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Bill

SB 588

Schools; requiring certain school district or technology center school to provide certain attestation regarding individual being considered for employment. Effective date. Emergency.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Kendal Sacchieri

The act requires high school teams to be labeled by sex or coed and bars male students from girls’ teams, while shielding schools from certain complaints but allowing civil suits.

Second Reading referred to Education
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Bill Summary · SB 588

SB 588 — Education: Interscholastic and Intramural Junior Varsity and Varsity Teams and Sports (Fairness in Girls’ Sports Act)

Status: Hearing scheduled 3/05 at 1:00 p.m.
Introduced: 2025 (assigned to Education, Energy, and the Environment)
Effective date (if enacted): July 1, 2025

Purpose / Intent

The bill requires high school athletic teams and sports to be expressly labeled by sex or as coeducational, and it protects schools that maintain separate girls’ (female) teams from certain complaints or sanctions. It is presented as the “Fairness in Girls’ Sports Act” to preserve female-only athletic opportunities.

Key provisions

  • Scope: Applies to public high schools and to nonpublic high schools whose teams compete against public high schools in the state.
  • Required designation: Every interscholastic or intramural junior varsity or varsity team or sport must be expressly designated as one of:
    • Boys’, male, or men’s; or
    • Girls’, female, or women’s; or
    • Coeducational/mixed.
  • Participation rule: Any junior varsity or varsity team/sport designated for girls/females/women may not include students of the male sex (the bill defines “student of the female sex” and “student of the male sex” by biological sex).
  • Protection from adverse action: Governmental entities, licensing/accrediting organizations, and athletic associations may not accept complaints, investigate, or take adverse actions against a school for maintaining separate girls’ teams.
  • Private civil remedies:
    • A student who is deprived of an athletic opportunity or suffers harm from a violation may bring a civil action against the student’s school.
    • A student who suffers retaliation or adverse action for reporting a violation (to school officials, athletic organizations, or state/federal oversight agencies) may sue the school or the athletic association/organization.
  • Severability: If any provision is held invalid, the remainder remains in effect to the extent possible.
  • Short title: The act may be cited as the Fairness in Girls’ Sports Act.

Who is affected

  • Public high schools and qualifying nonpublic high schools (administrators, coaches).
  • Students seeking to participate on sports teams — specifically female students (as defined by biological sex) and male students who may be affected by participation rules.
  • Athletic associations and state oversight entities in their ability to enforce nondiscrimination rules against schools under this law.

Fiscal and procedural notes

  • Fiscal note summary: The bill does not directly affect state operations or revenues. Local school systems may incur additional costs if civil litigation is filed; schools can update policies with existing resources.
  • Legal context: The bill interacts with federal nondiscrimination law (Title IX). Recent federal litigation and agency rulemaking regarding sex and gender identity may affect legal challenges to or interpretation of state laws that define participation by biological sex.
  • Effective date listed in the bill text: July 1, 2025.

Practical effect

If enacted, schools would need to (1) label teams/sports explicitly by designation, (2) enforce female-team exclusion of male-sex students, and (3) be insulated from certain external complaints or sanctions for maintaining female-only teams — while exposing themselves to potential civil suits by students alleging deprivation or retaliation.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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