CASPER â Natrona County School District 1 has updated its parental rights policies to conform to new mandates passed by the Wyoming Legislature earlier this year, but a local state legislator says they donât go far enough because they donât address using preferred pronouns of transgender students without parental approval.
The school board Monday approved on an 8-1 vote tightening down on parental rights for families in the district ahead of a July 1 deadline, but not before some criticized the Legislature.
Board President Kevin Christopherson chastised legislators for giving school districts so little time to deal with the issue of parental control while a kindergarten teacher and local union official said the new policy will complicate teachersâ lives.
State Rep. Jeannette Ward, R-Casper, attended the meeting and told the board sheâs disappointed that the district policyâs language seems too soft and gives wiggle room for âstaff to shield a studentâs desired âsocial transitionâ from parentsâ a key reason the legislation was passed.
She also sparred with a kindergarten teacher in the district over whatâs appropriate to teach kids that age.
âI am disappointed that the proposed definition of âchange in a studentâs educational, physical, mental or emotional health or well-beingâ does not include desire to be referred to by a different name or pronouns,â she said. âThat was the whole point of Senate File 9, Parental Rights in Education. Please consider addressing this concern as I am here tonight as a legislator who was witness to the intentions of the Wyoming Legislature in this matter.â
Board Trustee Kyla Alvey, who chairâs the districtâs Policy Committee, said that âour hands were kind of tied by the state Legislatureâ as the committee worked through the information contained in the policy â much of which she said the district already had in its policies.
âWe tried to keep it a little bit larger, but teachers still have the ability to work the best way with their knowledge because they are the ones who work directly with the students,â she said. âIt is going to be a learning curve for everybody so please take it easy on your teachers as this is newly implemented.â
âShall Notifyâ
Under the policy, the district âshall notifyâ a studentâs parent or guardian as practicable if a school district employee has actual notice of a change in the studentâs educational, physical, mental or emotional health or well-being. The building administrator shall document the notification.â
Ward reminded the board that the policy was enacted because in a âdifferent school district in our state a young student was put on the track to socially transition without the knowledge of her parents. Some school staff used different names and pronouns for her â a decision that is not to be made without parental involvement â period.â
Dirk Andrews, a kindergarten teacher and teacher organization representative, told the board he was disappointed with the Legislatureâs law. He said the new policy would make more work for elementary teachers.
âAs a kindergarten teacher, we have social studies standards that focus on the family unit. Kindergarten teachers will have to have parents opt in (for students) to be taught social studies standards,â he said. âIf I am teaching about the family unit, that would include topics around heterosexual families as well as LGBTQ+ families. And the way I read this policy, I will have to have parents opt in to be taught social studies standards.
âSecondly, this policy is basically requiring educators to violate studentsâ rights and out them to their parents or guardians if we have actual knowledge.â
Ward told Cowboy State Daily that kindergarten teachers have no place teaching kindergartners about sexual orientation.
âKindergartners are learning to count and tie their shoes,â she said. âIt is the role of parents to teach that subject to their children. I think it is very curious and shocking when educators or former educators get angry because they canât have conversations about sexual orientation with kindergartners.â
Trustee Mary Schmidt, a member of the Policy Committee, said she supports the parental rightâs policy and called it a compromise. She said the Legislature acted in response to âmany of the citizens across the state, maybe not in this school district specifically.â
âUltimately, this policy is important. I donât think it will affect the curriculum or standards,â she said. âI understand certain people want certain things taught and others want other things taught, but ultimately we must as a school district first and foremost always respect the parental rights.â
âLess Teaching, More Spyingâ
Trustee Thomas Myler said he agreed with the overall concept of the policy that parents should be informed. He said he believes the district does a good job of that overall.
âIn this district we very much support parental rights,â he said. âWhat I disagree with is that this will have little effect on teachers. I find it a little ironic that some in our Legislature want to have our teachers focus on teaching, yet we have a policy and a bill that requires them to do more than teach. I guess the best way to say it is âless teaching, more spyingâ in a way.â
The board voted 8-1 to pass the policy with Trustee Michael Stedillie voting against it as a matter of principle and because the state mandate does not take effect until July 1.
âThe reason I am against it is not because I donât think parents should be informed,â he said. âI personally think this one has too many unintended consequences ⌠but I am still following law because it (the bill) isnât law yet.â
Christopherson said the district did not have a choice about the policy and that the Legislature gave schools little time to get their updated policies in place.
âThis is ridiculous we had to shoehorn two meetings in where we had not scheduled just to do this,â he said. âYou canât pass a law that is this vague and not have the purpose that they wrote the law anywhere in it. We all know what the law is about, but it doesnât say it in the law.
âSo, we have to come up with a vague policy to cover a vague law in a short amount of time. It is a ridiculous way to do law in this state, so shame on you boys.â
The Legislature passed the bill at its budget session earlier this year following a controversy in the Rock Springs School District.
Parents there filed a federal lawsuit against the district and school administrators for allegedly helping their daughter transition from being a girl to a boy by calling their daughter by a boyâs name, using he/him pronouns, and hiding the transition efforts from them.
Dale Killingbeck can be reached at dale@cowboystatedaily.com.