Tennessee Bill That Would Defend Local School Districts Over Transgender
Bathroom Policies Fails
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - A Tennessee bill
that would have required the state attorney general's office to defend
local school districts over their bathroom policies for transgender
students appears dead for the year.
The measure failed to make it out of the Senate Judiciary Committee on
Tuesday amid concerns that it could prove costly. One of the provisions
of the bill allowed school districts to use private attorneys if the
state attorney general's office didn't want to take the case. Some
lawmakers saw it as a gift to lawyers at the expense of taxpayers.
LGBT advocates have said the bill was meant to embolden school boards to
pass policies that discriminate against transgender students knowing the
state would provide for the legal defense if they were sued.
The bill would have provided for the defense of school systems that
adopted policies requiring transgender students to use bathrooms or
locker rooms based on their sex at birth. It also would have allowed
schools to provide transgender students with other accommodations if
they were not comfortable using facilities based on their gender at
birth.
The bill was sponsored by Sen. Joey Hensley, a Republican from
Hohenwald.
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