When the Gloucester County High School refused to permit Gavin to use restrooms designated for boys, he sued the School Board under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which provides that a school receiving federal financial assistance may not "subject[]" any person to "discrimination . . . on the basis of sex." The U.S. Court of Appeals ruled in Grimm's favor and, on June 23, the district court entered a preliminary injunction requiring the Board to allow Grimm to use the boys’ restroom.
Yesterday the Gloucester School Board filed an application with the Supreme Court, asking the Court to stay the injunction while it considers the Board's forthcoming petition for certiorari. Amy Howe has a very helpful summary of the application here.
I might address the merits of the suit more fully in a later post. (See the footnote below* for a very cursory take on what the hardest question is.) The point of this post, however, is merely to flag one important part of the Board's application to the Court--namely, its conspicuous failure to explain how the district court's injunction will harm the Board, or anyone else.
The Board states that it "urgently needs a stay of the underlying action," "in order to avoid irreparable harm to the Board, to the school system, and to the legitimate privacy expectations of the district’s schoolchildren and parents alike." The Board points to several distinct "harms" that the injunction allegedly will cause.
Most of them are obvious makeweights. For example, the first "harm" noted in the Board's application is a bald assertion that the injunction will be "a particularly devastating blow to the School Board’s authority." Why, however, is this injunction any more of a "blow" to the Board's authority than any other of the countless legal mandates to which it's bound? The Board doesn't say. The Board also alleges that the injunction "will likely cause severe disruption to the school as the upcoming school year approaches in September." But what does that "severe disruption" consist of? Nothing more than the fact that the Board might receive “numerous complaints” from those objecting to Grimm's presence in boys' restrooms. I hope it's obvious why that, too, is hardly a "harm" that would justify staying the injunction. (What's more, there might be even more complaints if the Board continued its exclusion of Grimm from boys' restrooms.)
So then we come to the nub of the matter: The Board argues that the injunction allegedly will impinge upon "children’s constitutionally guaranteed rights of bodily privacy" and "depriv[e] parents of any say over whether their children should be exposed to members of the opposite biological sex, possibly in a state of full or complete undress, in intimate settings."
Think about that for a second. The singular effect of the injunction will be to allow Gavin Grimm to use the boys' restrooms at his high school. And the harm in this is that other students in that school will expose themselves to Grimm while they are "in a state of full or complete undress"? Really?
For one thing, students virtually never expose themselves "in a state of full or complete undress" to anyone in high school restrooms--and on the rare occasions when they do, it's voluntary. Their "right" not to do so--to preserve their bodily privacy--is not implicated by the district court's injunction here any more than it is by the everyday practices at Gloucester High. (Indeed, as it happens, Gloucester High has raised the doors and walls around its restroom stalls, and even installed partitions between the urinals in the boys’ restrooms, thereby making involuntary exposure even more unlikely than it already was. Moreover, as Judge Davis noted in his separate opinion below, all Gloucester High students have the option of using three single-stall restrooms in the school.) The alleged "bodily privacy" concern might be different, or at least worth pondering, in the case of a locker room in which a school requires communal nudity (assuming public schools even do that anymore -- do they?). But the Gloucester School Board case does not raise that question--it's limited to a single student's access to a single high-school's restrooms.
The utter absence of any harm caused by the injunction here does not necessarily mean that the Court should not agree to review the Gloucester High case (although other cases that the courts of appeals will decide in the coming months are apt to be much better "vehicles" for review, if and when a circuit-split develops); and neither does it resolve the merits question (see footnote below). It is, however, a good reason for the Court to deny the Board's application for a stay of the injunction.
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* Short version: I think there's a good case to be made that Title IX, standing alone, would prohibit the school (which receives federal funds) from denying a transgender student from using the boys' restroom by virtue of his reproductive organs--a straightforward form of discrimination on the basis of "sex" that can't easily be justified. It therefore would be permissible for the Department of Education to promulgate a regulation to that effect. The harder question--and it's the principal question raised in the case before the Supreme Court--is one of administrative law, namely, whether an existing regulation creating a restroom exemption from Title IX's antidiscrimination condition ("A recipient [of federal funds] 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") gives schools the authority to provide separate bathrooms on the basis of students' reproductive organs, without regard to students' gender identity, or whether it was proper for the Department of Education to interpret that old regulation not to permit such discrimination. That is to say: Does the Department have to promulgate a new or amended regulation, pursuant to the rulemaking procedure of the Administrative Procedure Act, or can it rest on the existing regulation?