California’s state legislature will vote on a bill that would prohibit biological men from girls in the state, because the State is currently one of the country’s largest households for controversial incidents involving Trans athletes.
The Sports Association of the State Lycée, California Interscholastic Federation, is currently under federal survey for potential title IX violations after several controversial incidents involving trans athletes have taken place over the past year.
Governor Gavin Newsom recently declared in an episode of his podcast that he believed that the trans athletes participating in the sports of girls were “deeply unfair” but defended the policies which allow him to sensitivity to the emotions of trans people.
On Thursday, the Secretary of Education Linda McMahon sent an official warning to Newsom and to the rest of the state, which suggests that federal funding could be reduced to the State if it continues to allow the inclusion trans into the sports of girls.
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The woman of the California assembly Kate Sanchez, who proposed the state bill to resolve the issue, AB 89, warned the Democrats of the potential impact if they block this bill, both to the residents of the State and the reputation of their party.
“They must be very thoughtful because, obviously, President Trump is a speech man, so losing this funding, is that really what they want to do?” Sanchez asked. “It’s a fight, I’m not sure that the Newsom administration really wants to face, and if they do, President Trump showed that he was really strong.”
Sanchez believes that the State cannot afford to risk federal funding on a problem that affects such a population.
“There are so many school districts that would be in absolute distress. I really hope it would not happen to this point. I hope we can resolve a resolution and find common ground because we have to come back to the base. I grew up in California. We are injured. There are so many other problems, pocket books, on which we have to focus.”
In California, a law called AB 1266 has been in force since 2014, giving Californian students at the scholastic and college levels to “participate in programs and school activities separated by sex, including teams and sports competitions, and to use installations consistent with its gender identity, regardless of the genre listed on the pupil files.”
The law and the subsequent authorization of athletes Trans to compete with girls and women of the state led to multiple controversies on the issue in the last year only.
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In Riverside, California, two girls from the Cross-Country team from Martin Luther King high school filed a complaint against their school and the California prosecutor, Rob Bonta, a situation Implying a trans athlete in the team. The trial says that the Trans athlete has taken a academic place in a runner and that when the girls wore t-shirts “save the sports of girls” to protest, the school administrators compared them to the swastikas.
The father of a daughter who has lost his university spot against the Trans athlete told PK Press Club Digital We said to his daughter and other girls from the school that “the transgenders have more rights than Cisgender[s]”By school administrators when they protested the athlete’s participation.
The unified school district of Jurupa Voisin has treated a recent national controversy involving an athletic athlete in Jurupa Valley High School (Juvhs) who dominated opponents by amazing margins in the triple jump this season.
Jaspriya Singh, former athlete and sister of Juvhs of a current athlete of the female cross-country team, deplores the situation that Newsom allowed.
In the fall, the Stone Ridge Christian High School’s female volleyball team was to face San Francisco Waldorf in the Northern California Division 6 tournament, but they lost in an ad just before the match on the presence of a Trans athlete in the team.
Sanchez said that she had spoken with dozens of voters from her state who identify as a democrats, but the question has become so overwhelming that these party voters are moving away. Sanchez has added that it becomes particularly more common among state -of -the -state voters.
Kate Sanchez Republican Assembly, R-Santa Margarita. (California State Assembly)
“Our Hispanic communities, many of them in the state called our office and asked” please continue to push this bill “,” said Sanchez.
“The Hispanic community is a lot of a family, a worker and attentive community who just wants to offer opportunities and security to their family, and to their children and grandchildren. So we have a lot of conversations from top to bottom of the state of saying them” what’s going on? “Before a man.”
The Sanchez bill is one of the two bills to prevent Trans athletes from participating in the sports of girls who will be voted on Tuesday. A second bill to solve the same problem, AB 844, will also obtain a vote.