The greatest votes in the California high school district to protect the sports of girls

NEWYou can now listen to PK Press Club articles!

The greatest district of the school by registrations and land of the State of California voted 3-2 to adopt a resolution of the title IX which would only allow students in the sports of girls on Monday.

The vote occurs while state educational agencies are faced with a trial of the US Ministry of Justice for the alleged violations of the title IX by allowing biological men to play in the sports of girls.

Kern High School District regularly registers more than 40,000 students and employs more than 1,700 employees per year in his 31 schools. Now it becomes the 16th school district, the school or the individual board of directors in California to adopt an amendment to comply with title IX, rejecting the policy of the current state which protects trans athletes in sports for girls.

CLICK HERE for more sports cover on Foxnews.com

The resolution was written by the president of the Chino School Board Valley Unified District of Education, Sonja Shaw. The Shaw district is one of 16 in California to also adopt a resolution on the issue.

“I have the author of this resolution to be the voice of our communities – to stand with our daughters and protect the truth that should never have been reduced to silence,” said Shaw. “The boys are boys. Girls are girls. God made them beautiful as they are. It is time to put fairness, truth and common sense in education.”

The school district of Kern, separated from the school district of Kern but shares a county, was one of the other districts to offer its own resolutions in August.

Trans athletes were legally authorized to participate in the sports of girls under the law of the State of California dating from 2013. President Donald Trump signed the executive decree “keeping men out of female sports” in February, but California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) became one of the first secondary leagues in the country to announce it.

Trump’s GM has announced that it would continue the state on the issue in July, weeks after an Athlete Trans won two state titles on girls’ athletics on the last day of May. The DoJ is engaged in a similar trial with the educational agencies of Maine on the same problem, and gave a deadline of October 10 to that of Minnesota to change its policies on the issue, otherwise a trial should also be launched there.

The continuation of the state by the state of trans athletes in the sports of girls led to several controversial incidents through the State, and some led to separate proceedings.

Within the transgender crisis of Gavin Newsom

In the County of Riverside, two female cross-country runners continued the unified school district of Riverside after a Trans athlete took one of their university spots. The trial partially advanced the previous requests to be rejected in September. In this same county, the players of women’s volleyball continued the unified school district of the Jurupa after having passed the three previous seasons to share a field and the locker room with a Trans teammate – the same athlete who resumed the athletics titles of the girls in the spring.

Governor Gavin Newsom openly said that he accepted that the men who participate in the sports of girls are “unfair”, and even said that he had heard complaints concerning the issue of his parents “sharing the same ideas” in the football matches of his children.

The Newsom office previously provided a statement to PK Press Club Digital suggesting that the problem of trans -state athletes is not its responsibility.

“CIF is an independent non -profit organization that governs secondary sports. California Department of Education is a separate constitutional office. None of the two is under the authority of the governor. CIF and the CDE declared that they followed the existing state law – a law which was adopted in 2013 and signed by Governor Jerry Brown (Non Newsom) and in accordance with 21 other states.

A Bipartite survey By the public Policy Institute of California noted that the majority of California residents oppose the organic athletes of males participating in female sports.

This figure included more than 70% of Parents of the State School.

“Most Californians argue forced transgender athletes to compete in the teams corresponding to the sex attributed to them at birth,” said the survey.

“The solid majority of adults (65%) and probable voters (64%) argue that transgender athletes compete on teams that correspond to the sexual relations allocated to them, and not on the sex with which they identify. An overwhelming majority of public schools (71%) support such a requirement.”

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top