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[PUBLISH]
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
________________________
No. 18-13592
________________________
D.C. Docket No. 3:17-cv-00739-TJC-JBT
DREW ADAMS,
a minor, by and through his next friend and mother, Erica Adams Kasper,
Plaintiff - Appellee,
versus
SCHOOL BOARD OF ST. JOHNS COUNTY, FLORIDA,
Defendant - Appellant.
________________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Middle District of Florida
________________________
(August 7, 2020)
Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, MARTIN and JILL PRYOR, Circuit
Judges.
MARTIN, Circuit Judge:
Drew Adams is a young man and recent graduate of Nease High School in
Florida’s St. Johns County School District. Mr. Adams is transgender, meaning
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when he was born, doctors assessed his sex and wrote “female” on his birth
certificate, but today Mr. Adams knows “with every fiber of [his] being” that he is
a boy. While Mr. Adams attended Nease High School, school officials considered
him a boy in all respects but one: he was forbidden to use the boys’ restroom.
Instead, Mr. Adams had the option of using the multi-stall girls’ restrooms, which
he found profoundly “insult[ing].” Or he could use a single-stall gender-neutral
bathroom, which he found “isolati[ng],” “depress[ing],” “humiliating,” and
burdensome. After unsuccessful negotiations with the St. Johns County School
District over his bathroom use, Mr. Adams brought suit against the St. Johns
County School Board (the “School Board”) through his next friend and mother,
Ms. Erica Adams Kasper. He asserted violations of his rights under Title IX of the
Education Amendments Act of 1972 (“Title IX”), 20 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq., and the
Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. After a bench trial, the District
Court granted him relief on both claims.
This case calls upon us to decide whether the St. Johns County School
District’s policy barring Mr. Adams from the boys’ restroom squares with the
Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection and Title IX’s prohibition of sex
discrimination. We conclude it does not. We affirm the District Court’s decision
on both questions.
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I.
The District Court developed a thorough factual record after a three-day
bench trial of Mr. Adams’s claims. See Adams ex rel. Kasper v. Sch. Bd. of St.
Johns Cty., 318 F. Supp. 3d 1293, 1298–1310 (M.D. Fla. 2018). We recite those
facts here, as necessary.
Drew Adams was born in 2000. At birth, doctors examined Mr. Adams and
recorded his sex as female. That female designation has vexed Mr. Adams
throughout his young life. As Mr. Adams entered puberty, he suffered significant
anxiety and depression about his developing body, and he sought the help of a
therapist and a psychiatrist. In the eighth grade, after introspection and with the
help of therapy, Mr. Adams came to realize he was transgender. He revealed to his
parents that he was a boy, not a girl. Together, Mr. Adams and his family met with
mental health professionals, who confirmed Adams was transgender. In time, Mr.
Adams’s psychiatrist diagnosed him with gender dysphoria, a condition of
“debilitating distress and anxiety resulting from the incongruence between an
individual’s gender identity and birth-assigned sex.” Mr. Adams’s “gender
identity”—his consistent, internal sense of gender—is male, but the sex assigned to
him at birth was female.
To treat and alleviate Mr. Adams’s gender dysphoria, the psychiatrist
recommended Adams socially transition to living as a boy. This included cutting
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his long hair short, dressing in more masculine clothing, wearing a chest binder to
flatten breast tissue, adopting the personal pronouns “he” and “him,” and using the
men’s restroom in public. Mr. Adams embraced these changes. Socially
transitioning to using the men’s restroom, Mr. Adams explained at trial, is “a
statement to everyone around me that I am a boy. It’s confirming my identity and
confirming who I am, that I’m a boy. And it means a lot to me to be able to
express who I am with such a simple action because . . . I’m just like every other
boy.”
The psychiatrist also supported Mr. Adams’s request for medical treatment
for his gender dysphoria. Mr. Adams began a birth control regimen to end his
menstrual cycle and met with social workers and endocrinologists to obtain a
prescription for testosterone to masculinize his body. About a year after his
diagnosis with gender dysphoria, Mr. Adams underwent a bilateral mastectomy to
remove his breast tissue. At the time of trial, Mr. Adams contemplated further
surgeries to alter his internal reproductive organs and external genitalia, but he
could not take those steps before reaching the age of 18.
Alongside his social and medical transition, Mr. Adams amended his legal
documents to reflect his male sex. Following Florida agencies’ established
procedures for gender change, Mr. Adams updated the sex marker on his learner’s
driving permit (which became his driver’s license) and his original birth certificate.
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Both now read “male” or “M.” At the time of trial, Mr. Adams had not yet
changed the sex listed on his U.S. passport but testified he could “very easily go
get that changed” by presenting a letter from his physician stating he was being
clinically treated for gender transition. 1
The transition process, according to Mr. Adams, took “the better part of a
year.” At trial, he described steps in his medical and social transition as a
“rigorous process” through which “medical providers, me, and my parents [agreed]
that this was the right course of action.” Mr. Adams said transitioning led to “the
happiest moments of my life,” “finally figuring out who I was,” and being “able to
live with myself again.” 2 Mr. Adams’s course of treatment—gender transition—
also reflects the “accepted standard of care for transgender persons suffering from
gender dysphoria.” Modern medical consensus establishes that “forc[ing]
1
See Change of Sex Marker, U.S. DEP’T OF STATE,
https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/passports/need-passport/change-of-sex-marker.html (last
visited August 7, 2020).
2
The dissenting opinion’s central flaw is that it does not meaningfully reckon with what
it means for Mr. Adams to be a transgender boy. The dissent describes Mr. Adams as “a
female.” See Dissenting Op. at 47 (calling Mr. Adams “a female who identifies as a male”).
The dissent fails to acknowledge Mr. Adams’s gender transition, his gender dysphoria and
clinical treatment, or the unique significance of his restroom use to his wellbeing. The dissent
also ignores the finding of the District Court that, in light of Mr. Adams’s social, medical, and
legal gender transition, he is “like any other boy.” Adams, 318 F. Supp. 3d at 1296–97
(resolving the parties’ dispute “over whether Drew Adams is a boy”).
Because the dissent does not consider Mr. Adams’s transgender status analytically
relevant, it expresses the view that allowing Mr. Adams to use the boys’ restroom erodes
restroom divisions for all. This argument cannot stand together with the fact, found by the
District Court, that Mr. Adams is “like any other boy.”
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transgender people to live in accordance with the sex assigned to them at birth” is
ineffective and “cause[s] significant harm.” In particular, the Pediatric Endocrine
Society maintains that “not allowing [transgender] students to use the restroom
matching their gender identity promotes further discrimination and segregation of a
group that already faces discrimination and safety concerns.”
Mr. Adams entered Nease High School in ninth grade, after he began
transitioning and presenting as a boy. Mr. Adams’s mother informed the school
that Adams was transgender, currently transitioning, and should be considered a
boy student, but did not discuss Adams’s bathroom use with the school. For his
first six weeks as a ninth grader, Mr. Adams used the boys’ restroom. One day,
however, the school pulled Mr. Adams from class and told him he could no longer
use the boys’ restroom because students had complained. These complaints came
from two unidentified girl students who saw Mr. Adams entering the boys’
restroom. There were no complaints from boy students who shared bathroom
facilities with Adams. Regardless, school officials gave Mr. Adams two choices:
use a single-stall, gender-neutral bathroom in the school office, or use the girls’
facilities.
In issuing this warning to Mr. Adams, Nease High administrators were
acting to enforce the St. Johns County School District’s (the “School District”)
unwritten bathroom policy. For “as long as anybody can remember,” the School
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District has maintained a policy that, for restroom use, “boys go to boys’ rooms,
[and] girls go to girls’ rooms.” The School District defines “boy” and “girl” based
on “biological sex,” separating “biological boys” from “biological girls.” It
administers this policy based on the sex indicated on a student’s enrollment
documents. Because Mr. Adams enrolled in St. Johns County schools in the fourth
grade as “female,” the School District’s policy considered him a “biological girl”
who could not use the boys’ restroom, regardless of Mr. Adams’s updated legal
documents or verified course of medical treatment. Students who fail to abide by
the School District’s bathroom policy can be disciplined for violating the student
code of conduct.
School administrators were not wholly unprepared for Mr. Adams’s plea to
use the boys’ restroom as a transgender boy. In 2012, the School District began to
consider how to best accommodate its lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and
queer (collectively, “LGBTQ”) students. Through research and consultation, the
School District developed guidelines it considered to be “best practices” for faculty
and staff encountering emerging LGBTQ issues raised by students. The School
District implemented this LGBTQ best-practices policy in September 2015, at the
same time Mr. Adams was directed to avoid the boys’ bathroom.
Among other provisions, the best-practices policy instructed educators to use
LGBTQ students’ preferred names and pronouns; prohibit discriminatory bullying
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or harassment; protect students’ private information; allow students to be “open
about their sexual orientation or transgender identity”; and permit students to
“wear clothing in accordance with their consistently asserted gender identity.” For
bathroom use, the best-practices policy clarified: “Transgender students will be
given access to a gender-neutral restroom and will not be required to use the
restroom corresponding to their biological sex.” 3 The policy also stated the School
District’s belief that no law required schools to “allow a transgender student access
to the restroom corresponding to their consistently asserted transgender identity.”
Through researching the LGBTQ best-practices policy, the School District
learned that other school districts—in Florida and in other states—permitted
transgender students to use the restroom according to their gender identity. But the
School District declined to adopt such a policy, in part because it feared any
student might be able to gain access to any bathroom facility by identifying or
pretending to identify as “gender-fluid.”4 The School District, however, had never
3
Through the LGBTQ best-practices policy, the School District also set policy for
transgender students’ use of school locker rooms. That policy provided: “Schools will provide a
transgender student with available accommodations that best meet[] the needs and privacy
concerns of all students. Transgender students will not be forced to use the locker room
corresponding to their biological sex.”
Mr. Adams did not bring a claim for access to the boys’ locker rooms at Nease High
School. This opinion therefore does not address whether the Fourteenth Amendment requires
schools to allow transgender students access to locker rooms consistent with their gender
identity.
4
“Gender-fluid” describes a person who “typically reject[s] notions of static categories of
gender and embrace[s] a fluidity of gender identity.” In other words, a person identifying as
gender-fluid “may feel they are a girl some days and a boy on others, or a combination, or
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encountered or even heard of any gender-fluid students or pretenders seeking
access to all bathroom facilities. The School Board also believed allowing
transgender students to use single-stall restrooms appropriately reconciled
accommodations for transgender students with the privacy rights of non-
transgender students.
Mr. Adams disagreed. He felt “alienated and humiliated” every time he
“walk[ed] past the boys’ restroom on his way to a gender-neutral bathroom,
knowing every other boy is permitted to use it but him.” Mr. Adams believed the
bathroom policy sent “a message to other students who [saw Adams] use a ‘special
bathroom’ that he is different.” Throughout his freshman and sophomore years, he
and his mother protested the School District’s birth-sex-based bathroom policy,
writing letters, meeting with school officials, and filing a complaint with the U.S.
Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights.
Unsuccessful, Mr. Adams—through his mother, Ms. Kasper—sued the
School Board in federal court in June 2017. He alleged the School Board violated
possibly feel that neither term describes them accurately.” As the District Court observed, no
“scientific or medical definition” of “gender-fluid” exists in the record, and other courts have
accepted expert testimony that gender-fluid, unlike gender dysphoria, “is not a clinical term.”
See Doe ex rel. Doe v. Boyertown Area Sch. Dist., 276 F. Supp. 3d 324, 365 (E.D. Pa. 2017),
aff’d, 890 F.3d 1124 (3d Cir. 2018), cert. denied, 138 S. Ct. 2636 (2019). The School District
offered no evidence of gender-fluid students or students pretending to be gender-fluid in St.
Johns County schools. See id. at 376 n.44 (observing a school district had “no evidence that any
student” who requested special restroom access had “other gender identities” beyond boy or girl,
such as “gender-fluid”).
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his right to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment and his rights under
Title IX by barring him from the boys’ bathrooms at school. He asked for
injunctive, declarative, and monetary relief. Mr. Adams then moved for a
preliminary injunction to enjoin the School Board from enforcing its bathroom
policy. The Honorable Timothy J. Corrigan denied his motion for a preliminary
injunction on August 10, 2017, but set the case for a bench trial in December 2017,
on an expedited schedule. Before trial, Judge Corrigan toured Nease High School
with both sides’ counsel to view the bathroom facilities.
After a three-day trial, Judge Corrigan issued findings of fact and
conclusions of law, holding that Mr. Adams was entitled to declaratory, injunctive,
and monetary relief on his constitutional and Title IX claims. The School Board
timely appealed.
II.
After a bench trial, we review de novo the District Court’s conclusions of
law. Tartell v. S. Fla. Sinus & Allergy Ctr., Inc., 790 F.3d 1253, 1257 (11th Cir.
2015). We accept the District Court’s findings of fact, absent clear error. See id.
“We will not find clear error unless our review of the record leaves us with the
definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” U.S. Commodity
Futures Trading Comm’n v. S. Tr. Metals, Inc., 894 F.3d 1313, 1322 (11th Cir.
2018) (quotation marks omitted).
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III.
We turn first to Mr. Adams’s constitutional claim.
The Fourteenth Amendment promises “the equal protection of the laws.”
U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. When state actors draw distinctions using sex or
gender, this constitutional mandate “call[s] for a heightened standard of review.”
See City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 473 U.S. 432, 440, 105 S. Ct. 3249,
3254 (1985). Because sex or gender “generally provide[] no sensible ground for
differential treatment,” id., the Equal Protection Clause tolerates only “exceedingly
persuasive” classifications based on sex or gender, United States v. Virginia
(“VMI”), 518 U.S. 515, 534, 555, 116 S. Ct. 2264, 2276, 2286 (1996). “A gender
classification fails unless it is substantially related to a sufficiently important
governmental interest.” Cleburne, 473 U.S. at 441, 105 S. Ct. at 3255. “Ever since
the Supreme Court began to apply heightened scrutiny to sex-based classifications,
its consistent purpose has been to eliminate discrimination on the basis of gender
stereotypes.” Glenn v. Brumby, 663 F.3d 1312, 1319 (11th Cir. 2011).
A.
Mr. Adams and the School Board are in agreement that our Court is required
to review the School District’s bathroom policy with heightened scrutiny.
Although this standard of review is not in dispute, we first review why heightened
scrutiny is warranted in order to chart a course for our analysis.
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The School Board concedes its policy broadly “discriminates on the basis of
sex” by requiring “biological females to use girls’ bathrooms and biological males
to use boys’ bathrooms.” But Mr. Adams describes the discrimination more
narrowly. He believes the bathroom policy discriminates against him because, by
being transgender, he defies gender norms and stereotypes. He explains that by
defining “boy” and “girl” based on “biological sex,” or sex assigned at birth, the
School Board divides restrooms based on a characteristic that “punishes
transgender students and favors non-transgender students.” He further points out
that the policy forces transgender students (and only transgender students) to
choose between using a single-stall restroom in isolation from their peers or using
a restroom that does not match their gender identity and causes them humiliation
and insult. Mr. Adams says this choice is no choice at all, so the bathroom policy
has the effect of excluding him from all communal restrooms.
It is Mr. Adams who properly tees up the constitutional issue in this case.
The School Board’s bathroom policy singles out transgender students for
differential treatment because they are transgender: “Transgender students will be
given access to a gender-neutral restroom and will not be required to use the
restroom corresponding to their biological sex.” The policy emphasized the
School Board’s position that no law required it to “allow a transgender student
access to the restroom corresponding to their consistently asserted []gender
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identity.” In this way, the policy places a special burden on transgender students
because their gender identity does not match their sex assigned at birth. And, as
this Court announced in Glenn, “discrimination against a transgender individual
because of [his or] her gender-nonconformity is sex discrimination, whether it’s
described as being on the basis of sex or gender.” 5 663 F.3d at 1317; cf. Bostock
v. Clayton County, 590 U.S. ___, 140 S. Ct. 1731, 1741 (2020) (confirming that “it
is impossible to discriminate against a person for being . . . transgender without
discriminating against that individual based on sex”). We therefore apply
heightened scrutiny to the School Board bathroom policy. See Glenn, 663 F.3d at
1320.
B.
Next, we recognize an important government interest behind the School
Board’s bathroom policy. Out of concern for students’ privacy, the School Board
adopted a policy prohibiting Mr. Adams and other transgender students from using
the restrooms matching their gender identity. We believe the School Board’s goal
is a worthy one. Protecting the bodily privacy of young students is undoubtedly an
important government interest. See Whitaker ex rel. Whitaker v. Kenosha Unified
Sch. Dist. No. 1 Bd. of Educ., 858 F.3d 1034, 1052 (7th Cir. 2017) (holding a
5
In its analysis of the equal protection claim, the dissenting opinion barely mentions this
Court’s decision in Glenn. See Dissenting Op. at 57. This is remarkable, because Glenn
established the equal protection rights of transgender people in this circuit.
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school district had “a legitimate interest in ensuring bathroom privacy rights are
protected”); cf. New Jersey v. T.L.O., 469 U.S. 325, 338–39, 105 S. Ct. 733, 740–
41 (1985) (observing, in the Fourth Amendment context, that a “search of a child’s
person” at school “is undoubtedly a severe violation of subjective expectations of
privacy”); Beard v. Whitmore Lake Sch. Dist., 402 F.3d 598, 604 (6th Cir. 2005)
(noting that “[s]tudents of course have a significant privacy interest in their
unclothed bodies” against strip searches at school).
C.
Beyond this, we assume the government may promote its interest in
protecting privacy by maintaining separate bathrooms for boys and girls or men
and women. Mr. Adams, for his part, does not question the ubiquitous societal
practice of separate bathrooms for men and women. Instead, Mr. Adams argues
the School Board’s bathroom policy singles him out for differential treatment on
the basis of his gender nonconformity and without furthering student privacy
whatsoever. The record before us has persuaded us to his view.
The School Board has demonstrated no substantial relationship between
excluding Mr. Adams from the communal boys’ restrooms and protecting student
privacy. We see three constitutional infirmities with the School District’s
bathroom policy. First, the policy is administered arbitrarily. The policy relies
upon a student’s enrollment documents to determine sex assigned at birth. This
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targets some transgender students for bathroom restrictions but not others. Second,
the School Board’s privacy concerns about Mr. Adams’s use of the boys’ bathroom
are merely “hypothesized,” with no support in the factual record. See VMI, 518
U.S. at 533, 116 S. Ct. at 2275. Third, the School District’s bathroom policy
subjects Mr. Adams to unfavorable treatment simply because he defies gender
stereotypes as a transgender person.
1.
The record demonstrates that the School District’s bathroom policy is
administered arbitrarily. This poses a constitutional problem. To pass muster
under the Fourteenth Amendment, a governmental gender classification must “be
reasonable, not arbitrary.” Reed v. Reed, 404 U.S. 71, 76, 92 S. Ct. 251, 254
(1971) (quotation marks omitted).
By way of example, the Supreme Court struck down an arbitrary gender-
based policy in Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S. 190, 97 S. Ct. 451 (1976). See id. at 204,
97 S. Ct. at 460. Craig addressed an Oklahoma statute that outlawed the sale of
3.2% beer to young men under the age of 21 and to young women under the age of
18, purportedly as a means to promote traffic safety. Id. at 191–92, 199, 97 S. Ct.
at 454, 458. Considering the constitutionality of the statute, the Court first cast
doubt on the statistical evidence that young men drink and drive more frequently
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than young women. 6 See id. at 200, 97 S. Ct. at 458. The Court concluded that the
statistical evidence did not demonstrate that gender was a “legitimate accurate
proxy for the regulation of drinking and driving.” Id. at 202, 204, 97 S. Ct. at 459,
460. Then, even setting aside the problematic correlation of gender and drinking
behavior, the Court observed that the statute as written did not even prevent young
men from driving under the influence. This was because the law “prohibits only
the selling of 3.2% beer to young males and not their drinking the beverage once
acquired (even after purchase by their 18-20-year-old female companions).” Id. at
204, 97 S. Ct. at 460. Thus, the Court decided that the statute violated the
Fourteenth Amendment because its terms did not achieve its statutory objective.
Id. Concurring separately, Justice Stewart observed that the statute’s terms
“amount[ed] to total irrationality.” Id. at 215, 97 S. Ct. at 466.
The School District’s bathroom policy suffers from this type of defect. We
set aside for now that the policy treats transgender students differently than non-
transgender students. The policy still runs afoul of the Fourteenth Amendment
6
The Craig Court cautioned that “proving broad sociological propositions by statistics is
a dubious business, and one that inevitably is in tension with the normative philosophy that
underlies the Equal Protection Clause.” 429 U.S. at 204, 97 S. Ct. at 460. The dissent throws
this caution to the wind. It would condone the School District’s bathroom policy because
transgender students in the School District are few and the policy is “99.96 percent accurate in
separating bathrooms.” Dissenting Op. at 50, 59. The dissent considers this result “near-
perfect.” Id. at 50. But this case has come before our Court because Mr. Adams considers the
bathroom policy to be nowhere near perfect. Once again, the dissent does not grapple with Mr.
Adams’s status as a transgender boy.
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because it does not even succeed in treating all transgender students alike. Just as
the statute in Craig did not prevent young men from driving after drinking 3.2%
beer, the bathroom policy does not succeed in excluding every transgender student
from the restroom matching his or her gender identity. This arbitrary result
demonstrates the unconstitutionality of the bathroom policy.
As the District Court found, the School District determines a student’s sex
assigned at birth for purposes of restroom use by looking to the forms the student
presented at the time he enrolled in the District. Even if a student later provides
the District with a birth certificate or driver’s license indicating a different sex, the
original enrollment documents control. The enrollment forms, however, say
nothing about a student’s assigned sex at birth or transgender status. They ask only
whether a student is male or female. At trial, the School District admitted that if a
transgender student enrolled with documents matching his gender identity, he
would be permitted to use the restroom matching his gender identity. At present,
the School Board acknowledges that this loophole in the policy means some of the
District’s transgender students may be using school restrooms that match their
gender identity. See Oral Arg. Recording at 12:05–12:43 (Dec. 5, 2019). But a
transgender student like Mr. Adams, who transitions after enrolling in the School
District, would not be able to use the restroom matching his gender identity. In
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this way, the bathroom policy does not even apply to all transgender students
equally.
Thus, the School District’s criteria for determining a student’s bathroom use
do not achieve the School Board’s stated goal of restricting transgender students to
the restroom of their assigned sex at birth. The designation of a student’s sex on
his school enrollment documents is not a “legitimate, accurate proxy” for his sex
assigned at birth. See Craig, 429 U.S. at 204, 97 S. Ct. at 460. It is arbitrary that
some transgender students—like Mr. Adams—are restricted by the bathroom
policy, while others are beyond its reach. Again, the Fourteenth Amendment
requires a substantial, accurate relationship between a gender-based policy and its
stated purpose. See Cleburne, 473 U.S. at 441, 105 S. Ct. at 3255; Craig, 429 U.S.
at 198, 97 S. Ct. at 457. Because the bathroom policy does not do what it was
designed to do, the School Board cannot show the requisite substantial
relationship. See Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677, 690–91, 93 S. Ct. 1764,
1772 (1973) (plurality opinion) (rejecting a gender-based policy as arbitrary
because the government did not show that the policy promoted “administrative
convenience” by actually saving any money or time (quotation marks omitted)).
2.
And there are broader constitutional concerns. The School Board’s concerns
about transgender students endangering restroom privacy are not borne out by the
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record. To satisfy the Fourteenth Amendment, the government’s justification for a
gender classification “must be genuine, not hypothesized.” VMI, 518 U.S. at 533,
116 S. Ct. at 2275. While a rational basis standard of review “permits a court to
hypothesize interests that might support [governmental gender] distinctions, . . .
heightened scrutiny limits the realm of justification to demonstrable reality.” Tuan
Anh Nguyen v. INS, 533 U.S. 53, 77, 121 S. Ct. 2053, 2068 (2001) (O’Connor, J.,
dissenting).
We must examine the trial record to see whether the government showed a
non-hypothesized justification for its gender classification. For instance, in Glenn,
an employer claimed he fired a transgender woman because “other women might
object to [her] restroom use.” 663 F.3d at 1321. But the record showed that the
office building had “only single-occupancy restrooms,” and the employer testified
he believed lawsuits over restroom use were “unlikely.” Id. Because the record
showed that concerns about restroom use were unfounded, our Court held there
was not sufficient evidence that the employer “was actually motivated” by
restroom-related concerns. Id. As a result, the Glenn opinion said the employer’s
defense was a “hypothetical justification” that was “wholly irrelevant to the
heightened scrutiny analysis.” Id.
Here, the School Board’s concerns about privacy in the boys’ bathrooms are
as hypothetical as those raised in Glenn. After extensive evidence was presented at
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trial, the District Court found that Mr. Adams’s presence in the boys’ bathroom
does not jeopardize the privacy of his peers in any concrete sense. When Mr.
Adams uses the restroom, he “enters a stall, closes the door, relieves himself,
comes out of the stall, washes his hands, and leaves.” The School Board received
no reports of privacy breaches during the six weeks Mr. Adams actually used the
boys’ restroom at Nease. Indeed, the School Board could not produce any
“complaints of untoward behavior involving a transgender student” in the
restroom. Nor could the School Board point to any incidents across the country in
which allowing transgender students to use the restroom according to their gender
identity compromised other students’ privacy. The District Court found that “any
student engaging in voyeurism in the bathroom would be engaging in misconduct
which is [already] subject to discipline through the School District’s code of
conduct,” such that the bathroom policy was not necessary to protect any new
privacy concerns. The court also accepted expert evidence that transgender
students like Mr. Adams “typically seek privacy and discr[eet]ness in restroom use
and try to avoid exposing any parts of their genitalia that would reveal sex
characteristics inconsistent with their gender identity.” In fact, the School Board
conceded at oral argument it was “fair” that some transgender students in the
School District may already be using the bathroom consistent with their gender
identity, without anyone’s knowledge. Oral Arg. Recording at 12:05–12:43. From
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the sum of these facts, we cannot say the School Board has met its burden to show
a genuine, non-hypothetical privacy justification for excluding Mr. Adams from
the boys’ bathroom. See Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1052–53.
Accepting, as it must, the District Court’s finding that Mr. Adams has not
harassed or peeped at other boys while using the boys’ restroom, the School Board
argues Mr. Adams’s mere presence in the boys’ room constitutes a privacy
violation. It asserts that “when Adams enters a boys’ bathroom and there is a
biological boy using the urinal, that biological boy’s privacy rights have been
violated.” Again, this record simply does not support this assertion. Absent such
evidence, we “decline to recognize such an expansive [formulation of] privacy . . .
that would be violated by the presence of students who do not share the same birth
sex.” See Doe ex rel. Doe v. Boyertown Area Sch. Dist., 897 F.3d 518, 531 (3d
Cir. 2018) (holding that transgender students’ access to bathrooms matching
gender identity did not violate non-transgender students’ constitutional privacy
rights), cert. denied, 139 S. Ct. 2636 (2019); see also Parents for Privacy v. Barr,
949 F.3d 1210, 1222 (9th Cir. 2020) (holding that there is no Fourteenth
Amendment privacy right not to share school restrooms with transgender students
who were assigned a different sex at birth); Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1052 (holding a
school could not show the “mere presence of a transgender student in the
bathroom” infringed on other students’ privacy rights, without facts supporting
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tangible breaches of privacy). Simply put, the School Board singled out Mr.
Adams’s use of the restroom as problematic, without showing that Adams did, in
fact, flout or compromise the privacy of other boys when he was in the boys’
restroom.
The School Board next argues its bathroom policy survives heightened
scrutiny because excluding transgender students from the restroom matching their
gender identity keeps private the “different physiological characteristics between
the two sexes.” The Board likens the bathroom policy to the government policies
upheld in Michael M. v. Superior Court of Sonoma County, 450 U.S. 464, 101 S.
Ct. 1200 (1981), and Tuan Anh Nguyen v. INS, 533 U.S. 53, 121 S. Ct. 2053. We
reject these comparisons as inapt.
Michael M. held that a statutory rape law criminalizing sex with underage
girls, but not boys, passed constitutional muster because its goal was to “prevent
illegitimate teenage pregnancies.” 450 U.S. at 470, 101 S. Ct. at 1205 (plurality
opinion). The idea was that “young men and young women are not similarly
situated with respect to the problems and the risks of sexual intercourse,” so the
law bore a substantial relationship to the government’s important interest in
reducing teenage pregnancies. Id. at 471–72, 101 S. Ct. at 1205. Nguyen likewise
addressed pregnancy and childbirth. The Nguyen Court upheld a statute allowing
unmarried U.S. citizen mothers who gave birth abroad to establish citizenship for
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the child automatically, while unmarried citizen fathers of foreign-born children
had to offer proof of paternity. See 533 U.S. at 60, 73, 121 S. Ct. at 2059, 2066.
Because “[f]athers and mothers are not similarly situated with regard to the proof
of biological parenthood,” the law withstood heightened scrutiny. Id. at 63, 121 S.
Ct. at 2060.
The use of the restrooms by boys and girls in closed, locked bathroom stalls
is legally distinct from the reproductive differences between sexes, as related to
pregnancy and childbirth. The District Court here expressly found that the School
District’s bathroom policy did not turn on “something innately different” between
how boys and girls use the bathroom. The District Court also made the finding
that no anatomical differences between the sexes were required to be on display in
the school restrooms. And, “if the School District’s concern is that a child will be
in the bathroom with another child who does not look anatomically the same,”
other possible anatomical differences between students, such as the differences
between pre-pubescent and post-pubescent students, might be just as concerning
from a privacy standpoint. See Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1052–53. But the School
District’s bathroom policy did not account for these factors. According to the facts
found at trial, Mr. Adams’s anatomical differences from his non-transgender male
peers are irrelevant to his use of the boys’ restroom.
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And again here, the School Board’s invocation of privacy for anatomical
differences is internally inconsistent. The School Board ignores that, in many
ways, Mr. Adams has changed the physiological manifestation of his gender. Like
many transgender boys and men, Mr. Adams surgically eliminated his breast tissue
and embarked on hormonal treatment that would “alter the appearance of the
genitals, suppress menstruation, and produce secondary sex characteristics such as
increased muscle mass, increased body hair on the face, chest, and abdomen, and a
deepening of the voice.” Were Mr. Adams to use the school’s restroom for girls,
as the School Board maintains he could, his masculine physiology would present
many of the same anatomical differences the School Board fears if non-transgender
boys used the girls’ restroom. The District Court observed the School Board’s
position that Mr. Adams was free to use the girls’ bathroom “seem[ed]
disingenuous” for these reasons. And of course, because the School Board
identifies a student’s gender based on the paperwork he submitted when he first
enrolled in the school district, Mr. Adams would have been considered a boy under
the policy if he had happened to enroll with his updated legal documents. On this
record, the School Board failed to raise genuine, non-hypothetical justifications for
excluding Mr. Adams from the boys’ restroom.
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3.
The School Board’s bathroom policy also treats transgender students like
Mr. Adams differently because they fail to conform to gender stereotypes. To
survive heightened scrutiny, a sex classification “must not rely on overbroad
generalizations about the different talents, capacities, or preferences of males and
females.” VMI, 518 U.S. at 533, 116 S. Ct. at 2275. And “sex-based stereotypes
are also insufficient to sustain a classification.” Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1051; see
J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B., 511 U.S. 127, 138–40, 114 S. Ct. 1419, 1426–27
(1994) (holding the Equal Protection Clause prohibits peremptory challenges to
jurors based on gender stereotypes); Glenn, 663 F.3d at 1320 & n.9
(“[G]overnmental reliance on gender-based stereotypes is dispositive in . . . equal
protection analysis. . . .”).
Gender stereotypes “presume that men and women’s appearance and
behavior will be determined by their sex.” Glenn, 663 F.3d at 1320. Mr. Adams is
considered transgender “precisely because of the perception that his . . . behavior
transgresses gender stereotypes.” See id. at 1316. Because Mr. Adams was
assigned a female sex at birth but identifies consistently and persistently as a boy
and presents as masculine, he defies the stereotype that one’s gender identity and
expression should align with one’s birth sex. See id. (noting that transgender
persons’ “appearance, behavior, or other personal characteristics differ from
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traditional norms” (quoting Taylor Flynn, Transforming the Debate: Why We
Need to Include Transgender Rights in the Struggles for Sex and Sexual
Orientation Equality, 101 Colum. L. Rev. 392, 392 (2001))).
The School Board’s bathroom policy sought to enforce this gender
stereotype. The School District administered the policy using students’ enrollment
documents as a proxy for their sex at birth. The School Board says this was the
best way to protect all students’ privacy in school restrooms. But this policy
presumes every person deemed “male” at birth would act and identify as a “boy”
and every person deemed “female” would act and identify as a “girl.” Based on
these stereotypes, the School Board labeled Mr. Adams as a “girl” for purposes of
his bathroom use, based solely on his sex assigned at birth. This label gives no
regard to the fact that that Mr. Adams lives and presents as a boy and has been
declared a boy by his family, the State of Florida, the federal government, and his
medical providers. As far as the record shows, Mr. Adams was the only student in
the School District with a “male” birth certificate and driver’s license who was not
allowed to use the boys’ restroom. Nevertheless, the School Board’s bathroom
policy relegated Mr. Adams to single-stall, gender-neutral bathrooms and exposed
him to school discipline for using the restroom matching his gender identity.
These hardships were imposed on Mr. Adams because he is transgender and did
not act or present as female, the sex he was assigned at birth.
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The gender stereotypes the School Board imposed on Mr. Adams track the
stereotypes this Court ruled unconstitutional in Glenn. Vandiver Elizabeth Glenn,
a transgender woman, was fired because her employer perceived her as “a man
dressed as a woman and made up as a woman.” 663 F.3d at 1314, 1320–21
(quotation marks omitted). Ms. Glenn’s employer was “unsettl[ed] to think of
[Glenn] dressed in women’s clothing with male sexual organs inside that clothing.”
Id. at 1314 (quotation marks omitted). This Court held the employer’s discomfort
with Ms. Glenn’s femininity combined with her private anatomy were proof of
unconstitutional gender stereotyping. See id. at 1320–21. Based on the
employer’s comments, this Court concluded Ms. Glenn was fired because she was
transgender and thereby defied gender stereotypes. See id.
As in Glenn, the School District’s bathroom policy labels Mr. Adams as a
“girl” solely because of the gender assigned to him at birth based on his sexual
organs. The policy advances gender stereotypes by deeming Mr. Adams “truly”
female, even though he produced legal and medical documentation showing he
was male. See Grimm v. Gloucester Cty. Sch. Bd., 400 F. Supp. 3d 444, 457 (E.D.
Va. 2019) (“In determining the physical characteristics that define male and female
and the characteristics that are disregarded, the [School] Board has crafted a policy
that is based on stereotypes about gender.” (citing, inter alia, Glenn, 663 F.3d at
1316)), appeal docketed, No. 19-1952 (4th Cir. Sept. 3, 2019). And like Glenn, the
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bathroom policy singles out Mr. Adams for different treatment because he is
transgender. It excludes him from the restroom matching his gender identity and
gives him little choice but to use the restroom in isolation from his peers. See
Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1045 (affirming a preliminary injunction because a school
district caused irreparable harm to a student “when it dismissed him to a separate
[gender-neutral] bathroom” and “stigmatized [him], indicating that he was
‘different’ because he was a transgender boy”). Of course the School Board here
treated Mr. Adams with more respect than the employer in Glenn. School officials
used Adams’s male pronouns, permitted him to wear boys’ clothes to school, and
did not interfere with his decision to identify openly as transgender. Nevertheless,
the Constitution does not tolerate any form of gender stereotyping on the basis of
one’s birth sex and sexual organs. See Glenn, 663 F.3d at 1316–17.
The School Board repeats its concern that allowing Mr. Adams to use the
boys’ restroom could allow “a non-transgender student to pose as a gender-fluid
student to access the bathroom.” But again, the Board offers no evidence that any
students claiming to be gender-fluid have asked for access to all bathroom
facilities. We remain unpersuaded that this concern is anything more than
hypothetical.
The School Board also believes allowing Mr. Adams access to the boys’
restroom threatens the time-honored convention of separate bathrooms for men and
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women, because any person could “claim discrimination” and use a different
bathroom for “no reason at all.” Neither are we convinced by this argument. Mr.
Adams succeeds on his constitutional claim because, first, there is a dearth of
evidence in this record that transgender students are a threat to other students’
privacy. Second, the record demonstrates that the School Board subjected Mr.
Adams to gender stereotyping. We emphasize that the constitutionality of gender-
separated bathrooms is not before us. Although the dissenting opinion seems
anxious to weigh in on this broader issue, no one has argued here that separating
men and women’s restrooms treats men and women unequally, lacks any factual
basis, or perpetuates “invidious, archaic, and overbroad stereotypes” about gender.
See J.E.B., 511 U.S. at 130–31, 115 S. Ct. at 1422.
4.
Because this record reveals no substantial relationship between privacy in St.
Johns County School District restrooms and excluding Mr. Adams from the boys’
restroom, the School District’s bathroom policy violates the Equal Protection
Clause. In so holding, we join the Seventh Circuit, the only other circuit to
encounter this issue, along with the majority of district courts who have taken up
this topic. See Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1054 (holding a transgender boy
demonstrated likelihood of success on the merits of his equal protection claim to
use the boys’ restroom); see also A.H. ex rel. Handling v. Minersville Area Sch.
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Dist., 408 F. Supp. 3d 536, 578 (M.D. Pa. 2019) (granting summary judgment to
transgender girl on equal protection claim for access to girls’ restroom because
school district failed to demonstrate an exceedingly persuasive justification);
Grimm, 400 F. Supp. 3d at 461 (same, for transgender boy); Evancho v. Pine-
Richland Sch. Dist., 237 F. Supp. 3d 267, 293 (W.D. Pa. 2017) (holding
transgender students showed likelihood of success on equal protection claim to
access restrooms matching gender identity); Bd. of Educ. of the Highland Local
Sch. Dist. v. U.S. Dep’t of Educ., 208 F. Supp. 3d 850, 877 (S.D. Ohio 2016)
(same, with transgender girl).
Although this issue is not before us here, we are aware that the Third and
Ninth Circuits have rejected claims from non-transgender students that their school
violated their fundamental right to privacy by separating boys’ and girls’
bathrooms based on gender identity. See Parents for Privacy, 949 F.3d at 1221–26
(affirming dismissal of non-transgender students’ constitutional privacy claim);
Doe, 897 F.3d at 530–31 (holding that non-transgender students could not establish
likelihood of success on constitutional privacy claim). And we subscribe to the
thinking of the Third Circuit when it said that requiring “transgender student[s] to
use single-user facilities” under an assigned-sex-at-birth-based bathroom policy
“would very publicly brand all transgender students with a scarlet ‘T,’ and they
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should not have to endure that as the price of attending their public school.” Doe,
897 F.3d at 530.
This record does not demonstrate that the School Board has met its
“demanding” constitutional burden by showing a substantial relationship between
excluding transgender students from communal restrooms and student privacy.
See VMI, 518 U.S. at 533, 116 S. Ct. at 2275. We therefore affirm the District
Court’s grant of relief to Mr. Adams under the Fourteenth Amendment.
IV.
Mr. Adams also prevails on his Title IX claim. Title IX mandates that no
person “shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the
benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or
activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a).
There is only one dispute about Mr. Adams’s Title IX claim: whether
excluding Mr. Adams from the boys’ bathroom amounts to sex discrimination in
violation of the statute. 7 We conclude that this policy of exclusion constitutes
discrimination. First, Title IX protects students from discrimination based on their
transgender status. And second, the School District treated Mr. Adams differently
because he was transgender, and this different treatment caused him harm. Finally,
7
The parties agree that the St. Johns County School District receives federal financial
assistance and is thus bound by Title IX. They agree as well that the use of the school restrooms
is an “education program or activity” within the meaning of Title IX.
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nothing in Title IX’s regulations or any administrative guidance on Title IX
excuses the School Board’s discriminatory policy.
A.
Our analysis of Mr. Adams’s Title IX claim benefits from the Supreme
Court’s recent decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, 590 U.S. ___, 140 S. Ct.
1731 (2020). Bostock announced that Title VII’s prohibition on sex discrimination
also forbids discrimination based on transgender status. Id. at 1737. The Court
instructed that “it is impossible to discriminate against a person for being . . .
transgender without discriminating against that individual based on sex.” Id. at
1741.
Bostock has great import for Mr. Adams’s Title IX claim. Although Title
VII and Title IX are separate substantive provisions of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, both titles prohibit discrimination against individuals on the basis of sex. 42
U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(1) (Title VII); 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a) (Title IX). Both titles also
employ a “but-for causation standard,” which Bostock found critical to its
expansive interpretation of sex discrimination. See Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1739
(citing Univ. of Tex. Sw. Med. Ctr. v. Nassar, 570 U.S. 338, 350, 133 S. Ct. 2517,
2527 (2013)); Comcast Corp. v. Nat’l Ass’n of African Am.-Owned Media, 589
U.S. ___, 140 S. Ct. 1009, 1014 (2020) (explaining that but-for causation is the
“default” rule for federal antidiscrimination laws). Given these similarities, it
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comes as no surprise that the Supreme Court has “looked to its Title VII
interpretations of discrimination in illuminating Title IX” and its anti-
discrimination provisions. Olmstead v. L.C. ex rel. Zimring, 527 U.S. 581, 616
n.1, 119 S. Ct. 2176, 2195 n.1 (1999) (Thomas, J., dissenting); see, e.g., Franklin v.
Gwinnett Cty. Pub. Schs., 503 U.S. 60, 75, 112 S. Ct. 1028, 1037 (1992) (applying,
in the context of a Title IX claim, Title VII’s conception of sexual harassment as
sex discrimination).
The School Board argues that Title IX does not proscribe discrimination
against transgender people, because the statute was only “intended to address
discrimination plaguing biological women.” Appellant’s Br. at 39. However,
Bostock teaches that, even if Congress never contemplated that Title VII could
forbid discrimination against transgender people, the “starkly broad terms” of the
statute require nothing less. 140 S. Ct. at 1753. This reasoning applies with the
same force to Title IX’s equally broad prohibition on sex discrimination.
Still, the School Board argues that Title IX’s ban on sex discrimination is
somehow different from Title VII’s because “schools are a wildly different
environment than the workplace” and education “is the province of local
governmental officials.” Appellant’s Br. at 43–44. We are not persuaded.
Congress saw fit to outlaw sex discrimination in federally funded schools, just as it
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did in covered workplaces. And, as we have explained, the Supreme Court’s
interpretation of discrimination based on sex applies in both settings.
With Bostock’s guidance, we conclude that Title IX, like Title VII, prohibits
discrimination against a person because he is transgender, because this constitutes
discrimination based on sex.
B.
Of course, Mr. Adams still bears the burden of showing that the School
District discriminated against him by barring him from the boys’ restroom because
he is transgender. With the benefit of the District Court’s careful factfinding, we
are satisfied that Mr. Adams succeeds on his claim of sex discrimination under
Title IX, and we affirm the District Court’s judgment in his favor.
Again, Title IX provides that no person shall, “on the basis of sex . . . be
subjected to discrimination” at school. 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a). Discrimination
“refers to distinctions or differences in treatment that injure protected individuals.”
Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. White, 548 U.S. 53, 59, 126 S. Ct. 2405, 2410
(2006); see also Jackson v. Birmingham Bd. of Ed., 544 U.S. 167, 174, 125 S. Ct.
1497, 1504 (2005) (describing sex discrimination under Title IX as “differential”
and “less favorable” treatment (quotation marks omitted)). Title IX’s
implementing regulations explain that a school cannot “[s]ubject any person to
separate or different rules of behavior, sanctions, or other treatment” on the basis
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of sex. 34 C.F.R. § 106.31(b)(4). Neither can a school “[p]rovide different aid,
benefits, or services or provide aid, benefits or services in a different manner”
because of sex. Id. § 106.31(b)(2).
As with his equal protection claim, Mr. Adams’s claim of sex discrimination
is stated narrowly. He argues the School District excluded him from the boys’
restroom because he is transgender. He says this policy constitutes discrimination
on the basis of sex in violation of Title IX. Although one would never know it
from reading the dissenting opinion, Mr. Adams does not argue that providing
separate restrooms for boys and girls violates Title IX. Nor do we think he could.
The statute’s implementing regulations specifically authorize “separate toilet,
locker room, and shower facilities on the basis of sex,” as long as all facilities are
“comparable.” 34 C.F.R. § 106.33.
The School Board argues Mr. Adams did not suffer any discrimination. The
Board reads Bostock to hold that “a woman who identifies as a man—a
transgender man—is a woman.” Appellant’s Suppl. Br. at 3. This being the
Board’s view, it argues that Mr. Adams was treated just the same as all girl
students at Nease High School. But the School Board, like the dissenting opinion,
misapprehends Bostock. Bostock explained that if an employer fires a transgender
female employee but retains a non-transgender female employee, this differential
treatment is discrimination because of sex. 140 S. Ct. at 1741–42. In the same
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way, Mr. Adams can show discrimination by comparing the School Board’s
treatment of him, as a transgender boy, to its treatment of non-transgender boys.
The Board’s treatment of Mr. Adams is like that deemed discriminatory in
Bostock. If Mr. Adams were a non-transgender boy, the School Board would
permit him to use the boys’ restroom. The School Board allowed all non-
transgender boys to use the boys’ restroom. It allowed all non-transgender
students with male driver’s licenses and birth certificates to use the boys’ restroom.
But because Mr. Adams is a transgender boy, the School Board singled him out for
different treatment. By the very terms of the bathroom policy, the Board refused to
allow Adams, “a transgender student[,] access to the restroom corresponding to
[his] consistently asserted transgender identity.”
Mr. Adams was also treated differently than non-transgender students
generally. If Mr. Adams entered the restroom matching the sex on his legal
documents and his gender identity, he faced school discipline. But non-
transgender students did not face discipline for restroom use corresponding to their
gender identity and their legal documents. Through the bathroom policy, the
School District ousted Mr. Adams from communal restrooms and gave him no
choice but to use the single-stall facilities. In these respects, the Board subjected
Mr. Adams, “as a transgender student, to different rules, sanctions, and treatment
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than non-transgender students, in violation of Title IX.” Whitaker, 858 F.3d at
1049–50; see 34 C.F.R. § 106.31(b)(4).
The record leaves no doubt that Mr. Adams suffered harm from this
differential treatment. Mr. Adams introduced expert testimony that many
transgender people experience the “debilitating distress and anxiety” of gender
dysphoria, which is alleviated by using restrooms consistent with their gender
identity, among other measures. 318 F. Supp. 3d. at 1299 (quotation marks
omitted). Experts also testified that “forc[ing] transgender people to live in
accordance with the sex assigned to them at birth . . . cause[s] significant harm.”
Id. at 1300. Mr. Adams described that he personally suffered “anxiety and
depression” from “walk[ing] past the boys’ restroom on his way to a gender-
neutral bathroom, knowing every other boy is permitted to use it but him.” Id. at
1308. The bathroom policy caused him to feel sorely “alienated” and “different”
from other students because he is transgender. Id. Mr. Adams testified that,
because of the policy, “I know that the school sees me as less of a person, less of a
boy, certainly, than my peers.” R. Doc. 160-1 at 204.
Mr. Adams also suffered harm because he was separated from his peers in
single-stall restroom facilities. Mr. Adams explained it felt like a “walk of shame”
when he had to walk past the communal restrooms for a single-stall, gender-neutral
restroom. It heightened the stigma he felt for being transgender. Mr. Adams had
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little choice in this matter. The evidence at trial established that using the girls’
restroom at school hindered Mr. Adams’s clinical treatment for gender dysphoria.
Because of the bathroom policy, Mr. Adams had to use single-stall restrooms at
school.8 This marked him as different from his peers because he is transgender.
On the basis of this evidence, the District Court found that Mr. Adams
“suffered emotional damage, stigmatization and shame from not being permitted to
use the boys’ restroom at school.” Adams, 318 F. Supp. 3d at 1327. These
consequences are well-recognized as injurious. See Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1045–
47 (affirming a finding of irreparable harm because excluding a transgender
student from the boys’ restroom “stigmatized” the student and caused him
“significant psychological distress” including “depression and anxiety” (quotation
marks omitted)); Dodds v. U.S. Dep’t of Educ., 845 F.3d 217, 221–22 (6th Cir.
2016) (per curiam) (affirming a finding of irreparable harm because excluding a
young transgender student “from the girls’ restrooms has already had substantial
and immediate adverse effects on [her] daily life[,] . . . health[,] and well-being”);
see also Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. ___, 135 S. Ct. 2584, 2602 (2015)
8
The evidence at trial also showed that the School District expected this outcome. The
School District official who developed the bathroom policy testified that she would prefer a
transgender student to use the gender-neutral single-stall facilities instead of the restroom of his
sex assigned at birth. This employee also acknowledged that a transgender student like Mr.
Adams could face “safety, security, and privacy concerns” while using the restroom of his sex
assigned at birth.
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(recognizing that “laws excluding same-sex couples from the marriage right
impose stigma and injury”).
Every court of appeals to consider bathroom policies like the School
District’s agrees that such policies violate Title IX. The Seventh Circuit has held
that “[a] policy that requires an individual to use a bathroom that does not conform
with his or her gender identity punishes that individual for his or her gender non-
conformance, which in turn violates Title IX.” Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1049. The
Sixth Circuit, affirming a preliminary injunction order, stated that, under Title IX,
“transgender students are entitled to access restrooms for their identified gender
rather than their biological gender at birth.” Dodds, 845 F.3d at 221. We agree
with our sister circuits.
C.
The School Board believes 34 C.F.R. § 106.33 of the Title IX implementing
regulations forecloses Mr. Adams’s discrimination claim. Section 106.33 reads:
A recipient may provide separate toilet, locker room, and
shower facilities on the basis of sex, but such facilities
provided for students of one sex shall be comparable to
such facilities provided for students of the other sex.
The School Board argues that the use of the term “sex” in this regulation clearly
means “biological sex,” or sex assigned at birth. Thus, it asserts that dividing
restrooms by sex assigned at birth—requiring transgender boys to use the girls’
restroom and transgender girls to use the boys’ restroom—cannot be
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discriminatory under Title IX. The Board considers Mr. Adams a “biological
female,” and it seeks to exclude him from the boys’ restroom on this basis.
But Mr. Adams’s discrimination claim does not contradict the implementing
regulations for two reasons. First, Mr. Adams is not challenging § 106.33’s
provision of separate restrooms for girls and boys. He is simply seeking access to
the boys’ restroom as a transgender boy. And second, the regulation does not
mandate how to determine a transgender student’s “sex.” Thus, we perceive no
conflict between the text of § 106.33 and Mr. Adams’s successful claim of
discrimination.
Title IX says nothing about Mr. Adams’s “sex.” To start, Title IX and its
accompanying regulations contain no definition of the term “sex.” “Also absent
from the statute is the term ‘biological.’” Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1047. It seems
fair to say that § 106.33 tells us that restrooms may be divided by male and female.
But the plain language of the regulation sheds no light on whether Mr. Adams’s
“sex” is female as assigned at his birth or whether his “sex” is male as it reads on
his driver’s license and his birth certificate. While the School Board maintains that
Mr. Adams’s sex is female, the State of Florida recognizes his sex as male. The
federal government is also prepared to recognize Mr. Adams’s sex as male, if he
seeks an updated passport. As the Supreme Court observed in Bostock,
transgender individuals have “one sex identified at birth and another today.” 140
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S. Ct. at 1746. Title IX and its regulations do not declare which sex should
determine a transgender student’s restroom use. Thus, the language of § 106.33
does not insulate the School Board from Mr. Adams’s discrimination claim based
on his transgender status.
The School Board argues that Bostock endorses its reading of the term “sex”
as strictly “biological sex.” According to the Board, Bostock laid out “a
conception of sex founded in biology and not gender identity.” Appellant’s Suppl.
Br. at 4.
Bostock lends no support to the Board’s interpretation of “sex.” The
Bostock Court expressly declined to decide whether Title VII’s reference to “sex”
means only “reproductive biology” or incorporates “some norms concerning
gender identity.” See 140 S. Ct. at 1739 (quotation marks omitted). The Court felt
it unnecessary to answer this open interpretive question in order to hold
discrimination against transgender people unlawful. Id. Thus, its analysis
proceeded “on the assumption that ‘sex’ signified what the employers suggest,
referring only to biological distinctions between male and female.” Id.
The District Court in this case studied the statute and the case law and held
that “the meaning of ‘sex’ in Title IX includes ‘gender identity.’” Adams, 318 F.
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Supp. 3d at 1325. If we thought it necessary, we would affirm this holding.9 But
Bostock counsels otherwise. Our dissenting colleague accuses us of shirking our
duty because we do not delve into the meaning of “sex” in Title IX. To the
contrary, we follow the lead of the Supreme Court in Bostock, which found it
unnecessary to perform that analysis as to Title VII. We need not interpret the
term “sex” to recognize that Mr. Adams suffered discrimination at school because
he was transgender. See Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1746. And nothing in Bostock or
the language of § 106.33 justifies the School Board’s discrimination against Mr.
Adams. Specifically, § 106.33 does not dictate how schools should approach
transgender students’ restroom use or define a transgender student’s “sex.” Indeed,
no court of appeals has accepted the School Board’s arguments that § 106.33
requires transgender students to use the restroom of their sex assigned at birth. See
Parents for Privacy, 949 F.3d at 1227 (rejecting a strict “biological sex” reading of
§ 106.33 as it applies to transgender students); Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1047
(observing that the term “biological” does not appear in Title IX); G.G. ex rel.
9
Our dissenting colleague believes that the term “sex” cannot encompass any conception
of gender identity. See Dissenting Op. at 67–68. Important to the dissent’s position is that, at
the time Title IX was passed, “a common belief among psychiatrists was that trans[gender]
people were severely mentally disturbed.” Id. at 68 (alteration adopted and quotation marks
omitted). The Supreme Court has recently reminded us, however, that we must “apply[]
protective laws to groups that were politically unpopular at the time of the law’s passage.”
Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1751. To hinge our statutory analysis on the historical prejudice and
misunderstanding the dissent describes “would tilt the scales of justice in favor of the strong or
popular.” Id.
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Grimm v. Gloucester County School Board, 822 F.3d 709, 720–21 (4th Cir. 2016)
(observing that § 106.33 does not explain how to determine an individual’s
maleness or femaleness for purposes of restroom use), vacated and remanded, 580
U.S. ___, 137 S. Ct. 1239 (2017).
The School Board then argues that the Department of Education (“DOE”)
and the Department of Justice (“DOJ”) endorse its reading of “sex” as “biological
sex.” In 2016, the DOE’s Office for Civil Rights and the DOJ’s Civil Rights
Division jointly issued a “Dear Colleague” letter instructing that discrimination
based on sex encompassed “discrimination based on a student’s gender identity,
including discrimination based on a student’s transgender status.” Then, in 2017,
the DOE and DOJ withdrew this guidance in a second “Dear Colleague” letter.
The withdrawal letter reasoned that the 2016 guidance did not “contain extensive
legal analysis or explain how the position is consistent with the express language
of Title IX, nor did [it] undergo any formal public process.”
The School Board believes the withdrawal of the 2016 guidance signifies the
DOE’s new position that sex discrimination does not include discrimination
because of gender identity. We are unpersuaded. The 2017 letter contained no
substantive interpretation of the meaning of “sex discrimination” in Title IX. It
merely withdrew the 2016 guidance for lack of sufficient legal explanation and
formal process. Since the 2017 letter contains no substantive interpretation of Title
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IX or its regulations, we owe it no deference. Cf. Kisor v. Wilkie, 588 U.S. ___,
139 S. Ct. 2400, 2414 (2019) (explaining that deference is not warranted to an
agency’s interpretation of its own regulation when that “interpretation does not
reflect [the] agency’s authoritative, expertise-based, fair, or considered judgment”
(alteration adopted) (quotation marks omitted)); Chevron, USA, Inc. v. Nat’l Res.
Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842–44, 104 S. Ct. 2778, 2781–82 (1984)
(describing deference to an agency’s interpretation of the statute which it
administers).
Even if we were to accept the School Board’s argument that sex is “founded
in biology” or refers “only to biological distinctions between male and female,” see
Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1739, this interpretation does not establish that Mr. Adams is
biologically female and belongs in the girls’ restroom. As the District Court found,
Mr. Adams—like some other transgender people—has confirmed his male sex not
just legally and socially, but medically. See 318 F. Supp. 3d at 1300–01. We will
not rehash the details of Mr. Adams’s medical transition. But suffice it to say that
the School Board’s preferred definition of “biological sex” reduces Mr. Adams “to
nothing more than the sum of [his] external genitalia at birth,” to the exclusion of
all other characteristics. See Appellee’s Suppl. Br. at 11. This understanding of
“sex”—or, for that matter, “biological sex”—is as narrow as it is unworkable.
* * *
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Bostock confirmed that workplace discrimination against transgender people
is contrary to law. Neither should this discrimination be tolerated in schools. The
School Board’s bathroom policy, as applied to Mr. Adams, singled him out for
different treatment because of his transgender status. It caused him psychological
and dignitary harm. We affirm the District Court’s ruling that maintaining this
policy violated Title IX. 10
V.
A public school may not punish its students for gender nonconformity.
Neither may a public school harm transgender students by establishing arbitrary,
separate rules for their restroom use. The evidence at trial confirms that Mr.
Adams suffered both these indignities. The record developed in the District Court
shows that the School Board failed to honor Mr. Adams’s rights under the
Fourteenth Amendment and Title IX. The judgment of the District Court is
therefore AFFIRMED.
10
The School Board presents one last argument. The Board points out that Title IX was
enacted through Congress’s spending power, which permits recovery of damages only where
recipients of federal funding have notice of their liability. See Davis ex rel. LaShonda D. v.
Monroe Cty. Bd. of Educ., 526 U.S. 629, 640, 119 S. Ct. 1661, 1669–70 (1999). The Board says
it had no notice that Title IX forbids discrimination against transgender students. Without such
notice, the Board contends, it cannot be said to have harbored discriminatory intent against Mr.
Adams and it cannot be held liable.
We need not pass upon the Board’s arguments, because the Board never raised the
Spending Clause issue in the District Court. “Arguments raised for the first time on appeal are
not properly before this Court.” Hurley v. Moore, 233 F.3d 1295, 1297 (11th Cir. 2000) (per
curiam).
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WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, dissenting:
Not long ago, a suit challenging the lawfulness of separating bathrooms on
the basis of sex would have been unthinkable. This practice has long been the
common-sense example of an acceptable classification on the basis of sex. And for
good reason: it protects well-established privacy interests in using the bathroom
away from the opposite sex. Although the Supreme Court recently considered the
relationship between transgender status and sex in the context of claims of
employment discrimination under Title VII, it declined to consider the
permissibility of sex-separated bathrooms. See Bostock v. Clayton Cty., 140 S. Ct.
1731, 1753 (2020); see also id. at 1739 (assuming that “sex” refers “only to
biological distinctions between male and female”). After all, context matters. As
the late Justice Thurgood Marshall once put it, “A sign that says ‘men only’ looks
very different on a bathroom door than a courthouse door.” City of Cleburne v.
Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc., 473 U.S. 432, 468–69 (1985) (Marshall, J., concurring
in the judgment in part and dissenting in part).
Against this backdrop, the St. John’s County School Board has long
enforced a policy that separates the bathrooms in its elementary and secondary
schools by sex. And yet the majority rules this policy illegal—indeed
unconstitutional—in an opinion that distorts the policy, misunderstands the legal
claims asserted, and rewrites well-established precedent. By failing to address
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head-on the lawfulness of sex-separated bathrooms in schools, the majority recasts
the school policy as classifying students on the basis of transgender status. And
based on this recasting, it reaches the remarkable conclusion that schoolchildren
have no sex-specific privacy interests when using the bathroom. The majority
opinion purports to allow only plaintiff Drew Adams, a female who identifies as a
male, to use the boys’ bathroom, but the logic of this decision would require all
schoolchildren to use sex-neutral bathrooms. I dissent.
A. The Bathroom Policy Does Not Violate the Equal Protection Clause.
Because the Equal Protection Clause “does not make sex a proscribed
classification,” a policy that classifies on the basis of sex is constitutional if it
survives the two requirements of intermediate scrutiny. United States v. Virginia,
518 U.S. 515, 533 (1996). The government first must prove that the “classification
serves important governmental objectives.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
For an objective to be “important,” it cannot stem from “overbroad generalizations
about the different talents, capacities, or preferences of males and females.” Id.
The objective must also be “genuine, not hypothesized or invented post hoc in
response to litigation.” Id. In addition to proving that its policy serves important
objectives, the government must prove that “the discriminatory means employed
are substantially related to the achievement of those objectives.” Id. (internal
quotation marks omitted).
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Under this well-established standard, this appeal is not complicated.
Although the school policy classifies on the basis of sex, it serves the important
objectives of protecting the interests of children in using the bathroom away from
the opposite sex and in shielding their bodies from exposure to the opposite sex.
The policy also fits tightly with both interests in privacy. By requiring students to
use the bathroom away from the opposite sex, the policy directly protects the first
interest and eliminates one of the most likely opportunities for a violation of the
second interest. In short, it easily satisfies intermediate scrutiny, and even if
questions remained, the Supreme Court has long required that we defer to the
judgment of public-school officials in this context.
The schools’ first objective—to protect students’ interest in using the
bathroom away from the opposite sex—is important. As then-Professor Ruth Bader
Ginsburg explained, “Separate places to disrobe, sleep, [and] perform personal
bodily functions are permitted, in some situations required, by regard for individual
privacy.” Ruth Bader Ginsburg, The Fear of the Equal Rights Amendment, Wash.
Post, Apr. 7, 1975, at A21. Indeed, “[a]cross societies and throughout history, it
has been commonplace and universally accepted to separate public restrooms,
locker rooms, and shower facilities on the basis of biological sex in order to
address privacy and safety concerns arising from the biological differences
between males and females.” G.G. ex rel. Grimm v. Gloucester Cty. Sch. Bd., 822
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F.3d 709, 734 (4th Cir. 2016) (Niemeyer, J., concurring in part and dissenting in
part), vacated, 137 S. Ct. 1239 (2017). Separating bathrooms based on sex “dates
back as far as written history will take us.” W. Burlette Carter, Sexism in the
“Bathroom Debates,” 37 Yale L. & Pol’y Rev. 227, 287–88 (2018); see also id. at
258–61 (documenting sex-separated bathrooms in feudal Japan and in ancient
Egypt, Greece, and Rome).
Unsurprisingly, the Supreme Court and our sister circuits have long
acknowledged a privacy interest in using the bathroom away from the opposite sex.
Even as it ordered the Virginia Military Institute to enroll women, the Supreme
Court acknowledged that “[a]dmitting women to VMI would undoubtedly require
alterations necessary to afford members of each sex privacy from the other sex in
living arrangements.” Virginia, 518 U.S. at 550 n.19 (citing Brief for Petitioner at
27–29 (arguing that integrating the institute would not require the sexes to be
together “when sleeping, dressing and using the bathroom”)). Our sister circuits
have likewise accepted that “the law tolerates same-sex restrooms . . . to
accommodate privacy needs.” Chaney v. Plainfield Healthcare Ctr., 612 F.3d 908,
913 (7th Cir. 2010); accord Faulkner v. Jones, 10 F.3d 226, 232 (4th Cir. 1993);
Cumbey v. Meachum, 684 F.2d 712, 714 (10th Cir. 1982); see also, e.g., Women
Prisoners of the D.C. Dep’t of Corr. v. District of Columbia, 93 F.3d 910, 926
(D.C. Cir. 1996) (“[S]egregation of inmates by sex is unquestionably
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constitutional.”). This privacy interest has long been “appropriately harmonized”
with the principle of equality. Ginsburg, Equal Rights Amendment, supra.
The schools’ policy is also “substantially related to the achievement” of its
objective to protect this privacy interest. Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533 (internal
quotation marks omitted). Indeed, the policy is a mirror image of its objective—it
protects students from using the bathroom with the opposite sex by separating
bathrooms on the basis of sex. The policy “is not a means to some greater end, but
an end in itself.” Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc., 501 U.S. 560, 572 (1991) (plurality
opinion). Intermediate scrutiny is satisfied when a policy directly achieves the
objective itself. See id.
This conclusion does not turn on Adams’s sex. The district court found that
the St. John’s County School District educates about 40,000 children, and of all
those students, the Board is aware of only 16 transgender students. Even if the
district court were correct that gender identity, not biology, determines a person’s
sex—that is, the school policy should have assigned these 16 students to the
bathroom that aligned with their gender identity—the policy would still be 99.96
percent accurate in separating bathrooms by sex. This near-perfect result is
certainly enough to satisfy intermediate scrutiny, which does not “require[] that the
[policy] under consideration must be capable of achieving its ultimate objective in
every instance.” Nguyen v. Immigration & Naturalization Serv., 533 U.S. 53, 70
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(2001); see also Michael M. v. Super. Ct. of Sonoma Cty., 450 U.S. 464, 473
(1981) (plurality opinion) (“The relevant inquiry . . . is not whether the statute is
drawn as precisely as it might have been . . . .”).
Nor does it matter that Adams brings an as-applied challenge to the
bathroom policy. “[C]lassifying a lawsuit as facial or as-applied . . . does not speak
at all to the substantive rule of law necessary to establish a constitutional
violation.” Bucklew v. Precythe, 139 S. Ct. 1112, 1127 (2019). And, to reiterate,
intermediate scrutiny does not “require[] that the [policy] under consideration must
be capable of achieving its ultimate objective in every instance.” Nguyen, 533 U.S.
at 70. Demanding that the policy satisfy its privacy interests as to each plaintiff
who brings an as-applied challenge would disregard intermediate scrutiny by
demanding a perfect fit between the sex-based classification and the government
interest at issue.
The school policy also substantially advances its objective to protect
children from exposing their unclothed bodies to the opposite sex. Courts have
long understood that the “special sense of privacy” that individuals hold in
avoiding bodily exposure is heightened “in the presence of people of the other
sex.” Fortner v. Thomas, 983 F.2d 1024, 1030 (11th Cir. 1993) (internal quotation
marks omitted); accord, e.g., Cookish v. Powell, 945 F.2d 441, 446 (1st Cir. 1991);
Harris v. Miller, 818 F.3d 49, 59 (2d Cir. 2016); Doe v. Luzerne Cty., 660 F.3d
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169, 177 (3d Cir. 2011); Strickler v. Waters, 641 F.2d 1375, 1387 (4th Cir. 1993);
Moore v. Carwell, 168 F.3d 234, 236–37 (5th Cir. 1999); Brannum v. Overton Cty.
Sch. Bd., 516 F.3d 489, 494 (6th Cir. 2008); Canedy v. Boardman, 16 F.3d 183,
185 (7th Cir. 1994); Byrd v. Maricopa Cty. Sheriff’s Dep’t, 629 F.3d 1135, 1141
(9th Cir. 2011) (en banc); Hayes v. Marriott, 70 F.3d 1144, 1146 (10th Cir. 1995).
And separating bathrooms by sex eliminates one of the most common
opportunities for exposure to the opposite sex. The district court acknowledged the
undisputed testimony that students at Adams’s school change clothing outside
bathroom stalls and that bathrooms are ordinarily unsupervised. By separating
bathrooms by sex, the policy eliminates the risk of bodily exposure where it is
most likely to occur, which satisfies intermediate scrutiny. See Nguyen, 533 U.S. at
70 (holding that a policy that “seeks to foster the opportunity” for a government
objective “has a close and substantial bearing on” that objective).
Even if any doubt remained about whether the bathroom policy survives
scrutiny, we must resolve that doubt in favor of the Board because the policy
governs student conduct in public schools. The Supreme Court has long held that
the constitutional rights of students, including “Fourteenth Amendment rights, are
different in public schools than elsewhere.” Vernonia Sch. Dist. 47J v. Acton, 515
U.S. 646, 656 (1995). Schools have a “custodial and tutelary” power over minor
students, “permitting a degree of supervision and control that could not be
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exercised over free adults.” Id. at 655. For that reason, the Supreme Court has long
deferred to the decisions of school districts in a variety of constitutional contexts,
including when determining whether a suspicionless drug search was reasonable
under the Fourth Amendment, id. at 665, whether the censorship of certain speech
was acceptable under the First Amendment, Morse v. Frederick, 551 U.S. 393,
403–06, 409–410 (2007) (collecting decisions), and whether corporal punishment
was cruel and unusual under the Eighth Amendment, Ingraham v. Wright, 430 U.S.
651, 681–82 (1977).
The bathroom policy falls squarely within the Board’s authority to
“prescribe and control conduct” in its schools. Id. at 682 (internal quotation marks
omitted). “[I]n a public school environment . . . the State is responsible for
maintaining discipline, health, and safety.” Bd. of Educ. of Indep. Sch. Dist. No. 92
of Pottawatomie Cty. v. Earls, 536 U.S. 822, 830 (2002); see also Fla. Stat.
§ 1001.42(8)(a) (making school boards responsible for the “control of students at
school, and for proper attention to health, safety, and other matters relating to the
welfare of students”). This responsibility is so weighty that school districts can be
liable for sexual assault and harassment between students. See Miami-Dade Cty.
Sch. Bd. v. A.N., 905 So. 2d 203, 203–04, 206 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2005)
(upholding a jury verdict against a school for failing to protect a student who was
sexually assaulted in a bathroom by another student); see also Williams v. Bd. of
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Regents of Univ. Sys. of Ga., 477 F.3d 1282, 1299 (11th Cir. 2007). And
bathrooms, one of the few areas in a school that are unsupervised, plainly pose
risks to student “discipline, health, and safety.” Earls, 536 U.S. at 830; see also
A.N., 905 So. 2d at 203–04, 206. The Board’s assessment of the privacy risks its
students face and the effectiveness of its policy in mitigating those risks deserves
deference.
The majority opinion elides this entire analysis by misunderstanding both
the classification and privacy interests at issue. It contends that the policy triggers
heightened scrutiny not because it separates bathrooms by sex but because it
purportedly imposes “differential treatment” on transgender students. Majority Op.
at 12. In doing so, the majority misstates the school policy, conflates sex-based
classifications with transgender-based classifications, and contravenes Supreme
Court precedent. Compounding its errors, the majority then ignores fundamental
understandings of why bathrooms are separated on the basis of sex by rejecting
long-standing privacy rationales for sex-separated bathrooms. This conclusion
leads it to fault the objective underlying the school policy as both hypothetical and
based on impermissible stereotypes. After misconstruing both the classification
and the privacy interests at issue—the only two ingredients of intermediate
scrutiny—the majority opinion then concludes that the schools’ classification does
not substantially advance a valid objective. I take each of these errors in turn.
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The majority’s conclusion that the school policy classifies on the basis of
sex because it “singles out transgender students” is both central to its analysis and
wrong. Id. The majority opinion reaches this incorrect conclusion by pointing to a
provision of the school policy that does not have that effect. The majority opinion
says the school policy targets transgender students because of the following
provision: “Transgender students will be given access to a gender-neutral restroom
and will not be required to use the restroom corresponding to their biological sex.”
Id. But this provision only offers the option of using gender-neural bathrooms as
an alternative to the bathroom that matches a child’s sex. It is an accommodation
for transgender students, not a special burden. What Adams actually challenges is
the requirement that students cannot use the bathrooms of the opposite sex, which
long predates the provision that accommodates transgender students. It is this
policy that “prohibit[s] . . . transgender students from using the restrooms matching
their gender identity.” Id. at 14. Because this policy divides bathrooms by sex, not
transgender status, it does not facially classify on the basis of transgender status.
The decision of the Supreme Court in Geduldig v. Aiello, 417 U.S. 484
(1974), is instructive. There, the Court held that a state insurance policy that
excluded coverage for pregnancies did not classify on the basis of sex. Id. at 495–
97. It explained that the classification at issue created two groups—pregnant and
nonpregnant people. Id. at 496 n.20. Although “the first group is exclusively
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female,” the Court explained, “the second includes members of both sexes,” which
revealed a “lack of identity” between pregnancy and sex. Id.; see also Bray v.
Alexandria Women’s Health Clinic, 506 U.S. 263, 271 (1993) (reaffirming this
reasoning). This analysis applies with equal force here. The bathroom policy
creates two groups—students who can use the boys’ bathroom and students who
can use the girls’ bathroom. Both groups contain transgender students and non-
transgender students, so a “lack of identity” exists between the policy and
transgender status. Geduldig, 417 U.S. at 496 n.20.
At most, the policy has a disparate impact on transgender students, which is
not enough to create a sex-based classification. Facially neutral policies trigger
intermediate scrutiny only if “invidious gender-based discrimination” motivated
them. Pers. Adm’r of Mass. v. Feeney, 442 U.S. 256, 274 (1979); see also Vill. of
Arlington Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 265 (1977) (“Proof of
. . . discriminatory intent or purpose is required to show a violation of the Equal
Protection Clause.”). Adams cannot argue that a discriminatory purpose against
transgender students motivated the policy. Although the district court found that
the Board acted with discriminatory intent because it failed to update its policies
when it became “aware of the need to treat transgender students the same as other
students,” the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that “[d]iscriminatory purpose
. . . implies more than . . . awareness of consequences.” E.g., Bray, 506 U.S. at 760
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(internal quotation marks omitted); Feeney, 442 U.S. at 279 (internal quotation
marks omitted). It instead requires the Board to act “at least in part ‘because of,’
not merely ‘in spite of,’ . . . adverse effects upon an identifiable group.” Feeney,
442 U.S. at 279. The district court found that the “School Board did not have
transgender students in mind when it originally established separate multi-stall
restrooms for boys and girls,” which precludes a finding of discriminatory intent.
The decision of the Supreme Court in Bostock v. Clayton County, 140 S. Ct.
1731, is not to the contrary. To be sure, Bostock clarified that “discrimination
based on homosexuality or transgender status necessarily entails discrimination
based on sex” in the context of employment discrimination under Title VII. Id. at
1747; see also Glenn v. Brumby, 663 F.3d 1312, 1318 (11th Cir. 2011) (holding
that discrimination based on gender nonconformity constitutes sex discrimination
regardless of whether the victim is transgender or not). But this appeal concerns
the converse question: whether discrimination on the basis of sex necessarily
entails discrimination based on transgender status. Of course, a policy can classify
on the basis of sex without also classifying on the basis of transgender status. See,
e.g., Nguyen, 533 U.S. at 60. Indeed, Bostock expressly disclaimed reaching any
conclusion on the permissibility of sex-separated bathrooms and locker rooms. See
140 S. Ct. at 1753.
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The majority’s misunderstanding of the classification at issue infects its
constitutional inquiry. Intermediate scrutiny turns on the relationship between the
classification at issue and the government’s objectives—that is, whether a sex-
based classification is substantially related to the government’s objectives. See
Nguyen, 533 U.S. at 60. So the relevant question is whether excluding students of
one sex from the bathroom of the other sex substantially advances the schools’
privacy objectives. The question is not, as the majority frames it, whether
excluding transgender students from the bathroom of their choice furthers
important privacy objectives. The majority’s misunderstanding of the classification
as based on transgender status gerrymanders its analysis to the second question.
Consider the majority’s assertion that the bathroom policy cannot satisfy
intermediate scrutiny because it is arbitrary. See, e.g., Craig v. Boren, 429 U.S.
190, 201–04 (1976) (holding that a statute failed intermediate scrutiny when the
relationship between the sex-based classification and government interest was
“unduly tenuous”). The district court found that the school district determines each
child’s sex by looking to the enrollment forms that the student provides when the
student enrolls, which includes the student’s birth certificate. The majority explains
that a transgender student who changed the sex on his birth certificate before
enrolling could use the bathroom matching his gender identity and not his sex. See
generally Fla. Admin. Code Ann. r. 64V-1.003(2)(c), (4)(b) (allowing amendments
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to birth certificates with medical documentation). According to the majority, this
process for determining sex fails to achieve the “stated goal of restricting
transgender students to the restroom of their assigned sex at birth” because the
enrollment documents are not “legitimate, accurate prox[ies]” for determining a
transgender student’s “sex assigned at birth.” Majority Op. at 18 (quoting Craig,
429 U.S. at 204).
This argument fails when we remember that the goal of the policy is to
restrict all students, not only transgender students, from the bathroom of the
opposite sex. Birth certificates are an almost perfect proxy for determining a
student’s sex. Even if all transgender students in the school district used bathrooms
that did not align with their sex, the policy would still be 99.96 percent accurate in
separating bathrooms by sex, which satisfies intermediate scrutiny. See Nguyen,
533 U.S. at 70. To close the supposed loophole that the majority identifies, schools
in the district would need to target transgender students. Of course, intermediate
scrutiny does not require that approach. See id. at 63 (“The Constitution . . . does
not require that Congress elect one particular mechanism . . . even if that
mechanism arguably might be the most scientifically advanced method.”).
In addition to misunderstanding the classification at issue, the majority
erroneously redefines the privacy interests at stake. Although the majority
concedes that protecting bathroom privacy, in some abstract sense, is an important
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objective, it rejects both of the privacy interests that the school policy protects. For
the first interest, the majority asserts that the Board incorrectly decided that its
students had any privacy interest in using the bathroom away from “students who
do not share the same birth sex.” Majority Op. at 21 (internal quotation marks
omitted). And although the majority appears to acknowledge that students have a
privacy interest in not exposing their bodies, it does not accept that this interest can
be sex-specific—that the interest is heightened when exposure is to the opposite
sex. Instead, it asserts not only that Adams’s “anatomical differences” from boys
are “irrelevant” to bathroom privacy, id. at 24, but also that thinking otherwise is
an unconstitutional stereotype, id. at 25–28.
The majority’s understanding of each interest contravenes precedent. Its
decision to limit students’ privacy interest to bodily exposure ignores that children
also have a distinct privacy interest in using the bathroom away from the opposite
sex. See, e.g., Virginia, 518 U.S. at 550 n.19; Chaney, 612 F.3d at 913; Faulkner,
10 F.3d at 232; Cumbey, 684 F.2d at 714; see also Skinner v. Ry. Labor Execs.’
Ass’n, 489 U.S. 602, 626 (1989) (concluding that urination is “an excretory
function traditionally shielded by great privacy”). Similarly, the majority’s failure
to acknowledge that the privacy interest in avoiding bodily exposure is heightened
when children of the opposite sex are present ignores longstanding precedent, not
to mention common sense. See, e.g., Fortner, 983 F.2d at 1030; Harris, 818 F.3d at
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59; Luzerne Cty., 660 F.3d at 177; Overton Cty., 516 F.3d at 494; Canedy, 16 F.3d
at 185.
Finally, the majority’s alternative contention that the privacy interests at
issue are invalid because they rest on impermissible sex stereotypes is incorrect.
According to the majority, the school policy “presumed every person deemed
‘male’ at birth would act and identify as a ‘boy’ and every person deemed ‘female’
would act and identify as a ‘girl.’” Majority Op. at 26. The majority also faults the
policy for indulging in the purportedly unconstitutional stereotype that “one’s
gender identity and expression should align with one’s birth sex.” Id. Neither of
these arguments has merit.
The majority never explains how the school policy “presume[d] every
person deemed ‘male’ at birth would act and identify as a ‘boy’ and every person
deemed ‘female’ would act and identify as a ‘girl.’” Nor can it. The policy does not
turn on how students “act and identify.” It assigns bathrooms by sex, which is not a
stereotype. See Nguyen, 533 U.S. at 73 (“Mechanistic classification of all our
differences as stereotypes would operate to obscure those misconceptions and
prejudices that are real.”); Etsitty v. Utah Transit Auth., 502 F.3d 1215, 1224 (10th
Cir. 2007) (“Use of a restroom designated for the opposite sex does not constitute a
mere failure to conform to sex stereotypes.”).
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The majority’s other contention—that believing “one’s gender identity and
expression should align with one’s birth sex” is an unconstitutional stereotype—
fares no better. The Supreme Court has long grounded its sex-discrimination
jurisprudence in reproductive biology. See, e.g., Nguyen, 533 U.S. at 73 (“The
difference between men and women in relation to the birth process is a real one
. . . .”); Geduldig, 417 U.S. at 496 n.20 (“[I]t is true that only women can become
pregnant . . . .”); see also Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533 (“Physical differences between
men and women, however, are enduring: [T]he two sexes are not fungible . . . .”
(internal quotation marks omitted)). Indeed, the Court’s justification for giving
heightened scrutiny to sex-based classifications makes sense only with reference to
physiology.
In one of its foundational sex-discrimination decisions, the Court justified
heightened scrutiny this way: “since sex . . . is an immutable characteristic
determined solely by the accident of birth, the imposition of special disabilities
upon the members of a particular sex because of their sex would seem to violate
the basic concept of our system that legal burdens should bear some relationship to
individual responsibility.” Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677, 686 (1973)
(plurality opinion) (internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, the Court
endorsed heightened scrutiny because laws “distributing benefits and burdens
between the sexes in different ways very likely reflect outmoded notions of the
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relative capabilities of men and women.” Cleburne, 473 U.S. at 441. To say that it
is an unconstitutional stereotype to believe that “one’s gender identity and
expression should align with one’s birth sex,” the majority must not only rewrite
the Supreme Court’s physiological rationale for heightened scrutiny of sex-based
classifications, but also hold that many of the Court’s sex-discrimination decisions
turned on an impermissible stereotype. See Nguyen, 533 U.S. at 73; Virginia, 518
U.S. at 533; Geduldig, 417 U.S. at 496 n.20; Frontiero, 411 U.S. at 686. We, of
course, cannot take either of those actions.
The majority’s narrow construction of bathroom privacy skews the
intermediate-scrutiny analysis in favor of Adams. Policies that separate bathrooms
on the basis of sex arise from the understanding that privacy interests are
sometimes sex specific. By failing to acknowledge any sex-specific privacy
interest, the majority demands the impossible: a justification for sex-separated
bathrooms that does not involve sex. To be sure, the majority suggests that a
different trial record—one that contained evidence that Adams or other transgender
students “harass[ed] or peep[ed] at” other students in the bathroom—might support
the bathroom policy. Majority Op. at 21. But that evidence would not justify a sex-
based classification. If voyeurism is equally problematic whether it occurs between
children of the same or opposite sex, then separating bathrooms by sex would not
advance any interest in combatting voyeurism. Only single-stall bathrooms could
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address that concern. Further, under intermediate scrutiny, an invidious stereotype
about members of a suspect class cannot justify a discriminatory policy “even
when some statistical support can be conjured up for the generalization.” J.E.B. v.
Ala. ex rel. T.B., 511 U.S. 127, 139 n.11 (1994). So evidence that children of a
particular sex—or transgender students under the majority’s perspective—are
likely to “harass or peep at” members of the opposite sex could not justify sex-
separated bathrooms.
Only after it replaces both of the inquiries relevant to intermediate
scrutiny—the “discriminatory means employed” by the policy and the privacy
interests at issue, Virginia, 518 U.S. at 533 (internal quotation marks omitted)—
does the majority conclude that the school policy does not substantially advance its
objective to protect privacy. The end result is an opinion on sex discrimination that
looks nothing like an intermediate-scrutiny inquiry into whether a sex-based
classification satisfies the Equal Protection Clause.
The majority’s redefinition of intermediate scrutiny will have consequences
far beyond the confines of this appeal. The logic of its opinion would invalidate all
government policies that separate bathrooms—or locker rooms and showers, for
that matter—by sex. To be sure, the majority “assume[s]” that the government can
promote privacy interests by separating bathrooms by sex, and it insists that the
lawfulness of sex-separated locker rooms is not before it. Majority Op. at 8 n.3, 14.
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But anyone can take advantage of the majority’s demolition of sex-specific
bathroom privacy.
That the majority purports to invalidate the school policy only as it applies to
Adams changes nothing. See Bucklew, 139 S. Ct. at 1127. The majority does not
offer a meaningful way to distinguish this appeal from one that challenges sex-
separated bathrooms and locker rooms. It only insists that the issue is not before it.
But do not be fooled: future plaintiffs can still leverage the majority’s narrow view
of privacy. Ultimately, if the privacy interest at stake is untethered from using the
bathroom away from the opposite sex or from biological differences between the
sexes, then no justification exists for separating bathrooms—or any related
facility—by sex.
When shorn of the majority’s misunderstandings of the school policy and the
legal standards that govern sex-based classifications, this appeal is straightforward.
The school policy protects longstanding privacy interests inherent in using the
bathroom, and it does so in an ancient and unremarkable way—by separating
bathrooms on the basis of sex. That policy is not unconstitutional.
B. The Bathroom Policy Does Not Violate Title IX.
Title IX mandates that no person “shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded
from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination
under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” 20
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U.S.C. § 1681(a). But an important qualification tempers this mandate: “nothing
contained herein shall be construed to prohibit any educational institution receiving
funds under this Act, from maintaining separate living facilities for the different
sexes.” Id. § 1686. The implementing regulations clarify that institutions “may
provide separate toilet, locker room, and shower facilities on the basis of sex, but
such facilities provided for students of one sex shall be comparable to such
facilities provided for students of the other sex.” 34 C.F.R. § 106.33.
Whether the Board violated Title IX turns on the answer to one question:
what does “sex” mean in Title IX? Regardless of whether separating bathrooms by
sex would otherwise constitute discrimination “on the basis of sex,” 20 U.S.C.
§ 1681(a), the bathroom policy does not violate Title IX if it falls within the safe
harbor for “separate toilet . . . facilities on the basis of sex.” 34 C.F.R § 106.33.
And if the school policy is valid under Title IX, then Title IX also permits the
schools to require all students, including Adams, to follow that policy. Cf. Antonin
Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts § 30, at
192–93 (2012) (“[W]henever a power is given by a statute, everything necessary to
making it effectual or requisite to attaining the end is implied.” (quoting 1 James
Kent, Commentaries on American Law *464)).
Contrary to the majority’s and Adams’s arguments otherwise, the Supreme
Court did not resolve this question in Bostock. Far from it. Not only did the Court
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“proceed on the assumption that ‘sex’ . . . refer[s] only to biological distinctions
between male and female,” it disclaimed deciding whether Title VII allows for sex-
separated bathrooms. Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1739, 1753. And any guidance Bostock
might otherwise provide about whether Title VII allows for sex-separated
bathrooms does not extend to Title IX, which permits schools to act on the basis of
sex through sex-separated bathrooms. See 20 U.S.C. § 1686; 34 C.F.R. § 106.33.
Turning to the provisions at issue, this question is not close. As used in Title
IX and its implementing regulations, “sex” unambiguously is a classification on
the basis of reproductive function. We must, of course, give words in statutes the
ordinary meaning they conveyed when Congress enacted them. See New Prime
Inc. v. Oliveira, 139 S. Ct. 532, 539 (2019); Scalia & Garner, Reading Law §§ 6–7,
at 69–71, 78–79. And “sex” has never meant gender identity. See, e.g., Sex, The
American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (1979) (“The property or
quality by which organisms are classified according to their reproductive
functions.”); Sex, The Random House College Dictionary (1980) (“either the male
or female division of a species, esp. as differentiated with reference to the
reproductive functions”); see also Am. Psychiatric Ass’n, Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 451 (5th ed. 2013) (“This chapter employs
constructs and terms as they are widely used by clinicians from various disciplines
with specialization in this area. In this chapter, sex and sexual refer to the
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biological indicators of male and female (understood in the context of reproductive
capacity) . . . .”).
That “sex” did not mean gender identity is unsurprising. When Congress
enacted Title IX in 1972, psychiatric literature conflated sexual orientation with
gender identity. See Jack Drescher, Transsexualism, Gender Identity Disorder and
the DSM, 14 J. Gay & Lesbian Mental Health 109, 111 (2010). And as with
homosexuality, a common belief among psychiatrists was that “trans people [were]
severely mentally disturbed.” See id. at 114, 116–17. Indeed, the American
Psychiatric Association first classified “Gender Identity Disorders” as
psychosexual disorders in which a person’s internal sense of gender did not align
with his or her anatomy. See Am. Psychiatric Ass’n, Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders 261 (3d ed. 1980). Consistent with this view,
“[m]ainstream medical thinking” when Title IX became law was firmly opposed to
sex-reassignment surgery. Drescher, supra, at 111–12. Even among its proponents,
“[s]ex reassignment was . . . considered not a cure, but a palliative treatment.”
Dallas Denny, A Selective Bibliography of Transsexualism, 6 J. Gay & Lesbian
Psychotherapy 35, 38 (2002). It is untenable to construe transgender status, which
even the medical community saw as a departure from the norm, as altering the
norm itself among the general public.
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In deciding otherwise, the majority erroneously concludes that the safe
harbor for bathrooms does not apply because Title IX and its regulations do not
“declare” whether “sex” as applied to Adams is the “sex identified at birth”—
female—or the sex listed on Adams’s amended birth certificate and driver’s
license—male. Majority Op. at 40–41 (quoting Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1746). But
the ordinary meaning of “sex” in the safe-harbor provision does not change when a
plaintiff is transgender. See Cochise Consultancy, Inc. v. U.S. ex rel. Hunt, 139 S.
Ct. 1507, 1512 (2019) (“In all but the most unusual situations, a single use of a
statutory phrase must have a fixed meaning.”). And as explained above, the
ordinary meaning of “sex” when Congress enacted Title IX turned on reproductive
function. That Congress did not define “sex” does not change this conclusion. See
United States v. Sepulveda, 115 F.3d 882, 886 n.9 (11th Cir. 1997) (“[A] statute is
not ambiguous merely because it contains a term without a statutory definition.”).
And under the unambiguous meaning of “sex” in the safe-harbor provision, the
Board did not violate Title IX when it prohibited Adams from using the boys’
bathroom.
Instead of grappling with the meaning of “sex,” the majority abdicates its
duty to interpret the law. According to the majority, it is unnecessary to delve into
the meaning of “sex” in Title IX because the safe harbor “does not dictate how
schools should approach transgender students’ restroom use.” Majority Op. at 42.
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But courts regularly apply general standards of law to particular facts, and the
Board asks this Court to apply the safe-harbor provision to the facts in this appeal.
By declaring it not “necessary” to interpret the safe-harbor provision, the majority
abandons statutory interpretation in favor of legislating a transgender exception to
the safe-harbor provision. This approach offends basic principles of statutory
interpretation. See Scalia & Garner, Reading Law § 8, at 93 (“The principle that a
matter not covered is not covered is so obvious that it seems absurd to recite it. The
judge should not presume that every statute answers every question . . . . Nor
should the judge elaborate unprovided-for exceptions to a text . . . .”); EEOC v.
Abercrombie & Fitch Stores, Inc., 135 S. Ct. 2028, 2033 (2015) (“We construe [a
statute’s] silence as exactly that: silence.”).
Indeed, the majority turns Title IX on its head by requiring a clear statement
from Congress that the safe harbor protects the Board. Because Congress enacted
Title IX under its Spending Clause power, U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 1, the Board’s
violation must be unambiguous to trigger liability. Although the Spending Clause
allows Congress to “attach conditions on the receipt of federal funds,” South
Dakota v. Dole, 483 U.S. 203, 206 (1987), “[t]he legitimacy of Congress’ power to
legislate under the spending power . . . rests on whether the State voluntarily and
knowingly accepts the terms of the ‘contract.’” Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v.
Halderman, 451 U.S. 1, 17 (1981). In other words, “if Congress intends to impose
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a condition on the grant of federal moneys, it must do so unambiguously.” Id. This
requirement unquestionably applies when courts interpret Title IX. See Davis ex
rel. D. v. Monroe Cty. Bd. of Educ., 526 U.S. 629, 649–50 (1999). It also applies
when the appellant fails to press the issue in the district court. See Jefferson v.
Sewon Am., Inc., 891 F.3d 911, 923 (11th Cir. 2018) (“[P]arties cannot waive the
application of the correct law.”). So even if the majority were correct that “sex”
was ambiguous, Title IX still would not prohibit the Board’s actions. Instead, the
Board would lose the protection of the bathroom safe harbor only if the meaning of
“sex” unambiguously did not turn on reproductive function.
For its part, the district court ruled that the Board violated Title IX for
different but equally flawed reasons. It first ruled that the meaning of “sex” in Title
IX was ambiguous because the statute did not define the term and dictionary
definitions of “sex” were not “so universally clear” at the time. It then held that our
decision in Glenn v. Brumby, 663 F.3d 1312, and the Supreme Court’s decision in
Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, 490 U.S. 228 (1989) (plurality opinion), supported
its conclusion that “sex” in Title IX “includes ‘gender identity’ for purposes of its
application to transgender students.”
A statutory term is not ambiguous solely because a statute does not define it
or because an isolated dictionary suggests a divergent meaning. See Brown v.
Gardner, 513 U.S. 115, 118 (1994) (“Ambiguity is a creature not of definitional
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possibilities but of statutory context . . . .”). Further, the only purportedly
competing definition the district court found—that “sex” means “the character of
being either male or female,” Sex, American College Dictionary (1970)—supports
a biological meaning of sex. That dictionary defined “female” and “male” in
physiological, reproductive terms. See Female, id. (“a human being of the sex
which conceives and brings forth young; a woman or girl”); Male, id. (“belonging
to the sex which begets young, or any division or group corresponding to it”). The
district court had no reason to conclude that the term was ambiguous.
The decision to resolve the purported ambiguity as applied to transgender
students with Price Waterhouse and Glenn fares no better. Like the majority, the
district court erred by assuming that “sex” could have different meanings as
applied to transgender and non-transgender persons. See Cochise Consultancy, 139
S. Ct. at 1512. Further, neither Price Waterhouse nor Glenn redefined the meaning
of “sex.” They held only that when an employer acts against a member of one sex
for failing to conform to stereotypes associated with that sex—for example,
dressing like the opposite sex—that employer has acted because of sex. See Price
Waterhouse, 490 U.S. at 250 (holding that an employer discriminated on the basis
of sex when he “act[ed] on the basis of a belief that a woman cannot be aggressive,
or that she must not be”); Glenn, 663 F.3d at 1318–19 (“All persons, whether
transgender or not, are protected from discrimination on the basis of gender
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stereotype. . . . Because these protections are afforded to everyone, they cannot be
denied to a transgender individual.”). Whether or not the Board based its policy on
sex stereotypes does not matter for this claim because that question would
determine only whether the Board acted “on the basis of sex.” 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a).
Title IX and its regulations expressly allow the Board to do so to provide separate
bathrooms. See id. § 1686; 34 C.F.R. § 106.33.
Like the majority, the district court also failed to grapple with the fact that
Congress enacted Title IX under its Spending Clause power. As explained above,
the district court could impose liability only if it concluded that the meaning of
“sex” in Title IX unambiguously did not turn on reproductive function. In other
words, even if the district court were correct that “sex” was ambiguous and that the
best interpretation of “sex” when Congress enacted Title IX was gender identity—
and, to reiterate, it was not on either count—Title IX still would not prohibit a
school from separating bathrooms on the basis of sex.
* * *
The majority transforms an appeal that it should have resolved with
straightforward applications of intermediate scrutiny and statutory interpretation
into something unrecognizable. Almost no aspect of its analysis emerges
unscathed. The majority misunderstands the policy at issue, ignores decades of
precedent, dismisses any sex-specific interest in bathroom privacy, and flouts
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foundational principles of statutory interpretation. In the process, it issues a
holding with radical consequences for sex-separated bathrooms. But for all of its
errors, the majority opinion cannot obscure what should have been the bottom line
of this appeal: there is nothing unlawful, under either the Constitution or federal
law, about a policy that separates bathrooms for schoolchildren on the basis of sex.
I dissent.
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