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School Can Keep Student’s Transgender Status Secret From Parents, NH Supreme Court Rules

School Can Keep Student’s Transgender Status Secret From Parents, NH Supreme Court Rules

Court: The mother failed to demonstrate that the school policy infringed a fundamental parenting right under the NH state constitution.

A policy that allows school staff to keep a child’s transgender status a secret does not violate a parent’s fundamental rights under the New Hampshire constitution, the state’s Supreme Court has held.

The policy was challenged by a New Hampshire mother who sued the Manchester school district after finding out from a teacher that her minor child (identified as M.C.) had asked school staff and students to be called by a name typically associated with the opposite sex.

According to the lawsuit, when the mother first asked the school to continue using her child’s given name and sex-appropriate pronouns, two teachers wrote to her saying they were willing to comply.

“I do think that a parent should be giving permission for their child to be called by any other name,” one allegedly said. “We will absolutely respect your wishes and continue to call [M.C. by M.C.’s birth name] on team!” wrote another, according to the lawsuit.

But minutes later, the lawsuit says, the school principal emailed her, repudiating the teachers’ cooperative responses:

Good Morning [Jane Doe]. While I respect and understand your concern, we are held by the District policy as a staff. I have quoted our district policy below, which outlines the fact that we cannot disclose a student’s choice to parents if asked not to. If [M.C.] insists on being called [M.C.’s desired name] as a staff we have to respect that according to the policy or unfortunately we can be held accountable despite parents’ wishes.

The principal was reiterating district policy that, absent the child’s consent, “[s]chool personnel should not disclose information that may reveal a student’s transgender status or gender nonconforming presentation to others.” The school justified the policy as recognizing transgender students’ “rights” to privacy.

But that policy violated her fundamental parental rights, the mother alleged, among other claims, by encouraging school officials to affirmatively conceal her child’s “open and public” gender identity transition in school from her.

After all, if the whole school knows the child is transitioning, why shouldn’t the parent?

Notwithstanding these arguments, the trial court found the policy did not infinge a fundamental parenting right so as to warrant the application of strict scrutiny. And because the policy was rationally related to legitimate governmental interests, it was not unconstitutional, the court held, dismissing her claim.

In a 3-1 decision on appeal, the New Hampshire Supreme Court agreed.

Unlike other “severe intrusions” involving parental custody or guardianship, the court ruled that “by its terms, the Policy does not directly implicate a parent’s ability to raise and care for his or her child.” [emphasis added]

But in her lawsuit, the mother challenged the policy as unconstitutional both on its face and as applied to her. And recall, the principal told her the school was bound by the policy not to disclose trans students’ private information to their parents.

The court’s response? The principal got the policy wrong:

[The policy] encourages school personnel to not disclose information that may reveal a student’s transgender status, but contrary to the principal’s assertion to the plaintiff, the Policy does not require non-disclosure. [emphasis added]

In other words, without the double negatives, the court read the policy’s directive that “[s]chool personnel should not disclose information” about trans students to mean they can, it’s just that they’re allowed not to.

Having rejected the principal’s stated response—and avoided the issue of how the policy was applied to the mother in practice—the court went on to recite a litany of other things parents can still do with their children, because the school policy doesn’t prevent them. Things like “talking to their children”; “choosing where their children live and go to school”; or “deciding what their children may do in their free time.”

None of which have anything to do with the mother’s core complaint that the school is facilitating her child’s delusion that she belongs to the opposite sex.

And while the school justifies its policy based on principles of “safety” and “inclusion,” such secret social transitioning—starting with using their preferred names and pronouns—puts the child on the path to permanent, life-altering medical transitioning. All without the parents’ knowledge, much less consent.

The court zoomed past these thorny issues to conclude there’s no “constitutional dimension” to any interference with parental rights resulting from the school’s non-disclosure policy, compared to those implicated by parental custody and termination cases. And it read the lower court’s order to find—without any explanation as to how—that the policy survives both the facial and “as applied” constitutional challenges under the more lenient rational basis review.

After puzzling through the majority opinion, Justice Melissa Countway’s dissent comes as a relief.

In her view, the policy means what it says, the way the principal said it.

Therefore, the court should have applied strict scrutiny when it reviewed the school policy that “on its face interferes with a parent’s fundamental right to parent” she wrote. Because “accurate information in response to parents’ inquiries about a child’s expressed gender identity is imperative to the parents’ ability to assist and guide their child,” the school’s “withholding of such information implicates the parents’ fundamental right to raise and care for the child.”

 

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Comments

destroycommunism | September 2, 2024 at 6:09 pm

of course

now keep paying the bill “parents” and shut your fn mouths

Time to move

Really

On its face, a school’s failure to communicate to the parents any material known fact about a child, that is unknown to the parent, is subverting the proper care of the child outside of school. Known bullying would seem to be a fairly prevalent example, with gender issues rather obscure. I would think that there would be quite a body of case law as to the extent that such is actionable.

    txvet2 in reply to jb4. | September 2, 2024 at 7:54 pm

    The fact that this ruling is from the state supreme court would seem to present some difficulty in pursuing any legal action.

    GWB in reply to jb4. | September 3, 2024 at 10:48 am

    There was a time – not that long ago – when the school couldn’t give your child so much as an aspirin without a signed consent form from the parents. Because it was interfering in the parental custody of that child.

    Not no more.

Remove the child from that school (should have already been done) and either home school or move them to a different school.

If you’re homeschooling your child in NH, are you allowed to tell yourself about their gender issues?

Live free or die!

ThePrimordialOrderedPair | September 2, 2024 at 8:18 pm

The principal was reiterating district policy that, absent the child’s consent

Children cannot give consent in areas such as these. That’s what that whole “statutory rape” thing is about …

Our society is overloaded with completely insane perverts of the most deranged sort. There are so many of them (and their enablers). Far too many for this society to be very long for this world. Things are going to break soon – because they just cannot continue on this path – and it is going to be very, very, very ugly.

    There aren’t that many perverts – it’s their enthusiastic enablers, mostly women, who are promulgating this pernicious nonsense.

    One would think that to be the case. OTOH I’m surprised, on this issue, that the break you speak of hasn’t happened already. Just amazing how patient parents are these days to put up with this situation. Coming from a childhood where every adult could, and usually did, act in loco parentis to correct bad behavior of children, it mystifies me that parents don’t correct their schools, at least through school board elections.

Wouldn’t SCOTUS rule that parental rights supersede child’s privacy rights?

I can’t believe this will stand on appeal. But, in the meantime, the school can pay for dental appointments, after school sports, limousine service, and college expenses, if any. Since they feel free to interfere, they can darn well pick up the bills.

    destroycommunism in reply to CincyJan. | September 2, 2024 at 10:50 pm

    except it the taxpayers who pay for it

    Milhouse in reply to CincyJan. | September 3, 2024 at 1:42 am

    Appeal to where?

    Fat_Freddys_Cat in reply to CincyJan. | September 3, 2024 at 8:30 am

    Yeah, it’s funny that the teachers (and their unions) are declaring that the children are “our children” but you know damn well they have no intention of paying any of the bills for the “transition”–or the lifelong medical bills that will result.

    FreeBop in reply to CincyJan. | September 3, 2024 at 9:15 am

    Correct. (1) This needs to be appealed to the United States Supreme Court. (2) Also sue the school officials in civil court for damages stemming from this obvious child abuse and obvious infliction of emotional distress and many other obvious injuries.

It is appalling that the NH (or any state) Supreme court thinks that parental rights are positive rights – that is rights awarded by the state to the parents akin to driving privileges. Parental rights are really natural rights – rights that predated the founding of this country and in fact arguably predated any civilzation. If I were the parent, I would find a way to pull my kid out of the school & school district.

thalesofmiletus | September 3, 2024 at 12:38 am

we cannot disclose a student’s choice to parents if asked not to.

If the student has asked staff and faculty not to disclose what’s going on, the parent would correctly infer that their student is being corrupted. Therefore, one would expect faculty and staff to outright lie to the parent as a form of counter-intelligence. Thus, since a parent has reason to expect faculty and staff are lying at all times, a parent should absolutely not send their children to any public school in NH.

Imagine if you will a circumstance in which this child began hallucinating during history class – George Washington himself was at the front of the room on horseback – and the child began screaming and frothing at the mouth.

Obviously, the child is suffering a mental health emergency. An ambulance should be summoned and the child taken to a hospital to begin intervention.

In every such circumstance, the parents would be immediately called and would take charge of the child’s care.

But not when the child is questioning their gender.

Between this and the left’s holy sacrament of abortion, they reveal themselves to be utterly demonic. They must be stopped otherwise our species is going to crash (which, come to think of it, is perfectly in congruity with the rest of their principles).

    Well said.

    Also, is it wrong that I read your entire comment in Rod Serling’s voice?

    The parent would be called in a situation where there was a medical emergency. This is because the parent must pay for the care, either with insurance or being billed for the care rendered. The notice isn’t occasioned by any altruistic impulse on the part of the school administration.

How are you supposed to give consent to anything when you’re not even old enough to have your name printed?

Notice that there were 25 amici curiae appearing in this case in support of the State (against parents’ rights) – primarily NGOs and church groups – but not a single one in favor of the parents! Our civilization is in deep trouble.

This is obviously unconstitutional.

Definitely appeal this New Hampshire State Supreme Court ruling to the United States Supreme Court.

Also sue the New Hampshire School officials for child abuse and intentional infliction of emotional distress, along with a long list of other injuries.

“Live Free or Die … or Not, Whatever”.

Capitalist-Dad | September 3, 2024 at 9:24 am

More societal carnage inflicted by duplicitous, moronic leftists in black robes. The leftist school district and the various leftist filth supporting it have successfully weaseled into NH law the disastrous notion that children are property of the state. In a sane and healthy country this asininity coming from state officials would raise leveled pistols.

Can a school refuse to notify a parent if they find that the child is anorexic? What’s amazing is that the pro-transgender crowd is accepting a “feeling” as objective fact. Imagine if we were forced to say that an anorexic was indeed fat and we were also forced to call them “Fatty”. The insanity of this whole transgender thing is amazing.

“Schools shall be a prompt mandatory reporter of all student medical or mental heath issues to the parents .”
Dear NH, FIFY

“A litigant who loses in a federal court of appeals, or in the highest court of a state, may file a petition for a “writ of certiorari,” which is a document asking the Supreme Court to review the case. The Supreme Court, however, does not have to grant review.”

Finding a non-profit group to take on an appeal would be another monumental endeavor benefiting a majority of many who face these ever expanding Educational policies. Policies which have over stepped their purpose of education and broaching on indoctrination of young minds.

This is soo insane on soo many levels it’s hard to know where to begin!
So they think it’s is healthy and good to collude with this child to keep secret ABOUT THEIR SEXUAL IDENTITY from their parents, in effect having them to live a secret “double life”?
And that duplicity is not supposed to have any ill effects on the mental health of this kid???
The insanity and horrors these so-called grown-ups are perpetrating upon our kids, families and society as a whole is even beyond criminal.
It is inhumane and horrifically cruel and unusual.