Utah State Board of Education working on gender-identity guide

KSL TV

Save Story

Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes

This archived news story is available only for your personal, non-commercial use. Information in the story may be outdated or superseded by additional information. Reading or replaying the story in its archived form does not constitute a republication of the story.

SALT LAKE CITY — A committee for the Utah State Board of Education spent hours Monday night working to complete a guidance document regarding transgender and gender-diverse students in Utah.

The committee completed a draft of the document at a meeting in September but later determined it needed further review.

The committee reviewed 14 items — everything from pronouns, bathrooms, overnight school trips, and even what parents are legally entitled to know about their children and their gender identity.

The committee is looking to what other states have implemented that have dealt with some of the controversial issues.

The document isn't intended to be legally binding, but rather a guide for school leaders as they deal with uncharted scenarios.

Kelleen Potter, the mayor of Heber City, is the mother of a gay son, who is now 24 years old and a transgender daughter, who is now 20 years old. She said policies, and even conversations about LGBT youth are a change in the right direction.

"My transgender daughter made it to one day of high school," Potter said. "It would have been phenomenal to have a more accepting environment where people understood and weren't feeling like 'how do we deal with these kids?'"

A study by UCLA estimates there are 24,000 LGBT youth ages 13-17 in Utah. That includes those who are nonbinary, gay, and gender diverse.

All parties, including recent research by the world professional association of transgender health, acknowledge the factors contributing to gender identity development in adolescence are still evolving and not yet fully understood by scientists, clinicians, community members, or other stakeholders.

The committee did not finish their document by night's end. It will turn it over to the Utah State Board of Education when completed.

The Board could adopt it or send it back for further consideration.

Related stories

Most recent Education stories

Related topics

Debbie Worthen, KSLDebbie Worthen
Debbie Worthen brings nearly two decades of award-winning journalism experience to the KSL Newsroom and is thrilled be working for Utah’s legacy news organization. She anchors KSL 5 News at 4 and Live at 5 with Mike Headrick and reports for KSL 5 News at 10pm. There are countless things Debbie enjoys about working in local news, but storytelling is at the top of the list. Whether it’s meeting the remarkable people of Utah as they do amazing things, informing viewers of critical breaking news and issues that impact their communities or reporting on daily assignments like weather and traffic, Debbie is honored to be the one trusted to tell Utahn’s stories. She believes journalistic integrity and a commitment to accuracy have never been more important than they are now. Debbie started her career as a writer, producer and traffic reporter while finishing her communications degree at The University of Utah before making the jump to a full-time on-air position. (Although you could say she caught the news “bug” at KOLT-News at Cottonwood High School.) After several moves across the country, Debbie and her husband, Brandon Gilbert, moved to Utah to start their family. They love everything Utah has to offer and can’t imagine living anywhere else. Outside the office, Debbie and her family are advocates for at-risk youth and have fostered several children through Utah Foster Care. As a family they enjoy movie nights in the basement, trying new recipes and, a few times a year, traveling to exotic locations!
KSL.com Beyond Series
KSL.com Beyond Business

KSL Weather Forecast

KSL Weather Forecast
Play button