In Alaska’s Capitol, House Bill 183 has left House Judiciary Committee with Republican Reps. Craig Johnson, Ben Carpenter, Jesse Sumner, Jamie Allard, and Sarah Vance recommending “do pass.” Democrat Reps. Andrew Gray and Cliff Groh recommended “do not pass.” The bill is now in the Rules Committee, the last stop before the House floor.
The bill puts state limits on transgenders who take over girls competitive athletics in public schools in Alaska. Across the country, a trend of boys who want to compete as girls on girls’ teams has taken hold; HB 183 seeks to end that in Alaska.
Rep. Gray called the bill “hateful,” and Rep. Groh said he was worried it would draw a lawsuit. Some 24 other states have similar laws as the one being proposed by Rep. Allard and Rep. Tom McKay.
Some legislative observers say the bill, if it passes the House, will be allowed to die in the Democrat-controlled Senate.
Meanwhile, in the nation’s capital, a group of U.S. House of Representatives Republicans has urged the National Collegiate Athletics Association to ban transgender-identifying male athletes from competing in women’s sports.
The request to the NCAA comes after the the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, another college athletics organization, enacted the ban earlier this month.
In a letter written by 17 congressional representatives, the lawmakers asked that NCAA President Charlie Baker uphold Title IX protections for women’s sports.
Currently, the NCAA policy allows each individual sport under its umbrella to determine whether male athletes can participate against females.
“As you know, last week the NAIA Council of Presidents unanimously approved a new policy regarding transgender athletes. This policy prohibits the participation of biological males, who have undergone hormone therapy, in women’s sports. However, this policy does not include sports that do not involve ‘some combination of strength, speed and stamina’, such as competitive cheer or competitive dance,” the group wrote.
“This policy appropriately recognizes the natural advantages that biological men have in certain athletic competitions. A 2022 study entitled ‘Transwoman Elite Athletes: Their Extra Percentage Relative to Female Physiology’ concluded that ‘many anatomical sex differences driven by testosterone are not reversible.’ Further, this study found that given that ‘estrogen therapy will not reverse most athletic performance parameters, it follows that transgender women will enter the female division with an inherent advantage because of their prior male physiology.’ The NCAA’s current transgender policy fails to take these scientific facts into consideration,” the congressional group wrote.
Recently, University of South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley said “if you’re a woman you should play. If you consider yourself a woman, and you want to play sports or vice versa, you should be able to play.”
The members of Congress responded.
“This statement ignores the biological facts and would harm female athletes throughout NCAA-affiliated schools. It is simply unfair for biological males to be allowed to compete against biological females. On top of that, allowing biological males to participate in women’s sports erodes critical Title IX protections for women,” the signers of the letter wrote to the NCAA. They included Rep. Claudia Teeny of New York and 16 others, including Rep. Dan Crenshaw of Texas and Rep. Jim Banks of Indiana, as well as three members of Congress who are medical doctors.
“As such, we urge the NCAA to reconsider its current policy that allows biological males to deprive women of a fair opportunity to compete and achieve athletic success. All women in NCAA-affiliated schools should not fear having their athletic accomplishments minimized by biological males, as happened in the 2022 NCAA 500-yard freestyle event, with Lia Thomas, a biological man, taking the championship over Emma Weyant. This cannot be allowed to ever happen again. The NCAA must follow the NAIA’s lead and prohibit biological males from competing in women’s sports,” the representatives wrote.