国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Eastwood (pictured here) is the first transgender woman to compete in a D1 cross country meet.
Eastwood (pictured here) is the first transgender woman to compete in a D1 cross country meet. (Photo: Rachel Leathe/AP)
In Stride

Inside the Complex Debate Over Transgender Runners

Unsurprisingly, the implications of this debate ripple far beyond the sport

Published: 
Eastwood (pictured here) is the first transgender woman to compete in a D1 cross country meet.
(Photo: Rachel Leathe/AP)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Over the weekend, Juniper Eastwood, a 22-year-old senior at the University of Montana, became the first trans woman to participate in a Division I cross-country meet. At an in Washington, Eastwood finished seventh out of 79 runners, completing the 4k course in 14:33. It was not, however, her first race as a collegiate athlete. Before transitioning in 2018, she was among the strongest runners on the University of Montana's men鈥檚 cross-country and track teams. Unsurprisingly, this has inspired a of letting Eastwood run on the women's team, not least because her personal best in the 1,500-meters, set in April 2018, is only .12 seconds slower than the women鈥檚 world record.听

In compliance with , Eastwood has been undergoing testosterone suppression treatment for over a year, with the predictable consequence that she has gotten significantly slower. (In last weekend鈥檚 race, Eastwood averaged roughly 5:51 per mile; running in the men鈥檚 6K race in 2016, Eastwood averaged 5:07s.) For that reason, her case might be less divisive than that of Andraya Yearwood and Terry Miller, two trans high school sprinters, who have also been sucked into the vortex of the national news cycle. Last February, Yearwood and Miller finished first and second in the girls听55-meter dash at the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) indoor state championships. The girls also finished 1-2 in the 100-meters at . (Miller, who will be a senior this fall, holds theConnecticut high school state record in the 55-meters.) In Connecticut, as in at least 19 other states, transgender athletes are allowed to compete as their self-identified gender without being required to undergo surgery or any kind of hormone treatment.听

In June, a Christian conservative nonprofit organization called the (ADF) filed an official complaint with the Department of Education鈥檚 Office for Civil Rights on behalf of high school sprinter Selina Soule and two other female track athletes who wanted to remain anonymous. The Alliance argues that the CIAC鈥檚 policy of letting trans women athletes compete without restriction 鈥渄iscriminate[s] against girls and threaten[s] to reverse the gains for girls and women that Title IX has achieved.鈥澨

In its complaint, the ADF also cites an April , (co-written by sprint legend ) in which the authors urge lawmakers to pass the 鈥攁 piece of legislation currently languishing in congressional purgatory which would extend Civil Rights protections to members of the LGBTQ community鈥攚hile making an exception for Title IX. This exception is necessary, the authors of the Post article argue, because the Equality Act specifically prohibits discrimination not only on the basis of sex, but also gender identity. If this distinction isn鈥檛 maintained in the unique case of women鈥檚 athletics, the Equality Act would make it illegal for federally funded educational institutions to differentiate between a transgender woman and cisgender woman; in practice, this could mean that an athlete like Eastwood wouldn鈥檛 be required to take testosterone suppressants. This, the article asserts, would put 鈥渇emale-bodied athletes,鈥 i.e. cis women, at an unfair disadvantage.听

Of course, the state of affairs that Richards-Ross and Co. are warning against is already the status quo for high school sports in Connecticut. As a result, Yearwood and Miller have become symbols of a larger ideological struggle surrounding transgender rights. The American Civil Liberties Union has a supporting their right to compete. As part of this petition reads:听

鈥淲hen misinformation about biology and gender is used to bar transgender girls from sports it amounts to the same form of sex discrimination that has long been prohibited under Title IX, a law that protects all students鈥攊ncluding trans people鈥攐n the basis of sex.鈥

Needless to say, this debate isn鈥檛 confined to high school or NCAA sports. Marquee have been updating their trans athlete policies, or developing one for the first time. As 国产吃瓜黑料 reported in May, the Western States Endurance Run recently became the first prominent ultra to officially address the issue. The now state that runners鈥 gender will be accepted at 鈥渇ace value,鈥 but that a transgender woman who finishes in the top ten may be asked to prove that, similar to the current NCAA policy, she has 鈥渂een undergoing continuous, medically supervised hormone treatment for gender transition for at least one year prior to the race.鈥澨

At the high school level, things are less clear cut. It seems highly irresponsible to impose mandatory hormonal treatment for transgender teenagers (to say nothing of the logistcal nightmare of regulating any such rules). Yet allowing trans women athletes to compete without any restrictions whatsoever is likely to prove controversial as well鈥攁ll the more so when those athletes are successful. As mentioned, Connecticut isn鈥檛 the only state which allows high school students to compete as their self-identified gender. According to the website , there are currently 18 other states with similar policies, as which, believe it or not, bears a striking similarity to the blue state/red state divide of general elections.

These days, that divide often feels insurmountable, at least if you鈥檙e the kind of person (me) who spends too much time on social media, or watching crappy news programming. As elsewhere in our politics, one of the more dispiriting aspects of the transgender sports discussion is the seeming impossibility of having any kind of discussion听at all.Those vehemently opposed to any form of trans participation often seem devoid of empathy while tending to to which trans athletes are actually altering the landscape of women鈥檚 sports. (Noted Fox News agitator Tucker Carlson , 鈥渂iological males who identify as females are entering the competition and dominating their opponents in many sports across the country and the world.鈥) Meanwhile, many trans rights activists believe that making any distinction whatsoever between a trans woman and a cis woman is itself an act of transphobia. (The ACLU: 鈥淕irls who are transgender are girls. Period.鈥)

Presumably, in order to develop a workable policy for trans athletes, one has to be able to acknowledge that trans athletes exist. Of course, some may feel that the best trans policy is no policy at all and that trans and cisgender athletes should be treated exactly the same. But, at least from where I sit, it seems difficult to defend that position while still maintaining that it is necessary and fair to have separate competitive categories for men and women.听

Lead Photo: Rachel Leathe/AP

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online