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Parent May Proceed on Some Challenges to School’s Policy on Transgender Students

By Howard Friedman on February 16, 2025
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In Landerer v. Dover Area School District, (MD PA, Feb. 13, 2025), a mother challenged a school board’s policy Directive that prohibits parental notification without student consent when a student asks to socially transition and be called by a different name or pronouns. The court held that plaintiff lacked standing to obtain injunctive or declaratory relief because she had withdrawn her children from the Dover School District. The court also dismissed plaintiff’s free exercise claim, saying in part:

… [T]he policy here is rationally related to the legitimate interest of protecting transgender students. Even though the policy is alleged by Plaintiff to impact or burden her religious beliefs, the Directive survives rational basis review.

The court however refused to dismiss plaintiff’s claim that a teacher interfered with her right to direct the care (including medical and mental health care), custody and control of her child. It also refused to dismiss plaintiff’s claim that she was denied procedural due process because the Directive failed to provide for notice to parents of their children’s request to use a different name and pronoun. The court allowed plaintiff to proceed only against the school board and not against the individual defendants on these claims because of qualified immunity.

Photo of Howard Friedman Howard Friedman

Author of the Religion Clause blog, highlighting church-state and religious liberty developments

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