Gavin Grimm is a transgender boy in Gloucester, Virginia. That means he was born female but identifies as a male. When he started 10th grade at Gloucester High School in the fall of 2014, he began referring to himself publicly as a boy.
By then, Gavin had already cut his hair short and received permission from the school principal to begin using the boys’ bathroom.
But when the community found out, a massive controversy erupted. The Gloucester County School Board voted to prevent Gavin from using the boys’ bathroom. So Gavin filed a lawsuit, saying the policy violated his civil rights. The case has now made its way to the Supreme Court.
Gavin’s lawyers argue that the district’s bathroom policy is unconstitutional under the 14th Amendment, which guarantees all Americans “equal protection of the laws.”
Gavin’s case comes at a time of intense debate over transgender rights. Last year, North Carolina passed a law requiring transgender people to use bathrooms in government buildings that correspond with the gender on their birth certificates. The law has sparked protests, boycotts, and lawsuits. So far, efforts to repeal it have failed.
“The only thing I ever asked for was the right to be treated like everyone else,” says Gavin, who is now 17 and a senior in high school.
But to Gary McCaleb, a lawyer with the Alliance Defending Freedom, a group supporting the school board, the case is about protecting the safety of all students.
“Federal law should not be twisted to require that a male be given access to the girls’ facilities, or a female to the boys’ facilities,” he says.
There’s a chance the justices won’t hear Gavin’s case. Part of the lawsuit involves whether Gloucester’s bathroom policy constitutes gender discrimination. That is prohibited by a federal law known as Title IX. The Obama administration said the bathroom policy is discriminatory, and that the school district is in violation of the law.
But the Trump administration may well have a different view, and experts say that could prompt the Court to dismiss the case. No matter what happens, the Court seems likely to rule on a transgender rights case at some point.