Where Does Trump’s Executive Order Leave Trans Kids Who Want to Play Sports?
In September of 2020, the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion issued a report about the virtues of youth sports, linking them to lower rates of anxiety and depression, lower amounts of stress, improved bone health, reduced risk of cancer and diabetes, and reduced risk of suicide among young people, among other benefits.
Any parent would have trouble arguing with those outcomes, but for the parents of trans children—who are at disproportionate risk of depression, anxiety, and suicidality (especially right now, as the US government moves to outlaw gender-affirming care among youths)—the social and emotional upside of a rec-league swim class, or cheering for them as they play on their school soccer team, may be even more alluring.
In an executive order issued in February—and praised by prominent anti-trans figures including South Carolina congresswoman Nancy Mace and Riley Gaines—however, President Donald Trump has sought to prevent transfeminine athletes from participating in women’s sports. And even with notably few out trans athletes competing in the NCAA, the order is already having a chilling effect on trans children—and their parents—around the country.
“For transgender young people who simply want to play sports with their friends and enjoy the equal benefits of their educational experiences, these attacks are not abstract,” ACLU attorney and trans rights expert Chase Strangio tells me. “Transgender youth have endured years of relentless demonization and political attacks when they are harming absolutely no one by going to school and pursuing extracurricular activities with their friends.”
Hazel Heinzer’s two children, 11-year-old Dylan and nine-year-old Sierra, are both nonbinary, and both currently practice with a youth rock climbing team in their home state of Arizona. Although neither child competes—they didn’t want to have to identify as male or female in order to register with USA Climbing—Heinzer says that her kids are among the lucky ones who have been “supported, accepted, and affirmed by coaches and teammates at their school and extracurricular activities.”
A recent email that Heinzer, who once swam for the University of Arizona, sent to her representatives reads, in part: “Our children are proof that when trans kids are allowed to be themselves, and are affirmed and loved for who they are, they thrive, just like any kid who is loved and accepted for who they are.”
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