Northern Virginia schools at risk of losing funding over transgender bathroom policies

Date: Category:US Views:1 Comment:0


Five northern Virginia school districts are at risk of losing their federal funding after they rejected the terms on an agreement with the Education Department to resolve probes into their transgender students policies.

Districts representing Alexandria City, Arlington County, Fairfax County, Loudoun County and Prince William County have been placed on high-risk status, the agency said Tuesday. All federal funding sent to these school districts will now be done by reimbursement only, forcing the schools to pay their education expenses up front.

More than $50 million of formula funding, discretionary grants and impact aid grants are at risk. Education Department officials said they are now proceeding with efforts to suspend or terminate federal funding to these school districts.

“States and school districts cannot openly violate federal law while simultaneously receiving federal funding with no additional scrutiny,” Education Secretary Linda McMahon said in a statement. “The Northern Virginia School Divisions that are choosing to abide by woke gender ideology in place of federal law must now prove they are using every single federal dollar for a legal purpose.”

The Education Department said the schools were found to be in violation of Title IX, the federal education law that bars sex discrimination, because of their policies allow transgender students to use restrooms and locker rooms that align with their gender identity. Officials said the agency’s Office for Civil Rights finished its investigation on July 25 and the school districts did not sign a proposed resolution agreement by its Aug. 15 deadline.

The department's action marks a major step against the D.C. area's suburban school systems, and it is one that is most often deployed against entities with a history of financial instability, poor fiscal management, a track record of unsatisfactory performance with federal funds, and other missteps. In one instance, the U.S. Virgin Islands school system was designated by the department as a "high-risk" grantee in the late 1990s because of unsatisfactory performance. The agency has also imposed the designation on Guam and American Samoa.

The Trump administration has said Title IX will now only be interpreted based on biological sex and has sought to end transgender student participation in sports teams and use of single-sex facilities that align with their gender identity.

But the school districts’ policies align with a landmark case in the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals that bolsters transgender students’ rights in the state. In 2021, the Supreme Court punted on the long-winding legal battle over transgender students’ rights to use bathrooms that match their gender identity in Gavin Grimm’s case against the Gloucester County School Board in Virginia.

The 4th Circuit sided with Grimm twice, ruling the transgender bathroom ban was unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause. The Supreme Court’s decision to not hear the case meant the appeals court’s decision remained in place.

The Supreme Court punted again in 2024 on an Indiana school bathrooms case, but has agreed to take up a pair of challenges over state laws barring transgender students from women's sports.

Juan Perez Jr. contributed to this report.

Comments

I want to comment

◎Welcome to participate in the discussion, please express your views and exchange your opinions here.