Marsha Chartrand

Case may decide if Michigan schools must tell parents of kids’ gender identity

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Jennifer Mead and her husband, Dan argue that the Rockford schools in Kent County violated their constitutional rights when it did not tell them about its decision to call their seventh grader by a different name and pronouns. Photo courtesy of Alliance Defending Freedom.

Editor’s note: This story was originally published by Bridge Michigan (bridgemi.com), a nonprofit and nonpartisan news organization. To get regular coverage from Bridge Michigan, sign up for a free Bridge Michigan newsletter here (https://bit.ly/BridgeMichiganNewsletter).” 

by Mike Wilkinson (Bridge Michigan)

A federal judge last week allowed a west Michigan lawsuit to proceed that could have broad implications for whether public schools must inform parents about LGBTQ children’s gender identities.

The judge ruled as “plausible” a couple’s claim that the Rockford schools in Kent County violated their rights when its staff failed to tell them about its decision to call their child by a different name and pronouns.

The district based its actions on a 2016 “guidance” from the state board of education that schools should take a “student-centered approach” for LGBTQ youths and notify parents on a “case-by-case basis.” In February, state Superintendent Michael Rice, who is retiring next month, affirmed those guidelines.

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