Dozens of parents and parental rights advocates displayed signs and banners with slogans such as “No More Secrecy” outside the Chico, California, school district office on March 15 in support of proposed federal legislation that would defund states that allow the secret gender transitioning of school children without parental consent.
The bill comes in the wake of a lawsuit filed by the Center for American Liberty on the behalf of Aurora Regino, the mother of a child in the Chico Unified School District, against school district staff. She alleges that a school counselor affirmed her 10-year-old daughter’s gender identity as a transgender male for about three months at Sierra View Elementary School without her knowledge. The lawsuit seeks to end the district’s policy of secret gender transitions.
“She’s very young and didn’t understand what being transgender really meant or the obstacles she would face going through a transition. The school transitioned her and left her to figure it out by herself. This is wrong,” Regino said at the news conference.
Regino says she will continue to love her daughter no matter what gender identity she chooses, but that “keeping important information a secret from parents is not the answer.”
Prior to suing the school district, Regino said she pleaded with school officials and staff to communicate with her about her daughter’s social transition after her daughter stated that she had transitioned.
“At every level within our district, they shut the door in my face and told me that this is law, and they can’t tell me. This is a lie. It’s not law ... and if any parents have experienced the same lie, please know that this is a hoax,” Regino said. “If this bill was in place, it could have prevented a lot of stress and emotional trauma for my child and me last school year.”
Schools have no business getting between parents and their children, especially on matters of gender and sexuality, LaMalfa said.
“It’s completely outrageous that these bureaucrats think they’re going to get away with this. It erodes the confidence in the public school system,” he said.
LaMalfa introduced the bill by title only, meaning the text of the legislation hasn’t yet been received by Congress.