," Newsom said to conservative influencer Charlie Kirk. "I completely agree with you on that. It's deeply unfair. "So that's easy to call out the unfairness of that. There's also a humility and a grace… these poor people are more likely to commit suicide, have anxiety and depression, and the way that people talk down to vulnerable communities is an issue that I have a hard time with as well. "So both things I can hold in my hand. How can we address this issue with the kind of decency that I think you know is inherent in you, but not always expressed on the issue? "The question you're asking is the question we've been asking ourselves for months and haven't been able to answer. What is that line? How can you make this fair? I haven't been able to figure it out, and I'm about as transparent about this as anybody out there, especially in my party on this. To the extent someone can and do it in a way that's respectful and responsible and could find the kind of balance, then I'm open to that discussion." Fox News Digital reached out to Newsom's office on the latest controversy but has not heard back. Follow Fox News Digital's sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

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