Female athletes to testify against NCAA, demanding sex screenings to keep trans athletes out of women's sports
XX-XY Athletics released a video calling out the NCAA over its alleged lack of clarity with a new transgender athlete policy.
A group of women college athletes affected by transgender inclusion will testify in a legal battle between the NCAA and the state of Texas Tuesday.
After the NCAA changed its gender eligibility policy to prevent biological males from competing in women's sports to comply with President Donald Trump's Feb. 5 executive order addressing the issue, many pro-women activists spoke out with concerns the new policy doesn't go far enough to keep trans athletes out.
In late February, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton sued the NCAA for its recent revised policy, demanding the governing body begin mandatory sex screening.
The lawsuit's first hearing is Tuesday and will include testimony from former San Jose State University volleyball player Brooke Slusser and her mother, Kim Slusser, former North Carolina State University Kylee Alons and former University of Kentucky Swimmer Kaitlynn Wheeler.
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Those athletes are already involved in another lawsuit, led by Riley Gaines and the Independent Council on Women's Sports (ICONS), against the NCAA for its past gender policy that allowed trans athletes to compete as women, citing their own experiences with trans inclusion.
Slusser is the most recent of the group to enter the battle against trans inclusion in women's sports after joining the Gaines lawsuit in September over her experience with transgender teammate Blaire Fleming. Slusser has alleged SJSU did not reveal Fleming's birth sex while they shared changing and sleeping areas.
WISCONSIN BANS TRANS ATHLETES FROM GIRLS SPORTS, FOLLOWING TRUMP’S EXECUTIVE