Tennessee Senate OKs bill to penalize schools if parents aren’t told students say they’re transgender

Sen. Paul Rose, R-Covington, sponsored a bill that requires teachers to inform school administrators if a student has said they identify as transgender or want to use different pronouns. (Tennessee Lookout Photo by John Partipilo)
Sen. Paul Rose, R-Covington, sponsored a bill that requires teachers to inform school administrators if a student has said they identify as transgender or want to use different pronouns. (Tennessee Lookout Photo by John Partipilo)


The Tennessee Senate approved a bill that will require public schools to tell parents if their child is identifying as transgender.

The bill by West Tennessee Republican Sen. Paul Rose and Rep. Mary Littleton, R-Dickson, requires teachers to inform school administrators if a student has confided they plan to transition to a different gender or wish to be called by different pronouns.

In turn, the school's administrator must inform the parents. Failure to do so, or to give false or misleading information about a student's gender identity, would subject the school to lawsuits from the parents and legal action by the Tennessee attorney general, according to the text of the bill.

"This is simply about parental rights," Rose said Thursday. "It's really not any more than that. As a parent, I certainly would want to know any things going on with my child that went beyond what I believe was correct."

The Senate OK'd the bill Thursday.

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Sen. Raumesh Akbari, D-Memphis, called the bill a license to discriminate against transgender children.

"Being a teenager, being in the school system is hard enough," Akbari said. "To put this additional barrier on them -- where you have to report as if it's some sort of crime ... if someone feels that they have a different gender identity, they want to be called by a different name, I certainly think that's not something that requires this level of scrutiny."

Forcing teachers to share disclosures made by students about their gender identity will damage trust between students and educators, said Sen. Jeff Yarbro, D-Nashville, who noted some children don't have trusted parents at home, including the disproportionate share of unhoused youth who are LGBTQ+.

(READ MORE: Pride flags would be largely banned in Tennessee classrooms in bill advanced by GOP lawmakers)

"This puts our teachers and guidance counselors in a genuinely untenable position to be trusted and even sometimes loving," Yarbro said. "It's not like the teacher can start the person on some sort of treatment. They're just trying to accommodate them in the building, and we're requiring that be reported to parents? I don't know when we decided that children became property."

The bill will be heard next in the House of Representatives.

Read more at TennesseeLookout.com.


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