ECR Cross-Post: Title IX, Sex, and Gender Identity: Chaos or Calculation?
February 04, 2025
This blog is from Jackie Wernz at ECR Solutions about the Trump Administration's return to the 2020 Title IX rule.
Last week ended with the Trump administration declaring a return to a narrow definition of âsexâ under the 2020 Title IX ruleâa definition that never actually existed. This week began with America First Legal Foundation filing a complaint with the feds with a novel and somewhat perplexing claim that gender-inclusive bathrooms violate Title IXâs prohibition on sex discrimination. Today, after this blog was initially posted, the Trump administration replaced the January 31 DCL with a new one that does not include a reference to a definition of "sex" in the 2020 rule.
These moves have fueled the already growing chaos and confusion in education civil rights, leaving many questioning whether there is a calculated strategy at play or if opponents of gender identity protections are throwing things at the wall to see what sticks. Until we know more, educational leaders should continue to approach these and similar developments with careful deliberation, not rash decisions. Keep reading for an explanation of these events and thoughts on how to move forward.
The January 31 and February 4 âDear Colleague Lettersâ
Despite criticizing past administrations for using informal guidance to create new law, on January 31, 2025, the Department of Educationâs Office for Civil Rights issued a ââ that appeared to do just thatâalbeit with a clumsy attempt to obscure the move.
The DCL said that OCR would enforce Title IX under the 2020 regulations issued during Trumpâs first term rather than the 2024 rules, issued by the Biden administration, that were vacated by a federal court in Kentucky earlier in January. Thatâs not newsâthe Biden OCR already made clear before leaving office that OCR was going back to using the definitions, procedural protections, supports, and reporting processes required by the 2020 rule.
The significance of the January 31 DCL was its statement that âsexâ means âthe objective, immutable characteristic of being born male or female as outlined in the 2020 Title IX Rule.â Why is that significant? Because the 2020 Title IX rule does not define âsexâ in any such way. It does not define âsexâ at all. The question of whether âsexâ under Title IX encompasses gender identity and sexual orientationâand the extent to which it does, if at allâis one of the most hotly debated topics in Title IX today. To the extent that the debate is leaning in one direction rather than the other, court decisions suggest that it is toward protecting LGBTQI+ status, not against it. Itâs certainly not as straightforward or clear-cut as the DCL suggests.
That understanding was solidified on the morning of February 4, 2025, when OCR replaced the January 31 DCL with a new one. The February 4, 2025, DCL does not include the language about the supposed definition of sex in the 2020 Title IX rule. I think the official name for what the February 4 DCL ended up as is "a big nothing burger," but this back and forth highlights the confusion and chaos being wrought by this administration on the world of education civil rights.
America First Legalâs OCR Complaint
On February 3, 2025, America First Legal (not to be confused with America First Policy Institute, ED Secretary-nominee Linda McMahonâs think tank) with OCR alleging that several Virginia school districtsâ gender-identity-friendly bathroom and locker room policies violate Title IX. AFL is an organization that, as of this writing, advertises on its website that it was founded by Stephen Miller, who served as a senior advisor in the first Trump administration and is currently serving as Donald Trump's Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy. OCR has made it clear that it is ready and willing to investigate schoolsâ policies protecting gender identity, making AFLâs complaint relatively unsurprising.
What is surprising about AFLâs complaint is the novel legal theory it espouses. Unlike the recent Denver Public Schools directed investigation in which OCR made a very traditional argument (not having a sex-segregated girls' bathroom while having a sex-segregated boys' bathroom is sex discrimination), AFL can't make that argument in this case.
The letter instead argues that allowing transgender or gender-fluid students to use facilities matching their gender identity violates the rights of cisgender students by permitting ââgender expansive and transgender studentsâ the ability to feel safe and comfortable by using sex-segregated intimate facilities consistent with their âgender identity,â while denying similarly situated individuals, whose âgender identityâ is the same as their sex, the ability to feel safe and comfortable in the use of the sex-segregated common restrooms and locker rooms of their sex.â
If, however, as the January 31 DCL claims, âsexâ under Title IX does not include gender identity, then there is no prohibition against a school treating students differently on that basis. In the case of sex-segregated bathrooms, as long as all those âborn maleâ are treated the same as all those âborn female,â there is no Title IX problem. Thatâs the case here. Whether you are âborn maleâ or âborn female,â you are both (1) allowed to use the restroom that matches your gender identity and (2) put at the same risk of having to share a restroom with someone whose gender identity does not match their sex assigned at birth. There is no different treatment of those âborn maleâ and those âborn female,â which is all that Title IX protects under this interpretation of âsex.â Sure, a concern could arise under the interpretation if a school eliminated sex-segregated bathrooms for one sexâwhether by explicitly changing its policy, like in Denver, or, as a matter of circumstance, by only maintaining sex segregation for one sex because the school happens to have only one transgender student, and they are allowed to use the bathroom matching their gender identity, ending the sex-segregation of that bathroomâbut there is no claim that any school has done either of those things here.
Still with me? What about now that OCR has implicitly acknowledged that the question fo whether "sex" includes gender identity is still open, as evidenced by its replacement of the January 31 DCL with the February 4 DCL? In that case, all âgirlsâ are allowed to use a bathroom designated for girls, and all âboysâ are allowed to use a bathroom designated for boys. The definition of âgirlsâ and âboysâ just includes both those âbornâ into that sex and those whose gender identity matches that sex. Either way, the AFL complaint appears to be a dud.
Why All the Confusion?
Why would the Trump administration issue a letter that so blatantly misrepresents the definition of âsexâ under the 2020 Title IX rule? Why would the AFL want OCR to take on a convoluted argument challenging school bathroom policies that appears to be dead on arrival?
Perhaps there is no method to any of the madness, and this is really just the proverbial spaghetti being thrown at the wall. But there may be a broader strategy at play. Ezra Klein of the New York Times explained one potential strategy this way in a recent :
Focus is the fundamental substance of democracy. It is particularly the substance of opposition. People largely learn of what the government is doing through the media â be it mainstream media or social media. If you overwhelm the media â if you give it too many places it needs to look, all at once, if you keep it moving from one thing to the next â no coherent opposition can emerge. It is hard to even think coherently.
Here, with so much going on, we are seeing an active chilling effect on schools, which may be inclined to rush to change policies to try to stay out of the spotlight and fend off the exhaustion of trying to keep up with all the changes. Nothing stops AFL from filing complaints across the country, and nothing stops OCR from investigating them. OCR complaints allow almost no real opportunity for schools to challenge OCRâs underlying legal theories until a finding has been made and the schoolâs federal funding is hanging in the balance. The overwhelming majority of schools fold to OCRâs pressure before getting to that point, meaning that there is often little practical ability to challenge OCRâs legal positions at any point. Schools seeing that writing on the wall may just decide to foldâand that very well may be the point of the DCL and AFL complaint. Others, recognizing OCR's slow and limited enforcement abilities, may decide to wait to see how cases start to play out before making changes, especially if their communities support gender identity protections.
Ultimately, whether these moves are part of a coordinated strategy or simply a flurry of disjointed actions, the result is the same: uncertainty, fear, and growing pressure on schools to react without clarity on what the law requires. Educational institutions should resist the urge to make hasty policy and instead make deliberate decisions with expert legal support and a firm understanding of their local environments. For assistance with navigating this or any other education civil rights matter, contact me at jackie@educationcivilrights.com.