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NCAA president says trans athlete rules will stay same after USSC decision.

Started by Sarah B, Yesterday at 11:58:35 PM

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Sarah B

Title: NCAA president says trans athlete rules will stay same after Supreme Court decision
Link To: Article/url]
Author: Siân Thompson
Date: Jul 07
Trigger Warning: None
🔗 [Link: [https/www.thepinknews.com/2026/07/07/supreme-​court-​trans-​athletes-​ruling/]
Brief summary of the article
NCAA president Charlie Baker said the organisation does not expect to change its transgender athlete policy after a recent US Supreme Court decision allowing states to restrict transgender girls and women from female school sports. The article explains the NCAA's current policy, the court decision involving Idaho and West Virginia laws, and Baker's comments about the issue's importance within college sports.

Main Points of the Article
"The NCAA does not expect to change its policy on transgender athletes following the US Supreme Court's recent decision allowing states to ban transgender girls and women from participating in female school sports, according to NCAA president Charlie Baker."

"Speaking to CBS News in a 1 July interview, Baker said the organisation's current policy, which bars athletes assigned male at birth from competing in NCAA women's sports while leaving men's competition open to all eligible athletes, was adopted in response to an executive order signed by President Donald Trump in early 2025."

""We adopted and comply with the standard that was put forth by the administration," Baker said, adding that state-level policies are "a different question"."

"The comments come days after the Supreme Court upheld laws in Idaho and West Virginia excluding transgender girls and women from female school sports, ruling that the bans do not violate Title IX, the federal law prohibiting sex discrimination in education."

"When asked whether the organisation's current policy remains inclusive, Baker said he believed it did and added that he did not think "many of our schools" objected to the existing rules."

"Baker continued, explaining that inclusivity is a priority of the NCAA, saying: "I don't have a problem ... with the way that policy currently operates. And frankly, I don't think many of our schools do either.""

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Sarah B
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Sarah's Story
Feb 1989 Living my life as Sarah.
Feb 1989 Legally changed my name.
Mar 1989 Started hormones.
May 1990 Three surgery letters.
Feb 1991 Surgery.
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