‘Let them play’: LGBTQ community protests proposed transgender sports bill

Bobbi Lancaster, a Gold Canyon doctor who underwent gender reassignment surgery in 2010, believes young transgender female athletes do not have a competitive advantage when competing against cisgender females. (Photo by Reno Del Toro/Cronkite News)

PHOENIX – Representatives of the LGBTQ community gathered at the Capitol on Wednesday to protest a bill that would ban transgender girls from competing in women’s sports.

The event, tagged Equity Lobby Day, was in response to a bill proposed by Rep. Nancy Barto, R-Phoenix. House Bill 2706, the Save Women’s Sports Act, would require interscholastic and intramural leagues to classify separate co-ed, men’s and women’s sports.

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“I don’t see how it’s going to accomplish anything because there’s no uneven playing field now,” Gold Canyon doctor Bobbi Lancaster said. “When it comes to young kids, pre-puberty young girls, whether they’re transgender girls or cisgender girls, there has never been any testosterone in their lives. There is no competitive advantage that’s measurable. And this isn’t me talking, these are experts talking.”

Cisgender refers to someone whose gender identity matches their sex assigned at birth, according to Phoenix nonprofit one-n-ten.

Lancaster, formerly known as Robert Lancaster, underwent gender-reassignment surgery in 2010 at 59. A skilled golfer, she competed in several women’s tournaments as she considered trying to qualify for the LPGA Tour, a story that attracted national attention.

“Let them play,” she said.

Protesters set up outside the Capitol and also spoke with state legislators.

Several speakers took the stage to speak on the matter.

Dr. Drew Cronyn said he worries about the misinformation out there about transgender athletes. (Photo by Reno Del Toro/Cronkite News)

Among them was Maddy Mogan, a young transgender athlete from Tucson who attends Mansfeld Magnet Middle School and competes in cycling tournaments across the state.

“I have an affirming family and good friends as well as a community that supports me,” Mogan said. “Unfortunately, I have so much more that I need as a student, and athlete, and basic human being. It is time for sports to be an inclusive and respectful affirming place for people’s identities no matter what.”

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HB 2706 challenges the language in the bylaws of the state’s governing body of high school athletics, which state that “all students should have the opportunity to participate in Arizona Interscholastic Association activities in a manner that is consistent with their gender identity, irrespective of the sex listed on a student’s eligibility for participation in interscholastic athletics or in a gender that does not match the sex at birth, via the following procedure below.”

Matt Sharp, the senior counsel for the Scottsdale-based Alliance Defending Freedom, told Cronkite News in January that the bill would complement Title IX, the 1972 civil rights law banning discrimination based on sex in education programs that accept federal dollars.

Editors: A previous version of this story incorrectly described the word cisgender. The story here has been corrected, but clients who used earlier versions are asked to run the correction found here.

However, Dr. Drew Cronyn, a pediatrician for El Rio Health in the El Pueblo Health Center in Tucson, expressed concern about misinformation spreading.

“Today when we’re hearing things from legislators, and when we see it on TV, we are sadly going to hear things that aren’t true,” Cronyn said. “We are going to hear that we, in our lobbying for sports, are trying to give an unfair advantage to kids, that we are trying to destroy women’s sport, that we are trying to cause unsafe atmospheres in a lot of places.

“And we know that isn’t true.”

Sports Reporter, Phoenix