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Charleston City Paper: SC bill would exclude trans students from girls’ school sports teams

Critics and supporters of a bill that would ban transgender female students from participating on many school sports teams based on gender identity delivered testimony before a S.C. House subcommittee on Tuesday.

Without the bill, supporters predicted the demise of women’s sports. The bill’s opponents said the proposal was unenforceable and fans flames of transphobia and anti-LGBTQ sentiment.

The chief sponsor of HB.3477, Republican S.C. Rep. Ashley Trantham, R-Pelzer, said the proposal aims to preserve an even playing field for young women seeking recognition for athletic achievement.

Trantham’s “Save Women’s Sports Act” stems from a 2016 rule by the South Carolina High School League that allows transgender students to participate in sports based on their gender identity. Trantham introduced testimony Tuesday, saying, “This harmful policy would steal opportunities for girls and women.”

Trantham’s bill, one of several like it being proposed nationwide, requires teams to be designated “based on biological sex,” and stipulates women’s teams “may not be open to students of the male sex.”

Supporters of the bill included former high school athletes and parents who echoed Trantham, arguing it would be unfair for cisgender females, whose gender identity corresponds with their sex at birth, to compete against transgender female students.

Calling the bill discriminatory, opponents of the bill included medical doctors and LGBTQ advocates, who said fears over an unequal playing environment are unfounded.

“This bill is unnecessary,” said Chase Glenn, executive director of the Charleston-based Alliance for Full Acceptance. “Transgender people do not have an inherent advantage in sports by virtue of their transition. In reality, transgender women and girls compete at levels similar to all women. No female transgender athlete has qualified for the Olympics, despite rules permitting participation that have been in place for more than a decade.”

Trantham said no incidents of trans students participating on high school girls sports teams have been reported in South Carolina.

Charleston-area Democratic state Rep. Spencer Wetmore was the only legislator present who raised questions Tuesday, posing queries about how the bill would be enforced.

Read the full article from the Charleston City Paper

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CCP: Charleston community leaders sound off on lessons from 2020

Looking ahead, looking back

How about one final look back at 2020 before we close the book on this wild year and throw it on the fire? We’ve enlisted a group of local figures, some of whom you may recognize, to jot down some of what they learned over the course of the year. With one foot already in 2021 for many of us, there are some smart takeaways here from local folks you should keep your eyes on. Bye, bye, 2020! Here’s to 2021. Can’t wait to see you there. —Sam Spence

 

Spencer Wetmore | S.C. Representative

There’s a Saturday Night Live sketch that makes me laugh every time I think about it. Kate McKinnon plays a psychic in 2019 spouting crazy visions: “Yes, I see him. He is washing a bag of Doritos with soap … You are screaming, you are crying, ‘That’s not enough soap!’” I’m no psychic, and my predictions didn’t foresee a global pandemic; not to mention running for office and opening my own law firm.

Nevertheless, here is my attempt at resolutions for 2021.  First, 2020 taught us that when you find yourself simultaneously on a dirt road and a six-lane highway, you still have to find a path forward. So, my first goal is to “stay in the work” by learning, focusing on the details, and pushing ahead. Second, I’ve been reminded this year that we’re not going to get anywhere unless we go together. So, my second goal is to listen and better appreciate others’ perspectives.

Finally, 2020 reminded us that we’re all the parent hiding in the closet during a Zoom meeting (as I write this, my husband is participating in a federal hearing in our daughter’s bedroom); so we can’t take ourselves too seriously.  Cheers, y’all!

 

Read more thoughts on 2020 here!