DOJ investigates Michigan school districts on LGBTQ+ content and parental rights
The Department Of Justice (DOJ) has kicked off a big investigation involving three public school districts in Michigan. They're digging deep, trying figure out if these schools are including LGBTQ+ content in their lessons without giving parents a say in whether their kids should be exposed.
Back on February 18th, they rolled out a statement explaining their plan. They've set their sights on Detroit Public Schools Community District, Godfrey-Lee Public Schools, and Lansing School District. The focus? Whether these schools are teaching about sexual orientation and gender identity from preschool all through high school, and if parents are being made aware that they can choose what their kids learn.
Focus on single-sex facilities and parental rights
The DOJ isn't stopping at lessons—they're also checking how these schools handle single-sex facilities like bathrooms and locker rooms. They want these spaces accessed based on "biological sex," which aligns with what Title IX currently means according their Civil Rights Division.
Harmeet K. Dhillon, who heads up this division, made it clear that they're all about protecting parental rights in schools. She said, "The Department Of Justice fully committed ending trend gender ideology infiltrating schools." Dhillon talked about how important it was that kids get raised with their family values. Part that? Making sure single-sex spaces stay based on biological sex, protecting what she calls "the safety, dignity, and innocence" our youngest citizens.
Title IX and recent legal interpretations
Let's talk Title IX—this law's a big deal, banning sex-based discrimination schools that get federal funding. It made waves back in day, especially pushing gender equality in sports. But, under Trump administration, "sex" got narrowed down "biological sex," creating a whole new ball game when it comes transgender inclusion.
This DOJ move follows a game-changer Supreme Court decision from 2025 in Mahmoud vs Taylor. They ruled in favor religious parents, giving them okay pull kids from LGBTQ+ lessons. It all started with parents in Montgomery County, Maryland, who didn't want LGBTQ+-inclusive books their kids' classes.
Implications recent Supreme Court decision
Montgomery County Public Schools initially let parents opt their kids out, but then revoked that option in 2023 because things got hectic. Parents cried First Amendment violation, and Supreme Court backed them up with a 6-3 decision. They said what schools did was an unconstitutional hit on religious freedom.
Afterward, former President Donald Trump praised this as "great ruling parents" and "tremendous victory." He claimed that Biden administration's policies yanked parental control schools when it came LGBTQ+ stuff.
This decision fit right in with Trump's second-term executive orders that cut back on transgender rights in public life. This included stopping transgender individuals from serving in military, blocking gender-affirming healthcare minors, and restricting transgender athletes in women sports.
On top that, those orders dialed back diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in government and military, underscoring policy that sees "only two sexes." With DOJ's investigation rolling, outcomes could really shape how LGBTQ+ content, and parental influence, looks in schools moving forward.