I've finally got back to the subject of what my username says: Writing a story about a TG character. The character I've decided is a teenage MTF set in the recent past (last 5 years or so) to the present, in a politically moderate U.S. suburb. One of the main elements is that she wants to transition between middle and high school with the support of her parents, but the school district refuses to let her go to school as a girl. Her parents then decide to pull her out and homeschool her. A year or so later the district has a bond election to raise money for school improvements. Her parents set up a campaign to encourage voters to vote "no" to protest the transphobic attitude of the administrators. The levy ended up failing by a very small margin, which led to a change of heart by the district. They then told the transgender student that she is welcome to attend school as a girl with a few accomodations (exempt from P.E., must use only designated single-toilet restrooms, etc.). In part this is because the bond issue would've funded a project to help provide much needed relief to overcrowding at the aforementioned high school, and didn't want it to fail again (when they had another election a few months later it passed). What do you think?
By the way, for her name (one of my original questions) I've tentatively decided on Melissa (first and middle name Melissa Ann, using the same initials as her pre-transition name of Matthew Aaron) with the legal change taking place when she originally planned to start attending school as a girl mentioned above. I won't mention the last name here for various reasons (which isn't being changed with her transition).
ETA: The school in the story (not real, but modeled after one a friend of mine went to) prior to the bond improvements was about 150 percent over-capacity (e.g. built to hold 800 or so students but actually has about 1,200) - even with "half lockers" some students had to share one, the school had to use a dozen or so portables, and had to run lunches all the way from about 10:30 to 1:00 and even then the lines in the cafeteria were so long that many students had to rush eating their lunch to get back to class on time.