by KPMLAW | Apr 25, 2016 | KPMBlog, News, Uncategorized, Updates
The issue of transgender restrooms continues to evolve, and last week, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Richmond, Virginia became the first federal court to weigh in on the issue. The ruling comes in the case of G.G. v. Gloucester County School Board. The case has received a great deal of attention due to the recent controversial legislative enactments in North Carolina and other states, which have attempted to legislate which restroom transgender persons must use. G.G. was born female and when the vents of this lawsuit had taken place, had begun hormone therapy. G.G. legally changed his name to a traditionally male name and prior to his sophomore year, informed the school that he was a transgender boy. By all accounts, G.G. lived all aspects of his life as a boy. In late 2014, the Gloucester County School Board prohibited G.G. from using the male restroom in his high school. G.G. sued the School Board on the grounds that the school discriminated against him in violation of Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause of the Constitution, and he moved for a preliminary injunction to stop the school’s restroom prohibition. The District Court denied the injunction, holding that G.G. lacked sufficient evidence after it refused to consider hearsay expert testimony on the topic. It further held that using a unisex bathroom in the school was not unduly burdensome compared to the hardship to the other students caused by G.G’s presence in the men’s restroom. Finally, the District Court granted the School Board’s Rule 12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss the Title IX allegations, claiming that requiring G.G. to use...