WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court declined Monday to take up an appeal from parents in Oregon who want to prevent transgender students from using locker rooms and bathrooms of the gender with which they identify, rather than their sex assigned at birth.
The case came from a school district near Salem, Oregon’s capital city. The federal appeals court in San Francisco had upheld a Dallas, Oregon, school district policy that allows transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity.
Parents sued over the policy in 2017, saying it caused embarrassment and stress.
A lower court refused to block the policy and the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed that ruling, writing that the school district did not violate students’ constitutional rights or a law that protects people from discrimination based on sex in education programs.
Similar lawsuits have been dismissed by courts in other parts of the country.
About 15,000 people live in Dallas, a town in an agricultural area 15 miles (24 kilometers) west of Salem.
Comments are not available on this story.
Send questions/comments to the editors.
-
Outdoors
Spending the winter in an off-the-grid cabin in the Maine woods
-
Letters
Letter to the editor: Pine Tree Power provides cheaper option to monopolies
-
Letters
Letter to the editor: Moving forward calls for seeing more than one side of an issue
-
Arts Review
Art review: See nature from a new angle in photo show at Cove Street Arts
-
Sports
This UMaine team wants to make some history of its own