California High School Volleyball -Fort Continues in the middle of Trans -Tvist

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A volleyball team in Girls High School with a transgender player in California saw more games lost its schedule last weekend. Forfected are the first to come after a trial was brought by three current and former players against the school district and state agencies.

Formed came against the Jurupa Valley High School in the Riverside County last Saturday in the Freeway Games tournament, according to Maribel Munoz, mother of two student athletes who are the lawsuits in the trial. Munonz told Pakinomist Digital that Aquinas High School, Yucaipa High School and San Dima High School were the teams that lost.

The High School Sports Archive Web site MaxPreps shows that Jurupa Valley was awarded a victory of forfeit on September 13 against Yucaipa High School on the tournament.

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Press Enterprise -The newspaper in southern California reported that Aquinas, Yucaipa and San Dima all lost to the Jurupa Valley last weekend.

Pakinomist Digital has reached these schools and Jurupa Valley for comment.

Before last weekend, four teams were confirmed to have lost Jurupa Vally this season – Riverside Poly High School, Rim of the World High School, Orange Vista High School and AB Miller High School.

Then Munoz’s daughters on September 9 Madison and Alyssa McPherson, along with teammate Hadeel Hazameh, filed their trial with the regular advocates of Faith & Freedom against Jurupa Unified School District (JUSD), California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) and California Department of Education (CDE) over their experience of sharing a team and Locker room with the violation (CIF). Alyssa McPherson and Hazameh former Pakinomist Digital told them to step away from the team as long as the Trans athlete participates.

“The applicants have been intimidated by a intentional hostile environment created by the defendant, where they were bullied by school officials to censor their objections to competing with and against, a man and sharing intimate and private spaces with a man,” the trial reads.

Inside the Gavin Newsoms transcent volleyball crisis

The McPherson family, who identifies as practicing Catholics, claimed to “believe that God created people as male and female, and that gender is a solid trait that cannot be changed. Their faith informs their understanding of human identity and forms their views of the importance of recognizing and honoring the distinctive features of male and women as created by God,” per. Court documents.

Meanwhile, Hazameh and her family identify themselves as practicing Muslims “whose religious obligations prevent HH from exposing his hair or body to men, including by carrying a hijab. Court documents.

“Their faith emphasizes modesty, dignity, and honor of gender debris that must be consistent with a ‘biological sex in both practice and identity.”

JUSD has directly called on critics to address the question with government officials and legislators in a statement previously delivered to Pakinomist Digital, but the school district has not commented on the trial.

“School districts do not write laws for the state of California, nor do they have the power to ignore them or change them.

A spokesman for CDE told Pakinomist Digital, “California’s education department cannot comment on this matter as we cannot comment on pending litigation.”

Girles Volleyball Players Hadeel Hazameh, Alyssa McPherson and Madison McPherson (With the permission of lawyers for Faith & Freedom)

CIF has not responded to Pakinomist Digital’s requests for answers to the trial.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office delivered a statement to Pakinomist Digital in response to the complaints of athletes and parents, suggesting that the responsibility falls on CDE, CDE and state legislator, but not on him.

“CIF is an independent nonprofit that controls high school sports. California’s educational department is a separate constitutional office. Neither of them is under the author’s authority,” the statement reads. “CIF and CDE have stated that they are following the existing state law – a law passed in 2013 and signed by Governor Jerry Brown (not Newsom) and in accordance with 21 other states. In order for the law to change, the legislature would send the governor a bill.”

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