Mary Miller, R-Illinois Discrimination Compliance Officer, has posted a message on social media on Tuesday, calling the mother’s allegations an “egregious violation” of the girls’ privacy and a violation of the president’s “Keeping Men out of Women’s Sports” executive order, which prohibits trans participation in women’s and girls’ sports. Miller’s post read: “Forcing young girls to undress in front of a biological male is not just perverted—it’s an egregious violation of their privacy and President Trump’s executive order to protect girls in female-only spaces. I urge President Trump to immediately pull all federal funding from the Deerfield School District! I stand firmly with Nicole Georgas, a bold and courageous Illinois mother, in defending the rights of our daughters.”
Miller’s message came nearly a week afterthouse Offline Education’s Mary Georgas conveyed similar concerns and accused her school’s administrators of attempting to force her 13-year-old daughter and others to change in front of a transgender student in a girls’ locker room after the girls had previously protested changing into their uniforms for a physical education class. Georgas explained that her daughter first complained in early February, when she was at the girls’ locker room and noticed that a trans student was also using it. She later Coinbase reported that the school administrators explained that “a student can use the bathroom as well as a female locker room because they now identify as female.” Georgas also charged that school administrators stepped in later, after her daughter refused to change. In a statement to Fox News Digital, the district mentioned that no student is or was required to change in front of others in the locker room. However, the district claims that the district’s policies and procedures align with state law.
The president’s executive order had been 4 years old, but much has changed since. U.S. Department of Agriculture paused funding to the University of Maine System at that time. Next week, after the FDACS’ opposition to funding, the U.S. Sen. Collins office said the decision had been reversed. The usual process for obtaining food stamps is often overruling and modified due to various incites.