Nondiscrimination terms more in line with state’s...
- Share via
Nondiscrimination terms more in line with state’s
An issue that swept through the Westminster School District like a
wildfire in recent months barely flickered in Surf City on Tuesday.
The Huntington Beach Union High School District board approved a
nondiscrimination policy that included the state Department of
Education’s definition of gender with almost no debate despite the
objections of one board member.
The board voted 4-1 to update the district’s anti-discrimination
policies to prohibit discrimination based on both sex and gender. The
word “gender” was added to the district’s regulations, Assistant
Supt. of Educational Services Carol Osbrink said.
Opponents of the policy said it is contrary to traditional gender
roles. Differentiating between a person’s sex and one’s sense of
gender makes the gender more a matter of choice than of birth, they
said.
“It’s very much the core issue: Is sex something that’s determined
objectively or is it something that’s self-determined?” board member
Matthew Harper asked.
Harper was the only board member to vote against the policy. He
proposed an amendment to have the district define gender along
biological lines. No board members seconded his motion.
In Westminster, a highly publicized confrontation between the
school district and the state Department of Education ended in April
when state Supt. of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell accepted the
district’s adoption of a nondiscrimination policy that defined gender
as a biological condition and banned discrimination based on the
offender’s perception of a person’s gender. The Department of
Education’s interpretation of the law defines gender as the victim’s
perceived sex.
Board members voting to adopt the state-approved policy said
school districts should follow the state’s lead in complying with the
education code.
“If that needs to be changed, it needs to be changed at the state
level,” school board President Michael Simons said.
Westminster school board member Judy Ahrens came to the meeting to
urge Surf City educators to follow her district’s lead. After the
meeting she said she did not support the state’s definition of gender
because she believes allowing a student or staff member to define
their own sex could allow for cross-dressing or other acts of
nonconformity with traditional gender roles.
“It has people protected under a policy so any employee can have
strange behavior, or any kid,” she said.
Disagreement on the issue stems from not only the meaning of
gender but also the relationship between the state legislature and
local school districts. Harper said the state should allow districts
to form their own rules, but Supt. Van Riley agreed with Simons that
the district’s better path is to heed the advice of officials in
Sacramento.
“As far as what we do with the rest of the education code, we try
to stick with the education code and the state Department of
Education’s interpretation of that,” Riley said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.