A girl from a transgender in the Al Masar team at Long Island Secondary School has ignited a violent discussion about fairness in sports – and whether the boycott may lose all federal funding under the last White House order.
The controversy revolves around a 6 -year -old and 14 -year -old student in the girl's path at William Floyd Secondary School in Shirley.
The unknown student “is socially moved” to females, which means that she is not exposed to hormonal therapy and maintains male properties biologically, but she gets to know a girl, according to the South Shore.
Her presence since joining the team in March for the spring season has divided the community and raised many gatherings to support and against its participation in the girls' team.
“I say let her run,” said Guinness Alvaro, one of the senior William Floyd team in the Flagbal Flagbal team, to this position.
But the enemies, while they say they do not have hatred towards the LGBTQ community, are arguing that participating in the female path has an unfair competitive advantage as a biological man.
“This is a mistake. It is not a matter of hatred, it is related to fairness,” said one of the parents in the area that I asked not to recognize. “Imagine that you are trained, trained and practiced, and after that this child comes while he is a biological boy and dominates it because he has a physical advantage. It is not fair.”
A member of the girls 'girls' path team at school claimed that in practice, when students are supposed to run at the same speed in warm -up operations, the “crossing” student in the front, according to the South Shore newspaper.
A group of athletes who asked not to recognize identity said that they are not necessarily concerned with whether a converted athlete compete with or against them, but they will feel uncomfortable if they have to share the dressing room.
One of the parents told the executive that the passing student was allowed to use the girls' cabinet room, although a plastic sheet is used to separate the athlete from her teammates.
The controversy over a transitary athlete may cost the educational zone more than $ 13 million in federal financing as well.
In February, President Trump signed an executive order that the government “will cancel all money” from schools that allow converting athletes to play on teams based on their sexual identity instead of biological race.
“This is insulting, incorrect and dangerous to women and girls, and women and girls are deprived of equal opportunity to participate and excel in competitive sport,” Trump wrote in his matter from schools that challenge his announcement.
The potential loss of federal financing will be a tremendous success of Lilliam Floyd, as the province receives more than $ 1500 per student for about 10,000 students, according to the boycott budget.
Some parents of the provincial students told the South Shore Press newspaper that they had asked local school officials to address the case, but they have not yet heard.
“The boycott must make a decision: adherence to federal law or to continue to leave a biological boy competing for the girls' team,” one of the parents said to the port.
William Floyd School area did not respond to a request after the comment.
On Monday, Representative Eliz Stefanik called on a federal investigation into another school area in the state of “direct violation” of Trump's order.
Under the New York Law, public schools in the state cannot prevent converting students from playing in sports teams that match their sexual identity – which leads to confusion and a potential crisis of regions that depend on federal financing.
The office of the governor of the state, Cathy Hochol, refused to comment on the case, but the state prosecutor for the state, Leitia James, described Trump's executive order, “illegally effectively.
“We understand that the presidential threats to fund financing intimidate. But they are
“The Post on behalf of the Ministry of Education in the state,” James told the newspaper.
Last week, Trump moved to Maine's stripping of all federal education funds to allow athletes passing by playing girls in public schools, a move now fights Jacket Janet Mills in court.
California and New York, two states with heterogeneous sports protection, can be in the cutting block depending on the ruling in Maine.