Resolution or Regression? The Fight for LGBTQ+ Inclusion in Our Schools

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CEC2 Resolution Hearing

“To achieve an equitable school system, we must unite and build a coalition stronger than those who would seek to frighten and silence us. More parents must step up to run for the community board to create a multitude of voices and perspectives.”

CEC2 Resolution Hearing

A. Connor

Activists from ACT UP at a recent CEC2 meeting.

“You have to let trans kids live their lives,  be accepted in schools…they are human beings.”

These words, shared by a New York City public school teacher and parent of a transgender child at a recent Community Education Council meeting, strike at the heart of what should be an unshakable truth: all students deserve respect, care, and opportunity in our schools.

Here in the city, it’s easy to believe that we are a progressive, unshakeable sanctuary, one that will zealously safeguard the rights and dignities of all youth. And yet, the reality is much more precarious. This past year we have seen our fragile bubble come under siege by a deliberate, dogged campaign to dismantle the rights of queer students in school. Moreover, if the results of the election are any indication, there is no escaping that this culture war is intent on harming some of the most vulnerable youth in our schools.

The opening salvo was this past spring when the District 2 Community Education Council (CEC2), an area made up of the Financial District, Tribeca, West Village, Clinton, Midtown, Gramercy, and the Upper East Side, passed Resolution #248. It called for a comprehensive review of NYC Department of Education’s Guidelines on Gender that allowed transgender athletes to participate in girls’ sports. This resolution was a poorly disguised effort to discriminate against transgender girls by preventing them from participating in sports. 



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