Wyomingâs governor was among nine state leaders who signed a Monday letter to a college athletics policy board urging a new policy of fairness in womenâs sports. Â
âWe strongly encourage you to rewrite your Transgender Student Athlete Policy to protect, preserve and encourage fairness in womenâs athletics,â reads the letter, a three-page plea to the National Collegiate Athletics Associationâs (NCAA) Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports.
It urges the committee to adopt a fairness policy preventing transgender athletes from placing female athletes at a natural disadvantage in competition. Â
âPolicies that allow men and women to compete against one another validate an average male athlete stealing the recognition from a truly remarkable female athlete,â says the letter. Â
The committee reviews the NCAAâs fairness policy and recommends changes to the NCAA Board of Governors, the letter says.
The national governing body for each sport sets their respective transgender competition policies, which the letter characterizes as the NCAA dodging accountability and the âchance to guarantee an environment where female college athletes can thrive without the concern of inequities.â Â
The letterâs nine signatures are those of Republican state governors, including Wyoming Gov. Mark Gordon, South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, Arkansas Gov. Sarah Sanders, Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson, Montana Gov. Greg Gianforte, Nevada Gov. Joe Lombardo, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott. Â
âGrandstandingâÂ
The American Civil Liberties Union of Wyoming condemned Gordonâs involvement in a Tuesday statement, accusing him of political grandstanding. Â
The group drew attention to a public letter Gordon wrote in March describing Wyomingâs Fairness in Womenâs Sports Act (Senate File 133) as âoverly draconianâ and âdiscriminatory.â
The governor let the bill pass into law without his signature. Â
Gordon said in his March letter that the act, which bans males from competing in girls school sports from grades 7-12, invites lawsuits and will keep youths from being included in sports. Â
While he said he agrees with the overall goal of fairness for girls, Gordon lamented the lawâs blanket ban, saying evaluating transgender athletes on an individual basis would be better. He doubted whether transgender competitive opportunism is a real issue in Wyoming and asked the Legislature to âpromote inclusion and equality for all individualsâ going forward. Â
But This Is CollegeÂ
Gordonâs spokesman Michael Pearlman said Gordonâs position in signing the letter Monday does agree with what he wrote in his March letter on SF 133, because âhe expressed his support for the overall goal of fairness in competitive female sportsâ in the March letter. Â
Pearlman quoted the March letter, where Gordon wrote: âFemale athletes deserve to be confident that in competition and perhaps in their quest for athletic scholarships, that their path is free of hesitation.âÂ
Pearlman said Gordon wants the NCAA to have a role in reviewing its transgender sports policy and recommending changes, and he supports the group taking this chance go âguarantee a fair environment for womenâs collegiate sports.â Â
Pearlman said it is important to note âthe key distinction between highly competitive collegiate athletics, and K-12 sports in Wyoming, where the governor believes in the benefits of participation in athletics for all students, including transgender individuals.â Â
âFearmongeringâÂ
The ACLU of Wyoming and the nine governors diverge on this issue. Â
âThis letter to the NCAA is just another attempt to erase transgender people from society while stirring up support from their base of anti-trans activists with fearmongering tactics and discriminatory rhetoric that harm some of the most vulnerable people in our state,â Libby Skarin, deputy executive director for the ACLU of Wyoming, said in a Tuesday press release. Â
The real threats to womenâs collegiate sports are underfunding, lack of media coverage, sexist ideologies suggesting women and girls are weak, and a lack of pay equity for coaches and players, Skarin said. Â
The ACLU statement says transgender people âbelong everywhere â including in sports. But does that mean that trans people should be used in a game of political football?âÂ
Also, Riley GainesÂ
The governorsâ Monday letter, conversely, cites the story of Riley Gaines, a top college swimmer who tied with transgender swimmer Lia Thomas.
Gaines has since launched an activism campaign advocating for fairness in womenâs sports, privacy in womenâs spaces and an end to what she calls the authoritarian silencing of womenâs fears and concerns on this issue. Â
Gaines spoke last week at the University of Wyoming to a crowd of at least 600 people in an auditorium and overflow rooms. Â
âAs former competitors, you understand the years of blood, sweat and tears that it takes to succeed at a high level,â reads the Monday letter. âThe NCAA has the opportunity to guarantee a fair environment for womenâs sports. If you take this opportunity, it will expand the possibilities for so many young women for years to come.â Â
The letter urges the NCAA away from allowing âmisguided policies,â and discusses biological differences between males and females, such as menâs greater height, musculature and testosterone. Â
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





