Adams v. Sch. Bd. of St. Johns Cnty.
This text of 318 F. Supp. 3d 1293 (Adams v. Sch. Bd. of St. Johns Cnty.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
TIMOTHY J. CORRIGAN, United States District Judge
The parents of St. Johns County, along with teachers and administrators of the St. Johns County School District, have a solemn obligation to guard the well-being of the children in their charge. As recent events from around the country have tragically demonstrated, this is a very challenging job. Recognizing the difficulty of this task and that local school boards, answerable to the citizens of their community, are best situated to set school policy, federal courts are reluctant to interfere. Nevertheless, the federal court also has a solemn obligation: to uphold the Constitution and laws of the United States. That is why federal courts around the country have recognized the right of transgender students to use the bathroom matching their gender identity.
Drew Adams is a rising senior at Allen D. Nease High School. He is transgender, meaning he "consistently, persistently, and insistently" identifies as a boy, a gender that is different than the sex he was assigned at birth (female).1 At trial, Adams testified: "I am a boy and I know that with every fiber of my being."2 However, when the principal of Nease was asked whether she considered Adams to be a boy, she replied, "I do not."3 That's what this case is about. Everyone agrees that boys should use the boys' restroom at Nease and that girls should use the girls' restroom. The parties disagree over whether Drew Adams is a boy.
I can only answer that question with the evidence given to me at trial. Drew Adams says he is a boy and has undergone extensive surgery to conform his body to his gender identity; medical science says he is a boy; the State of Florida says so (both Adams' Florida birth certificate and Florida driver's license say he is a male); and the Florida High School Athletic Association says so. Other than at his school, Adams uses the mens' bathroom wherever he goes, including in this federal courthouse during trial. Even the St. Johns County School Board regards Adams as a *1297boy in every way, except for which bathroom he can use.
When confronted with something affecting our children that is new, outside of our experience, and contrary to gender norms we thought we understood, it is natural that parents want to protect their children. But the evidence is that Drew Adams poses no threat to the privacy or safety of any of his fellow students. Rather, Drew Adams is just like every other student at Nease High School, a teenager coming of age in a complicated, uncertain and changing world. When it comes to his use of the bathroom, the law requires that he be treated like any other boy.
The Court recognizes that some will disagree with this decision, for religious and other reasons. I respect their point of view. However, as a judge, my job is to determine what the law requires and apply it faithfully to the facts. I have done that to the best of my ability.
I. Procedural History
Through his next friend and mother, plaintiff Drew Adams, a minor,4 filed suit in June 2017 (when he was a rising junior at Nease) under
II. Findings of Fact11
A. Defining Transgender/Gender Identity/Sex Assigned at Birth
As explained by Dr. Diane Ehrensaft, a developmental and clinical psychologist who studies and specializes in treating transgender children and adolescents, there are a number of components that determine a person's gender: external genitalia, internal sex organs, chromosomal sex, gonadal sex, fetal hormonal sex, hypothalamic sex, pubertal hormonal sex, neurological sex, and gender identity and role. Doc. 166, Ct. Ex. 3 at ¶ 20.12 Among these markers, external genitalia, the most physically obvious one, has historically been used to determine gender for purposes of recording a birth as male or female.
The Medical Amici14
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TIMOTHY J. CORRIGAN, United States District Judge
The parents of St. Johns County, along with teachers and administrators of the St. Johns County School District, have a solemn obligation to guard the well-being of the children in their charge. As recent events from around the country have tragically demonstrated, this is a very challenging job. Recognizing the difficulty of this task and that local school boards, answerable to the citizens of their community, are best situated to set school policy, federal courts are reluctant to interfere. Nevertheless, the federal court also has a solemn obligation: to uphold the Constitution and laws of the United States. That is why federal courts around the country have recognized the right of transgender students to use the bathroom matching their gender identity.
Drew Adams is a rising senior at Allen D. Nease High School. He is transgender, meaning he "consistently, persistently, and insistently" identifies as a boy, a gender that is different than the sex he was assigned at birth (female).1 At trial, Adams testified: "I am a boy and I know that with every fiber of my being."2 However, when the principal of Nease was asked whether she considered Adams to be a boy, she replied, "I do not."3 That's what this case is about. Everyone agrees that boys should use the boys' restroom at Nease and that girls should use the girls' restroom. The parties disagree over whether Drew Adams is a boy.
I can only answer that question with the evidence given to me at trial. Drew Adams says he is a boy and has undergone extensive surgery to conform his body to his gender identity; medical science says he is a boy; the State of Florida says so (both Adams' Florida birth certificate and Florida driver's license say he is a male); and the Florida High School Athletic Association says so. Other than at his school, Adams uses the mens' bathroom wherever he goes, including in this federal courthouse during trial. Even the St. Johns County School Board regards Adams as a *1297boy in every way, except for which bathroom he can use.
When confronted with something affecting our children that is new, outside of our experience, and contrary to gender norms we thought we understood, it is natural that parents want to protect their children. But the evidence is that Drew Adams poses no threat to the privacy or safety of any of his fellow students. Rather, Drew Adams is just like every other student at Nease High School, a teenager coming of age in a complicated, uncertain and changing world. When it comes to his use of the bathroom, the law requires that he be treated like any other boy.
The Court recognizes that some will disagree with this decision, for religious and other reasons. I respect their point of view. However, as a judge, my job is to determine what the law requires and apply it faithfully to the facts. I have done that to the best of my ability.
I. Procedural History
Through his next friend and mother, plaintiff Drew Adams, a minor,4 filed suit in June 2017 (when he was a rising junior at Nease) under
II. Findings of Fact11
A. Defining Transgender/Gender Identity/Sex Assigned at Birth
As explained by Dr. Diane Ehrensaft, a developmental and clinical psychologist who studies and specializes in treating transgender children and adolescents, there are a number of components that determine a person's gender: external genitalia, internal sex organs, chromosomal sex, gonadal sex, fetal hormonal sex, hypothalamic sex, pubertal hormonal sex, neurological sex, and gender identity and role. Doc. 166, Ct. Ex. 3 at ¶ 20.12 Among these markers, external genitalia, the most physically obvious one, has historically been used to determine gender for purposes of recording a birth as male or female.
The Medical Amici14 explain that *1299" '[g]ender identity' refers to a person's internal sense of being male, female, or another gender." Doc. 119, Ex. A at 6. A transgender individual is someone who " 'consistently, persistently, and insistently' identifies as a gender different than the sex they were assigned at birth."Id. at 7. A 2016 publication estimated that 1.4 million transgender adults are living in the United States, 0.6 percent of the adult population.
"[M]any transgender individuals are diagnosed with gender dysphoria, a condition that is characterized by debilitating distress and anxiety resulting from the incongruence between an individual's gender identity and birth-assigned sex."
Social transition "typically includes publicly identifying oneself as that gender; adopting a new name; using different pronouns; grooming and dressing in a manner typically associated with one's gender identity" (Id. at 11); changing sports teams to be consistent with one's gender identity (Doc. 166, Ct. Ex. 2 at Tr. 23); "and using restrooms and other single-sex facilities consistent with that identity." Doc. 119, Ex. A at 11. Transgender students typically seek privacy and discreteness in restroom use and try to avoid exposing any parts of their genitalia that would reveal sex characteristics inconsistent with their gender identity. Doc. 166, Ct. Ex. 3 at ¶ 49. The Pediatric Endocrine Society states that not allowing students to use the restroom matching their gender identity promotes further discrimination and segregation of a group that already faces discrimination and safety concerns.15 Doc.
*1300151, Pl. Ex. 47.
The Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline considers the standard of care for some adults and adolescents with gender dysphoria or who seek gender affirmance to include hormone treatment which, for a transgender male, will 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. Doc. 151, Pl. Ex. 30 at 18-19. Surgical interventions (including a double mastectomy and chest reconstruction for transgender men (sometimes referred to as "top surgery") and/or genital surgery) may be appropriate and medically necessary for some patients, but may be delayed until the age of legal majority because, unlike the other treatments, they are largely irreversible.
B. Drew Adams
When Adams was born in 2000, he had the external genitalia of a female, and indeed, his parents had been told they were expecting a girl. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 84; Doc. 161 at Tr. 31. His Florida birth certificate recorded his sex as "female." Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 83; Doc. 170, Def. Ex. 145 (under seal). From a young age, Adams' parents noticed that Adams rejected what they describe as stereotypically feminine behaviors and attributes, such as playing with dolls, favoring the color pink, or wearing dresses; instead, Adams preferred playing with toy race cars and dinosaurs, and going to the science center. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 217-18; Doc. 161 at Tr. 87. Nonetheless, Adams was a happy and smart child. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 81, 189. In middle school, however, as Adams started going through puberty, he "hated" the developing feminine parts of his body.
At the end of eighth grade, a few months after he began his therapy, Adams realized that he was transgender and came out to his parents, who already suspected as much. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 219; Doc. 161 at Tr. 87. Adams and his parents met with Adams' therapist seeking guidance. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 220-21. Adams' therapist confirmed that Adams was transgender, and Adams began implementing the social transition to present as a male, which included cutting Adams' hair short, wearing a chest binder (a garment which flattens the breast tissue) and masculine clothing, asking people to switch to male pronouns when referring to him, and using the men's restrooms when in public.16
Adams' psychologist determined he met the criteria for gender dysphoria, and in *1301May 2016, she supported his request to begin treatment with an endocrinologist for his medical transition, which included taking birth control to halt menstruation and testosterone to make his body more masculine.
Adams has also worked on the legal transition. The Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles follows the recommendations of the WPATH in establishing procedures for changing gender on Florida driver's licenses, requiring a statement from a medical provider that the applicant is undergoing clinical treatment for gender transition. See Doc. 147, Ex. A (Florida Driver License Operations Manual) at LR07.2b. Within certain guidelines, the Florida Department of Health, Office of Vital Statistics accepts supporting authenticated medical documentation to amend the sex designation on birth certificates.18 See Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 64V-1.003(2) (2004). Adams followed these procedures, and his Florida driver's license and Florida birth certificate both now record his gender as "Male" or "M." See Doc. 151, Pl. Ex. 3; Doc. 169, Pl. Ex. 4 (under seal).
According to Adams' mother, coming out brought on "an absolutely remarkable" change in Adams. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 220. "He went from this quiet, withdrawn, depressed kid to this very outgoing, positive, bright, confident kid. It was a complete 180."
Adams is excelling academically in high school, is enrolled in the International Baccalaureate program, and is a member of the National Honor Society.
C. The St. Johns County School District and Its Transgender and Bathroom Policies
The St. Johns County School Board is responsible for providing "proper attention to [the] health, safety, and other matters relating to the welfare of students."
According to the School Board Attorney, and as affirmed by the School Board Chair, for as long as anyone can remember, the unwritten School District bathroom policy was that boys will use the boys' restrooms at school and girls will use the girls' restrooms at school, using those terms as traditionally defined based on biological traits.
Beginning in 2012, the (now retired) Director of Student Services worked with LGBTQ students, attended and sent staff to LGBTQ conferences, and researched school policies in other school districts in Florida and elsewhere to educate herself and the School District about emerging LGBTQ issues. Doc. 161 at Tr. 146-47. She formed a task force which consulted with district administrators, principals, attorneys, guidance counselors, mental health professionals, parents, students, members of the public, and LGBTQ groups in St. Johns County and elsewhere.
The Best Practices Guidelines were formed with the community's values in mind (described by the School Board Attorney as trending conservative), and they provide guidance to faculty and staff to address numerous issues related to LGBTQ students. Doc. 162 at Tr. 32-33, 86. Under the Best Practices Guidelines, upon request by a student or parent, students should be addressed with the name and gender pronouns corresponding with *1303the student's consistently asserted gender identity; school records will be updated upon receipt of a court order to reflect a transgender student's name and gender; unofficial school records will use a transgender student's chosen name even without a court order; transgender students are allowed to dress in accordance with their gender identity; students are permitted to publicly express their gender identity; and the school will not unnecessarily disclose a student's transgender status to others. Doc. 152, Def. Ex. 33; Doc. 151, Pl. Ex. 138 at Request for Admission # 51.21 The Best Practices Guidelines also provide that "[t]ransgender students will be given access to a gender-neutral restroom and will not be required to use the restroom corresponding to their biological sex."22 Doc. 152, Def. Ex. 33 at 1. The document further states that "[t]here is no specific federal or Florida state law that requires schools to allow a transgender student access to the restroom corresponding to their consistently asserted transgender identity."
In formulating their recommendations for the Best Practices Guidelines, the LBGTQ task force was aware that some other school districts, including in Florida, have adopted policies permitting transgender students to use the restrooms consistent with their gender identity. Doc. 161 at Tr. 215-16. However, the task force did not recommend that alternative for the St. Johns County School District due at least in part to concerns about how to handle gender-fluid students (those whose gender changes between male and female) or those pretending to be gender-fluid, although the task force had not heard of any such incidents.23
*1304According to the School Board Attorney, the gender-neutral bathroom option was added to the Guidelines and is now part of the school policy as a reasonable alternative for transgender students so they would not be required to use the bathroom of their sex assigned at birth. Doc. 162 at Tr. 61-62. The School Board's position is that this approach reconciles the interests of transgender students without violating the School Board policy of having separate bathrooms for boys and girls.
Several months after the School District implemented the Best Practices Guidelines, the United States Departments of Education and Justice issued guidance ("the 2016 Guidance") that the term "sex" under Title IX included gender identity. Doc. 152, Def. Ex. 84. The 2016 Guidance directed that schools that provide sex-segregated restrooms, locker rooms and shower facilities must allow transgender students to use those facilities consistent with their gender identity.
Incorporating both the long-standing unwritten School Board bathroom policy and the Best Practices Guidelines, the current policy in St. Johns County public schools for grades four and up is that "biological boys" may only use boys' restrooms or gender-neutral single-stall bathrooms and "biological girls" may only use girls' restrooms or gender-neutral single-stall bathrooms, with the terms "biological boys" and "biological girls" being defined by the student's sex assigned at birth, as reflected on the student's enrollment documents.24 Doc. 162 at Tr. 45-46, 62, 71; Doc. 161 at Tr. 248. The School Board Attorney explained that the bathroom policy comports *1305with the Board's overall responsibility for student welfare, which, in the case of bathrooms, principally involves concerns for privacy and safety.25 Doc. 162 at Tr. 110-11.
With regard to privacy, the School Board seeks to preserve the privacy of individuals using the restroom facilities, but admits that the bathroom stall doors provide privacy for anyone inside a stall.
[W]hen a girl goes into a girls' restroom, she feels that she has the privacy to change clothes in there, to go to the bathroom, to refresh her makeup. They talk to other girls. It's kind of like a guy on the golf course; the women talk in the restrooms, you know. And to have someone else in there that may or may not make them feel uncomfortable, I think that's an issue we have to look at. It's not just for the transgender child, but it's for the other.
Doc. 161 at Tr. 213. The School District's Deputy Superintendent for Operations raised similar points, saying a student may want privacy to undress or clean up a stain on her clothing.
As for the safety aspect, the School Board seeks to assure that members of the opposite sex are not in an unsupervised bathroom together, citing as an example the risks of danger posed to a female freshman student who might find herself alone in the restroom with an 18-year old male student.
The retired Director of Student Services also expressed concern for the safety of transgender students, worrying that they might be bullied or assaulted or ridiculed by other students if they are in the bathroom that matches their gender identity.
Additionally, if a transgender student enrolled in the St. Johns County School District having already changed their legal documents to reflect their gender identity, the student's school records would reflect that gender as well. Doc. 162 at Tr. 35. The school district has no process to determine if a student is transgender. Doc. 161 at Tr. 235. As the School Board Attorney said, "[t]he district does not play bathroom cop," and it accepts the information on the enrollment documents at face value. Doc. 162 at Tr. 53. Thus, unless there was a complaint, a transgender student could use the restroom matching his or her gender identity until he or she graduated and the school would be none the wiser.
The Nease campus is spread over several buildings. There are four sets of multi-stall, sex-segregated bathrooms available during class time to the school's 2,450 students.
The undersigned visited Nease and toured all of the bathrooms on campus. While they were clean, most of the multi-stall single-sex restroom facilities were dated and there were not nearly enough bathrooms for boys or girls considering the number of students at Nease. The school principal said there are often lines to use those bathrooms. The gender-neutral bathrooms were generally more modern than the multi-stall single-sex bathrooms. Some of Nease's classrooms are in portable buildings. There are no gender-neutral bathrooms or faculty bathrooms near those classrooms, and the multi-stall single-sex bathrooms there have very few stalls. The principal said that faculty assigned to teach in the portable classrooms sometimes use the multi-stall single-sex bathrooms. The undersigned observed that the boys' locker room is an open space *1307with no room for privacy while changing. There is a bathroom available in the coach's office, but the principal said it is not available to use for changing. The boys' locker room shower is an open space with several shower heads and no curtains or dividers. The showering space is visible to other areas of the locker room.
D. Adams' Experience with the Bathroom Policy at Nease High School
School enrollment documents show that Adams enrolled in the St. Johns County School District as a female entering the fourth grade at PV/PV Rawlings Elementary in 2010. See Doc. 170, Def. Ex. 142, 143, 144 (under seal). During the summer of 2015, before Adams began high school at Nease, Adams' mother informed the student services department that Adams was transitioning and would be attending high school as a boy. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 251-52. When Adams began school in August, he presented as a boy and used the boys' restroom when needed without incident.
To Adams, the school's refusal to let him use the boys' restroom meant that the school did not see him as a boy, and refused to accept who he was. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 116. As Adams testified, "I was living in every aspect of my life as a boy and now they're taking that away from me."
For some of Adams' classes during his junior year, the gender-neutral bathrooms were considerably further away than the boys' restrooms.27
Adams testified that he feels alienated and humiliated, and it causes him anxiety and depression to walk past the boys' restroom on his way to a gender-neutral bathroom, knowing every other boy is permitted to use it but him. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 116-17. Adams thinks it also sends a message to other students who see him use a "special bathroom" that he is different, when all he wants is to fit in.
There were no reported instances of privacy breaches during the time Adams used the boys' restroom at Nease. Although no one other than the two female students ever complained about Adams' use of the boys' bathroom at Nease, the parties stipulated that certain parents and students in the School District object to a policy or practice that would allow students to use bathrooms in accordance with their gender identity as opposed to their sex assigned at birth, because they believe such a practice would violate the bodily privacy rights of students and raises privacy, safety and welfare concerns. Doc. 116 at § I, ¶ 3 (p. 22). The School District has agreed to treat Adams as a boy in all other respects, but its position is that Adams' enrollment documents and official school records identify him as a female, and he has not presented any evidence that he is a "biological male." Doc. 161 at Tr. 229-36, 253; Doc. 162 at Tr. 12-13, 35-36; Doc. 173-1 at ¶¶ 42-43. The School District maintains that Adams is welcome to use the gender-neutral bathrooms or the girls' bathroom.30 Doc. 161 at Tr. 250-51. But he cannot use the boys' bathroom.
E. Schools With Policies Permitting Transgender Students To Use The Bathroom that Aligns With Their Gender Identity
The Court heard testimony from three school administrators familiar with other schools that have adopted the transgender bathroom policy that Adams is advocating.31 Broward County, also in Florida, has a public school policy that permits students to use gender-neutral restrooms as well as the restrooms that match their *1309gender identity. Doc. 151, Pl. Ex. 66 at 40-41. Unlike St. Johns County, Broward County also has a human rights ordinance that prohibits discrimination based on gender identity.
Michelle Kefford, a principal at a high school in Broward County who also works district-wide answering questions about the district's LGBTQ policies, has worked with about a dozen transgender students over the years, and her high school presently has two transgender students out of a population of about 2,600.
Kefford testified that no students or parents have complained about transgender students in the bathrooms, although in the training sessions she conducts within the school district, she has encountered other adults who do not agree with the district's transgender policies. Doc. 161 at Tr. 106, 118-19. Based on her experience in meeting with these adults, Kefford's opinion is that "people are afraid of what they don't understand ... [and] a lot of that fear [is because] they haven't experienced it, they don't know enough about it, and the first thing that comes to mind is this person wants to go into this bathroom for some other purpose. That's not the reality. The reality is this child ... just want[s] to be accepted" as a member of the gender with which they identify.
Kefford also testified that there has never been a problem involving a transgender *1310student in the bathroom, and any problem that did arise would be dealt with in accordance with the school's disciplinary guidelines.
Dr. Thomas Aberli, a principal with the Jefferson County Public Schools in Kentucky testified about his experience at a high school during the time that it adopted a policy to permit transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms that aligned with their gender identity. Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 22-23. That high school does not have any gender-neutral bathrooms but does have one single-stall girls' bathroom and one single-stall boys' bathroom in the front office.
III. Conclusions of Law
To prevail, Adams must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that the School Board violated his rights under the Equal Protection Clause and/or Title IX.33 If Adams does so, it is also his burden to prove (again by a preponderance of the evidence) how this violation caused him damage.34 See Pattern Jury Instructions, Civil Cases, Eleventh Circuit (2013 revision, last revised Jan. 2018) 1.1 Gen. Prelim. Instr.; Texas Dep't of Comm. Affairs v. Burdine,
The Supreme Court has long recognized that the state has broad authority *1311to protect the physical, mental, and moral well-being of its youth. Planned Parenthood of Cent. Mo. v. Danforth,
A. Equal Protection Clause Claim
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that no State may "deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. Accordingly, the St. Johns County School Board, a political subdivision of the State of Florida,35 must "treat all persons similarly situated alike or, conversely, [must] avoid all classifications that are 'arbitrary or irrational' and those that reflect 'a bare desire to harm a politically unpopular group.' " Glenn v. Brumby,
*1312M.A.B. v. Bd. of Educ. of Talbot Cty.,
The School Board's bathroom policy cannot be stated without referencing sex-based classifications, as it requires what it terms "biological boys"--intended by the School Board to mean those whose sex assigned at birth is male--to use the boys' bathrooms or gender-neutral bathrooms, and it requires "biological girls"--intended by the School Board to mean those whose sex assigned at birth is female--to use the girls' bathrooms or gender-neutral bathrooms. But Adams identifies as a boy, is identified by others as a boy, is legally deemed by the state of Florida to be a boy, lives as a boy, uses the men's restroom outside of the school setting, and is otherwise treated as a boy--except when it comes to his use of the school bathrooms. The School Board Attorney agreed that as a transgender boy, Adams is not treated the same as "biological boys" when it comes to using the restroom. Doc. 162 at Tr. 118. Thus, although the policy treats most boys and girls the same, it treats Adams differently because, as a transgender boy, he does not act in conformity with the sex-based stereotypes associated with the sex he was assigned at birth (female). "This policy is inherently based upon a sex-classification and heightened review applies." Whitaker,
Under the intermediate scrutiny standard, the School Board must show that " 'its gender classification is substantially related to a sufficiently important government interest.' " Glenn,
1. Privacy
The School Board claims that its long-standing policy of having separate boys' and girls' bathrooms has created an *1314expectation of privacy for students and parents who do not expect students of the opposite sex to share the bathroom space. Doc. 162 at Tr. 67. The Court agrees that the School Board has a legitimate interest in protecting student privacy, which extends to bathrooms. But allowing transgender students to use the restrooms that match their gender identity does not affect the privacy protections already in place. When he goes into a restroom, Adams enters a stall, closes the door, relieves himself, comes out of the stall, washes his hands, and leaves. Adams has encountered no problems using men's restrooms in public places, and there were no reports of problems from any boys or boys' parents during the six weeks of his freshman year when Adams used the boys' restrooms at Nease. Nor was there any evidence that any school official associated with the St. Johns County School District, including members of its LGBTQ task force, had ever heard of any incident anywhere where a transgender student using a restroom acted in a manner that invaded another student's privacy.
Likewise, the research and experience of the school officials from Broward County and Jefferson County Public Schools in Kentucky revealed no privacy concerns when transgender students used the restroom that matched their gender identity. While St. Johns County School personnel said girls may want privacy in the restrooms while talking to their peers, changing clothes (which can be done in a stall), putting on make-up, or removing stains from their clothing, none of that requires them to expose their anatomy to other students such that having a transgender student in the restroom would invade their bodily privacy. And, any student who wants additional privacy for any reason is permitted to use the gender-neutral single-stall bathrooms.
Admittedly, the boys' restrooms at Nease- which Adams would use if he could- have urinals without dividers, so if someone chose to be a voyeur, there is the potential that a boy's genitals could be viewed. But this is not a real concern for several reasons. First, Adams cannot use a urinal and always uses a stall. Second, there is no evidence that a transgender boy is more likely to be curious about another student's anatomy than any other boy. Third, any student engaging in voyeurism in the bathroom would be engaging in misconduct which is subject to discipline through the School District's code of conduct. Fourth, any boy who is concerned about other students seeing his anatomy can use a gender-neutral bathroom or a stall in the boys' restroom (as Adams would when using the boys' restroom).
Nor was there any evidence that transgender students might expose themselves to other students in the restroom; in fact, the evidence was to the contrary- transgender students want to be discrete about their anatomy so other students do not recognize them as anything but the gender with which they identify. Indeed, as the School Board admitted, there could be transgender students whose enrollment documents are consistent with the students' gender identity, and no one would know they are using restrooms that are different from the ones that match their sex assigned at birth.
Based on the evidence at trial, the Court concludes that the School District's bathroom policy "does nothing to protect the privacy rights of each individual student vis-a-vis students who share similar anatomy and it ignores the practical reality of how [Adams], as a transgender boy, uses the bathroom: by entering a stall and closing the door." Whitaker,
2. Safety
The School Board also cites student safety as a basis to uphold its bathroom policy, expressing concern for transgender students who may be bullied or harassed in the bathroom matching their gender identity and for cisgender students who may not feel safe if a person with genitalia of the opposite sex is in the restroom with them. There was no evidence that Adams encountered any safety concerns during the six weeks he used the boys' restroom at Nease or when he does so in other public places. Likewise, there was no evidence that Adams presents any safety risk to other students or that transgender students are more likely than anyone else to assault or molest another student in the bathroom. Any incidents of misconduct are subject to the school's code of conduct and, if necessary, Florida criminal law.
None of the school officials who testified had ever heard of an incident where student safety was compromised by the presence of a transgender student in the restroom that matched his or her gender *1316identity. Again, any student with safety concerns-including a transgender student-can use a gender-neutral single-stall bathroom. Consistent with a number of other courts that have considered the issue, this Court finds concern for student safety is not an "exceedingly persuasive justification" for upholding the school bathroom policy. Virginia,
3. Additional Considerations
Although the Court has found that the School Board's concerns about privacy and safety are only conjectural (and therefore insufficient to survive intermediate scrutiny), the School District says it creates policy with an eye toward minimizing the risk of future problems, even if none have ever occurred. With that in mind, the Court has carefully considered whether the eleven gender-neutral single-stall bathrooms on campus (which are open to all students) provide an appropriate accommodation for Adams such that more is not required. They do not. While there are more stalls available in gender-neutral bathrooms (eleven) than in the multi-stall boys' restrooms (ten), some of them are further away from Adams' classes. More importantly, however, Adams testified to the stigma that attaches to his use of gender-neutral bathrooms, especially when he has to walk right past an available boys' restroom to find one. See Doc. 160-1 at Tr. 204 (describing the walk from his class to a gender-neutral single-stall bathroom as "feel[ing] almost like a walk of shame").
He also testified about the message it sends to other students that the school does not view him as a real boy. Using his words: "[B]ecause I'm using a special bathroom and I'm oftentimes passing a men's bathroom, everybody knows I'm different, and I just want to fit in. So it's the opposite of what I want." Id. at Tr. 205. In Boyertown, the Third Circuit rejected the suggestion from cisgender students that the school should offer transgender students the opportunity to use gender-neutral single-stall facilities, finding that policy "invite[s] more scrutiny and attention" from the transgender students' peers, "very publicly brand[ing] all transgender students with a scarlet "T" [which] they should not have to endure ... as the price of attending their public school." 893 F.3d at 192 (quoting Whitaker,
The retired Director of Student Services testified that the task force was concerned about what to do about "gender-fluid" students if the School District strayed from its long-standing policy of only permitting "biological boys" to use the boys' restroom and only permitting "biological girls" to use the girls' restroom. The general point is well-taken, but merely hypothetical given where we are. This case does not raise the issue of what to do about gender-fluid students; rather, the question here is whether to permit a transgender boy who has taken significant social, medical and legal measures to present as a boy (and who never intends to use a girls' restroom) to have access to the boys' restroom. Thus, to the extent school officials are worried that gender-fluid students might be using a boys' restroom one day and a girls' restroom the next, that would not happen if relief is granted here because this case is only about permitting one transgender boy to use the boys' restroom.42 For this same reason, the hypothetical worry that cisgender students might pose as gender-fluid for the purpose of gaining access to the restroom of the opposite sex is not a valid concern here.43 This case is not about eliminating separate sex bathrooms; it is only about whether to allow a transgender boy to use the boys' bathroom.
The Court likewise rejects the contention that permitting Adams to use the boys' restroom is just the beginning of a "slippery slope" which will result in the elimination of separate sex restrooms. As explained by the Medical Amici, a transgender individual " 'consistently, persistently, and insistently' identifies as a gender different than the sex they were assigned at birth." Doc. 119, Ex. A at 7. Transgender individuals are not gender-fluid and their sense of who they are is settled. Adams does not want to use the girls' restroom. The undisputed evidence is that he is a transgender boy and wants to use the boys' restroom. There is no evidence to suggest that his identity as a boy is any less consistent, persistent and insistent than any other boy. Permitting him to use the boys' restroom will not integrate the restrooms between the sexes.
Even so, the School Board contends that its policy is simply based on the realistic physical differences between the sexes. The School Board cites Michael M. v. Superior Court of Sonoma County,
The bathroom policy here is distinguishable-everyone is subject to the same rule-both boys and girls must use the bathroom that aligns with their sex assigned at birth (or a gender-neutral one), and both boys and girls would be subject to discipline for disobeying the policy. The school bathroom policy does not depend on something innately different between the bodies of boys and girls or what they do in the bathroom. Michael M., by contrast, "upheld ... the gender classification" because the statute there aimed to prevent teen pregnancy and "realistically reflect[ed] the fact that the sexes were not similarly situated" because only women could become pregnant.
The School Board also relies on Johnston v. University of Pittsburgh,
Though not an Equal Protection Clause case, the Third Circuit's recent Boyertown decision (which rejected claims by cisgender students that transgender students in the restrooms violated Title IX and Pennsylvania privacy law), likely eviscerates any persuasive value Johnston retained. Boyertown,
Although there was no testimony on the issue, the parties stipulated that some parents and students in the St. Johns County School District object to a policy permitting transgender students to use a restroom matching their gender identity, believing the policy "would violate the bodily privacy rights of students and raise[s] concerns for their privacy, safety and welfare." Doc. 116 at § I (p. 22). There are cases where parents have removed their children from public school and/or have sued a school district over a transgender bathroom policy. See, e.g., Boyertown,
But the Court has addressed why privacy and safety concerns, though perhaps understandable, simply aren't realized when transgender students use school bathrooms aligned with their gender identity. See Doc. 161 at Tr. 64-65, 106-07 (testimony of Broward County school officials); see also Whitaker,
The School Board has not shown that 'its gender classification is substantially related to a sufficiently important government interest,' " Glenn,
B. Title IX
Adams also claims that the School Board bathroom policy violates his rights under Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972. Under Title IX, 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 ...."
To prove his claim here, Adams must demonstrate that (1) he was subjected to discrimination in an educational program or activity; (2) the discrimination was "on the basis of sex;" (3) the School Board receives federal funding; and (4) the discrimination caused him harm. See Seamons v. Snow,
Title IX does not define the term "sex," nor do its regulations. There is no Eleventh Circuit or Supreme Court authority directly on point. Adams argues the term "sex" includes gender identity, whereas the School Board contends the term "sex" means "biological sex." Given the lack of definition within the statute or regulation, and recognizing that a number of courts have struggled with this exact question, this Court finds the term "sex" as used in Title IX is ambiguous as applied to transgender students. Cf. Robinson v. Shell Oil Co.,
The School Board raises four main arguments in support of its interpretation: first, the meaning of the word "sex" as based on dictionary definitions at the time Title IX was enacted and its legislative history support a conclusion that "sex" means "biological sex;" second, Title IX permits schools to provide separate boys' and girls' bathrooms so it cannot be a violation to separate the sexes in the restrooms; third, the Department of Education's current interpretation of Title IX refutes the argument that "sex" includes "gender identity;" and fourth, court decisions that have utilized Title VII principles to glean a definition of sex (cases upon which plaintiff relies for his interpretation) are inapplicable.48
Citing Judge Niemeyer's dissent from the affirmance of entry of a preliminary injunction in G.G. v. Gloucester County School Board,
Nor is the Court persuaded that the legislative history relied on by the School Board provides a definitive answer, as it merely emphasized that Title IX was not intended to integrate the sexes (something *1322no one is advocating here). See Doc. 173-1 at 28-29 (relying on statements of Title IX's sponsor, Senator Birch Bayh). Subsequent uses of the terms "gender" and "gender identity" in other statutes likewise fail to convince the Court that the omission of those terms in Title IX was intentional. The presumption that terms are used consistently by Congress is "entitled to less force where, as here, the [School Board] points to terms used in different statutes passed by different Congresses in different decades." Zarda v. Altitude Express, Inc.,
The School Board also argues that because Title IX explicitly allows "separate living facilities for the different sexes,"
*1323In 2017, the Department of Education withdrew earlier guidance which had instructed that the term "sex" under Title IX included gender identity and that schools must allow transgender students to use sex-segregated restrooms, locker rooms and shower facilities consistent with their gender identity. Doc. 152, Def. Ex. 84, 237. The School Board contends that the withdrawal of that guidance signifies that the Department of Education disagrees with an interpretation of "sex" that includes gender identity for purposes of Title IX. But the 2017 Guidance stated it was withdrawing the earlier guidance because it had not undergone any formal public process and had been issued without extensive legal analysis or explanation as to how it was consistent with Title IX. Doc. 152, Def. Ex. 237. Thus, the rescission of the old guidance without issuing new guidance does not provide any interpretation of Title IX from the Department of Education. See A.H.,
It is true, as the School Board notes, that some of the transgender school bathroom decisions which considered Title IX relied on the now rescinded guidance in reaching a result. See, e. g., G.G.,
Finding that Title IX does not define the ambiguous terms "sex" and "on the basis of sex" for purposes of their application to transgender students, many courts have *1324looked to decisions interpreting other anti-discrimination statutes, particularly Title VII, which prohibits employment discrimination based on, among other things, sex. 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e etseq. See, e.g., Boyertown,
In looking for Title IX guidance, the transgender school bathroom decisions inevitably consider Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins,
*1325This Court likewise follows the guidance of Glenn and other authorities cited above to conclude that the meaning of "sex" in Title IX includes "gender identity" for purposes of its application to transgender students. See Bostock v. Clayton Cty. Bd. of Comm'rs,
Adams has proven a Title IX violation because the School Board, a federally funded institution, prohibits Adams, a transgender boy, from using the boys' restroom "on the basis of sex," which discrimination caused him harm.
*1326III. Remedy
Having found that the School Board's bathroom policy violates Adams' rights under the Equal Protection Clause and Title IX, the Court must now consider the remedy. In his proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, Adams has narrowed the scope of his requested injunctive relief from that requested in his amended complaint, and seeks to permanently enjoin the School Board "from enforcing any policy, practice, or custom of the St. Johns County School District that denies transgender students access to and use of restrooms that match a student's gender identity."56 Doc. 175 at 50.
The evidence has established that Drew Adams is a transgender boy. Adams has undergone social, medical, and legal transitions to present himself as a boy. Adams wears his hair short; he dresses like a boy; his voice is deeper than a girl's; his family, peers, classmates and teachers use male pronouns to refer to him; he takes hormones which suppress menstruation and make his body more masculine, including the development of facial hair and typical male muscle development; he has had a double mastectomy so his body looks more like a boy; the state of Florida has provided him with a birth certificate and driver's license which state he is a male; and when out in public, Adams uses the men's restroom. As a transgender boy, Adams must be permitted to use the boys' restroom at school.
However, the Court has had no occasion in the context of this case to determine what threshold of transition, if any, is necessary for the School Board to accommodate other transgender students, nor did the parties ask the Court to do so. The Court received no evidence concerning any other transgender student. Thus, the injunction that will enter in this case will be limited to the plaintiff, Drew Adams.57
"[D]amages for emotional distress or mental anguish are at best difficult to measure." Benton v. Rousseau,
*1327situation, lessening the emotional trauma. Nevertheless, while there was no expert testimony about a diagnosis of gender dysphoria for Adams, the Court is persuaded by the evidence that he suffered emotional damage, stigmatization and shame from not being permitted to use the boys' restroom at school. See Sheely v. MRI Radiology Network, P.A.,
IV. Conclusion
There is no doubt that the teachers and administrators of Nease High School and the St. Johns County School District are caring professionals who have the best interests of their students at heart. Likewise, Drew Adams presented himself as a polite, forthright individual who is, without rancor, seeking to vindicate his civil rights. The lawyers for both sides have also conducted themselves professionally. All involved are to be commended for the way they have handled a difficult and sensitive situation.
Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED :
1. By separate entry, the Court will enter Final Judgment, finding in favor of plaintiff, Drew Adams, a minor, by and through his next friend and mother, Erica Adams Kasper, and against the defendant, St. Johns County School Board, on Counts I (Equal Protection Clause) and II (Title IX) of Adams' Amended Complaint (Doc. 60). The Court's Final Judgment will incorporate an injunction preventing the St. Johns County School Board from enforcing its policy which prohibits Drew Adams from using the boys' restrooms at Nease High School;59 and a compensatory damages award of $1,000.00.
2. The Court will retain jurisdiction to enforce the injunction and to address the matter of attorney's fees and costs.
3. No later than September 4, 2018 , plaintiff shall file his motion for attorney's fees and costs under
*1328DONE AND ORDERED at Jacksonville, Florida this 26th day of July, 2018.
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
318 F. Supp. 3d 1293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-sch-bd-of-st-johns-cnty-flmd-2018.