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The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma seeking to prevent the state's new public school bathroom law (SB 615) limiting bathroom access for transgender students from being enforced. The lawsuit (Bridge v. Oklahoma State Department of Education) asserts the new is unconstitutional and violates Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972.
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Three Oklahoma students are suing the state over its law that bars transgender students from using the bathroom corresponding with their gender identity.
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Several recent changes in Oklahoma education laws have teachers and administrators evaluating legal interpretations and implementing new rules.
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The fallout from a state law created to police bathroom use is still unclear in the eyes of students, teachers, administrators and mental health experts weeks before school starts, leaving them with little time to prepare.
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Oklahoma lawmakers advanced a measure barring transgender students from using the restroom corresponding with their gender identity.
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Oklahoma’s House of Representatives advanced a bill that would bar transgender students from using the bathroom corresponding with their gender identity.
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State schools superintendent and Democratic candidate for Governor Joy Hofmeister is asking for the Attorney General’s formal guidance on who can use which restroom in public schools.
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Stillwater Public Schools is asking the state to intervene in a controversy surrounding transgender students using the restroom.
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One of the most contentious issues facing this new school year is which bathrooms and locker rooms transgender students will be allowed to use.The Obama…
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Legislation that would allow students with “deeply held religious beliefs” to use separate restrooms than their transgender peers passed through the…