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Transgender women and girls will no longer be allowed to compete in female-designated high school sports in the state of Wyoming, once a new law takes effect in July.
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Wyoming lawmakers have considered two bills this session aimed at outlawing gender-affirming care for people under 18. One of those bills is still in play, but "Chloe's Law" died in a committee Wed., Feb. 22, ending its path through the legislature.
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“This idea that children are the vulnerable spot – the way to go after the LGBTQ community – is really taking hold,” says Olivia Hunt, the policy director at the National Center for Transgender Equality.
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Bills of this nature are opposed by every major medical and pediatric association and both the Wyoming Psychological Association and the State Academy of Pediatrics testified against it.
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Among survey respondents across the eight states that make up the Mountain West, about 67% support policies that protect trans individuals from discrimination in jobs, housing or in public spaces. That's compared to 64% nationwide.
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U.S .Senator Cynthia Lummis got an earful from a University of Wyoming commencement audience after making a statement about gender during her speech to graduates.
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Wyoming Senators voted 24 to 5 to put the state in charge of keeping transgender athletes out of women’s sports.
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After a lengthy debate over its legality, the Wyoming Senate gave strong support to a controversial bill that would no longer allow transgender girls and women compete in women’s sports.
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The Wyoming Senate education committee voted 3-2 to recommend moving forward with a bill that would ban transgender girls and women from playing on female athletics teams.