Legal Sidebari
Transgender Students and School Bathroom
Policies: Equal Protection Challenges Divide
Appellate Courts
January 17, 2023
The Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause
prohibits states from denying individuals “the
equal protection of the laws.” Transgender students have brought a number of challenges under the Equal
Protection Clause against public school boards’ policies that prohibit them from accessing the bathroom
consistent with their gender identity. Federal appellate courts reviewing such challenges have recently
split on how constitutional protections apply. As discussed below, the Courts of Appeals for t
he Seventh
Circuit and t
he Fourth Circuit have ruled that school policies prohibiting bathroom access consistent with
a transgender student’s gender identity can violate their right to equal protection of the laws, while the full
Eleventh Circuit recently upheld such a school policy against an equal protection challenge. (A similar
division has arisen with respect to whether such policies violat
e Title IX of the Education Amendments of
1972; this Sidebar does not address that issue.)
Courts reviewing challenges to governmental classifications based on sex
review those policies under a
searching inquiry known as intermediate scrutiny where the classifications allegedly deny equal
protection. The appellat
e courts that hav
e reviewed challenges to public schools’ bathroom policies have
applied this standard of review, although courts hav
e taken different
positions on the precise reason that
intermediate scrutiny applies. Some
courts take the view that these policies are subject to heightened
scrutiny because they classify based on sex. An alternativ
e position is that transgender individuals are a
distinct “quasi-suspect class” for equal protection purposes. Further, appellate courts, in
a series of split
decisions, hav
e divided as to whether and when intermediate scrutiny is satisfied in bathroom access
cases.
This Sidebar provides a brief overview of equal protection analysis, including the three primary tiers of
“scrutiny” applied by courts. It continues with an examination of the important features of intermediate
scrutiny used in Supreme Court cases addressing sex classifications. The Sidebar then turns to a
discussion of how federal appellate courts have approached claims transgender students have brought
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against public school policies that prohibit them from bathroom access consistent with their gender
identity.
Background: Tiers of Scrutiny for Government Classifications
The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
provides that states shall not deny individuals
within their jurisdiction “the equal protection of the laws.” In general, the principles that bind states under
the Equal Protection Clause al
so apply to the federal government through the Fifth Amendment. The
Supreme Court has
described this mandate as “essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated
should be treated alike.” Most types of government classifications challenged under the Equal Protection
Clause face
rational basis review, under which a court will
uphold statutory classifications, such as those
in economic legislation, as long as they are reasonably related to a legitimate government purpose.
There are other types of government classifications that receive heightened scrutiny, however. Statutes or
policies that involve
“suspect classifications,” such as race and national origin, are subject to strict
scrutiny. That standard of review also applies to certain distinction
s implicating fundamental
rights like
t
he right to vote. To withstand strict scrutiny, government classifications
must be narrowly tailored to
achieve a compelling government interest.
Falling in between these two standards of review, classifications based on sex or illegitimacy ar
e subject
to intermediate scrutiny. Sex and illegitimacy classifications are sometimes
called “quasi-suspect”
classifications. Beginning in the early 1970s, the Supreme Court
began striking down certain government
actions that discriminated on the basis of sex as a violation of the Equal Protection Clause. The Court
eventually
settled on the standard of review known as
intermediate scrutiny for reviewing government
classifications based on sex. Parties seeking to uphold government sex-based actions must
show an
“exceedingly persuasive justification” for the policy. Such classificati
ons must serve an important
government interest, and the “discriminatory means employed” must be “substantially related” to
achieving that interest.
Although it has been some time since the Supreme Court last
recognized that a specific classification
qualified as suspect or quasi-suspect, some of the relevant factors courts hav
e used i
n determining suspect
or quasi-suspect
status can includ
e whether a class has been historically subjected to discrimination,
whether a class
shares a characteristic that usually has no relationship to the ability to contribute to
society, whether a group ha
s immutable characteristics that can “define them as a discrete group,” and
whether they are a minority or
lack political power.
Supreme Court Application of Intermediate Scrutiny to Sex-Based
Classifications
The Supreme Court’s decisions applying the intermediate-scrutiny standard to governmental sex-based
classifications often reflect a searching inquiry into the actual objectives behind a government
classification and whether that classification is substantially related to the government’s purposes,
demanding a close fit between a statute’s means and end. At the same time, intermediate scrutiny is not
necessarily fatal to a governmental classification, as the Court has upheld certain sex distinctions,
particularly when the Court concludes the sexes are not similarly situated for purposes of the
classification.
In 1984, in
Mississippi University for Women v. Hogan, the Court
ruled that a female-only admissions
policy at a public nursing school violated the Equal Protection Clause. The Court
rejected the state’s
claimed justification that the policy remedied discrimination against women, as the state made no
showing that women lacked opportunities in the nursing field; instead, the school’s policy perpetuated the
stereotype of nursing as a “woman’s job.” The state als
o failed the second part of the equal protection
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analysis – it did not show that the classification was substantially and directly related to the remedial
objective. Rather, the school’s policy that permitted men to audit classes contradicted the claim that
women are harmed by having men in class, so the record did not show that excluding men was necessary
to reach any of the school’s educational goals.
Slightly more than a decade later, the Court again examined an equal protection challenge to a sex-based
collegiate admissions policy i
n United States v. Virginia. In that case, the Virginia Military Institute
(VMI), a state military college, limited admissions to men. The Court
emphasized that government sex
classifications must be supported by an “exceedingly persuasive justification.” Summarizing the Court’s
equal protection cases thus far, the majority opinion explained that justifications must be genuine, not
“invented
post hoc in response to litigation.” Justifications
must also not rely on “overbroad
generalizations about the different talents, capacities, or preferences of males and females.”
Virginia proffered two justifications for its exclusion of women from VMI. First, single-sex education
provides educational benefits, and offering that option contributes to diversity in educational approaches.
Second, the unique nature of VMI’s harsh discipline, an “adversative” approach to schooling, would have
t
o be modified, even transformed, if women were admitted, meaning that neither men nor women would
have access to the school’s unique approach. As to the first justification, the Court agreed that such a
purpose could serve the public; but it concluded that Virginia had not shown that VMI was established or
maintained to facilitate diverse educational approaches.
As to the second justification, the Court recognized that aspects of the program would have to be
modified, perhaps with accommodations and physical training programs for women; but the Court also
emphasized that it was “undisputed” that the VMI approach could be used to educate women. The issue,
as framed by the Court, was whether Virginia could deny “women who have the will and capacity” the
opportunities VMI offers. For the Court, the notion that admission of women would degrade the school’s
stature and destroy the adversative system
was on par with other “self-fulfilling prophecies” that were
once used to deny women opportunities, such as in law and medicine. Entrance of women into the federal
military academies and their participation in the armed forces suggest
ed, according to the Court, that
Virginia’s concerns for VMI “may not be solidly grounded.” As such, the Court
concluded that Virginia’s
justification for barring women, of which some are qualified, from training at VMI was not “exceedingly
persuasive,” and the policy violated the Equal Protection Clause.
While the above cases reflect that intermediate scrutiny of sex-based classifications is a searching
standard of review, not all sex-based classifications subjected to this review will necessarily fail. In its
1981 decision
Michael M. v. Superior Court, the Supreme Court
upheld a state criminal law that punished
males, but not females, for statutory rape. The Court’s plurality opinion accepted the state’s justification
for the statute: prevention of illegitimate teenage pregnancies. The plurality also held that the statute’s sex
classification was sufficiently related to this purpose. The harmful consequences identifiable in a teenage
pregnancy fell immediately on females, not males, the Court reasoned, so a criminal sanction for males,
but not females, could hel
p balance the deterrents for both sexes.
Federal Courts of Appeals: School Policies on Bathroom Access
Although intermediate scrutiny for sex-based classifications is well established, the Supreme Court has
not addressed the proper standard of review for government classifications involving transgender
individuals. Recently, a number of federal appellate courts have taken up this question in the context of
transgender students’ claims alleging discrimination when public schools bar them from accessing
bathrooms consistent with their gender identity.
In 2017, the Seventh Circuit
applied intermediate scrutiny in a case brought by a transgender boy
challenging a school-district policy that barred him from using the boys’ bathroom. The court initially
observed that under intermediate scrutiny, because the state cannot defend a sex classification by relying
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on overbroad generalizations about sex, sex-based stereotypes cannot sustain a sex classification. The
court then
reasoned that the school-district policy at issue inherently relied on sex in determining which
bathroom a student must use. The school made its decision based on the sex listed on a student’s birth
certificate, which, according to the court, rendered the decision a sex classification subject to heightened
scrutiny. The court
rejected the argument that the policy did not violate equal protection because it treated
boys and girls the same. In the court’s view, the school district treated transgender students, who fail to
conform to sex-based stereotypes that are associated with their sex assigned at birth, differently. The
policy thus had to be supported by an exceedingly persuasive justification. The school district argued the
policy was needed to protect the privacy rights of its students, but the court
concluded that this argument
amounted to “sheer conjecture and abstraction” and was ultimately “insufficient to establish an
exceedingly persuasive justification.” The panel ultimately
affirmed the district court’s grant of a
preliminary injunction permitting the student who challenged the policy access to the boys’ bathroom.
In 2020, the Fourth Circuit similarly
applied intermediate scrutiny to application of a school-board policy
preventing a transgender boy from using the bathroom consistent with his gender identity. The school
board policy
limited the use of bathrooms “to the corresponding biological genders,” which apparently
would be determined by the sex indicated on a student’s birth certificate. The Fourth Circuit
agreed with
the Seventh Circuit that such a policy was a sex classification and should be reviewed under intermediate
scrutiny. In addition, the court
determined that the student was subjected to sex discrimination based on
his failure to conform to the sex stereotype in the bathroom policy. The panel
rejected the argument that
there was no equal protection violation because the student “is not similarly situated to cisgender boys,”
and the proper comparison for the treatment of the transgender boy was thus “‘biological’ girls.” That
framing, the panel
reasoned, revealed bias and stereotyped notions, privileging “sex-assigned-at-birth
over [the student’s] medically confirmed, persistent and consistent gender identity.” Instead, according to
the court, the proper comparison was to other boys who were allowed to use the boys’ bathroom.
The panel also concluded in the alternative that heightened scrutiny applied because transgender
individuals “constitute at least a quasi-suspect class” in their own right. Drawing on Supreme Court
cases
articulating
when a group of people constitute a suspect or quasi-suspect class, the court concluded that
the plaintiff showed the four relevant factors needed: transgender people have endured a history of
discrimination; lack defining characteristics affecting their ability to perform or to contribute to society;
are a discrete group with immutable characteristics; and are a minority lacking political power.
Applying intermediate scrutiny to the bathroom policy, the panel
concluded the policy was not
substantially related to the proffered important interest of student privacy. The school board did not show
that a transgender student was
likely to invade others’ privacy, “rather than minding their business like
any other student.” Because the record showed that the privacy of other boys in the restroom did not
increase when the transgender boy was barred, the policy was not substantially related to the school
board’s asserted goal.
The Fourth Circuit panel opinion dr
ew a dissent by Judge Niemeyer, who reasoned that the transgender
boy was not similarly situated to the “biologically male students” who could use the boys’ restroom
because at all times relevant to the case “he remained anatomically different from males.”
Also in 2020, the Eleventh Circuit
initially reached a similar result as the Seventh and Fourth Circuits,
over a dissent, in another case challenging a school-district policy barring a transgender boy from using
the bathroom consistent with his gender identity. The Eleventh Circuit panel decision applied intermediate
scrutiny and concluded that the school district’s policy violated the student’s equal protection rights. That
decision was then vacated i
n an opinion that reached the same result but on narrower grounds (also over a
dissent). The Eleventh Circuit then
vacated the subsequent decision and voted to rehear the case en banc
(by the full court). In 2022, the en banc court issued a new decision.
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The en banc majority opinion
held that a school board policy separating bathrooms based on “biological
sex” did not violate equal protection. The majority opinion concluded that the policy did not unlawfully
discriminate based on either sex or transgender status. With respect to sex, although the court
reasoned
that the policy was a sex classification subject to intermediate scrutiny, it
ruled that the policy “advances
the important governmental objective of protecting students’ privacy in school bathrooms.” The court
determined that the policy was also substantially related to that purpose as it “is clearly related to—
indeed, is almost a mirror of—its objective of protecting the privacy interests of students to use the
bathroom away from the opposite sex.” While the district court had found that allowing a transgender
student to use the bathroom consistent with their gender identity did not affect the privacy protections in
place because the student used the bathroom in a stall, the Eleventh Circuit majority
determined that the
sex-specific privacy interests for students “are not confined to the individual stalls in those bathrooms.”
Having concluded that the policy did not unlawfully discriminate based on sex, the court also
rejected the
argument that the policy singled out transgender students for different treatment. The majority opinion
reasoned that the policy did not facially discriminate on the basis of transgender status but simply
classified students based on biological sex. For the court, because the policy divided students based on
biological sex into two groups, both of which included transgender students, there
was a “lack of identity”
between transgender status and the policy. In addition, the court
rejected the assertion that the policy
relied on impermissible stereotypes connected with transgender status, concluding that separating
bathrooms based on biological sex was not a stereotype. Finally, the court
reasoned that “[a]t most,” the
plaintiff’s challenge was a claim that the policy had a disparate impact on transgender students; but a
disparate impact, without purposeful discrimination, would not violate equal protection.
The en banc majority opinion drew
a number of
dissents. Judge Jill Pryor, for instance,
reasoned that the
policy facially discriminated against transgender students because only “cisgender” (people whose birth-
assigned sex and gender identity align) students could use the bathroom consistent with their gender
identity. While sh
e agreed that student privacy is an important government interest, she
concluded that the
policy was not substantially related to the asserted purpose. The school district produced no non-
speculative evidence linking the privacy interest with the policy of barring transgender students from the
bathroom consistent with their gender identity; and the majority opinion’s assertions about privacy
ignored that transgender students typically use the bathroom aligning with their gender identity discreetly.
Further, application of the policy woul
d force the transgender boy in this case to use the girls’ bathroom
while presenting as male, which would undermine the asserted privacy interests. Thus the policy
lacked
“fit” with the asserted privacy interests as it was “drastically underinclusive with respect to its stated
purpose.”
Judge Jordan al
so dissented, writing that while the policy barred the transgender student in the case from
using the bathroom that aligned with his gender identity, it would allow another transgender boy to do so
if that student had simply enrolled in the school after transitioning and obtaining appropriate documents
listing him as male. Because that other student would pose the same privacy concerns as the student that
was barred, the policy could only be justified based on administrative convenience, which could not
survive intermediate scrutiny.
Considerations for Congress
The standards courts apply when transgender individuals allege discrimination in violation of equal
protection can have important implications for various state and federal policies. As discussed above,
although federal appellate courts thus far have applied intermediate scrutiny to school bathroom policies
that bar transgender individuals from using bathrooms that align with their gender identity, whether such
policies meet that standard is a question that has divided the courts. More broadly, given the varied state
and local policies regarding transgender individuals that apply beyond school bathroom access, including
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in health care services and access to gender-specific sports teams, the applicable equal protection
standards may determine whether those policies withstand judicial scrutiny as well.
Although legislation may not alter the substantive meaning of the Equal Protection Clause as interpreted
by the courts, Congress may define prohibited discrimination in various contexts, such as in employment
and in federally funded education programs. The meaning of sex
discrimination in those context
s has also
be
en addressed by
federal courts, including in claims brought by transgender individuals. Congress
possesses substantial authority to alter the scope of prohibited conduct under civil rights statutes, such as
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. Likewise,
Congress has authority to provide exceptions to the application of those laws, such as the religious
exception under Title IX.
Author Information
Jared P. Cole
Legislative Attorney
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