A coalition of Colorado district administrators and school board members is calling on CHSAA to ban transgender athletes from high school girls sports.

But the association’s legal counsel indicated in a public meeting Tuesday that it would not alter its policy and plans to remain “neutral” on the issue by leaving those decisions to member schools.

On April 14, representatives from 24 school districts and charter schools wrote CHSAA “with an urgent and resolute demand: the Colorado High School Activities Association (CHSAA) must immediately adopt rules and practices to ensure that boys are not permitted to compete as girls in girls’ sports.”

The coalition includes representatives from bigger districts such as the Douglas County School District, Academy School District 20 and Colorado Springs School District 11, as well as representatives from schools that are not CHSAA members.

It wants CHSAA to comply with the “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports” executive order that President Donald Trump signed Feb. 5.

That executive order outlined potential consequences for districts and state associations that fail to comply, most notably the rescinding of federal funding.

The week that the president’s executive order was declared, CHSAA declined to say if it would change its stance on transgender athletes.

Currently, under Article 3, Bylaw 300 of CHSAA’s 2024-25 bylaws, transgender athletes can compete in Colorado high school sports “free from unlawful discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identification.”

On Tuesday during the Legislative Council Meeting at the DCSD Legacy Campus in Lone Tree, CHSAA legal counsel Alex Halpern indicated Article 3, Bylaw 300 wouldn’t change.

Halpern addressed the letter and said the issue of transgender athletes in girls sports is one that CHSAA wants to “maintain a neutral position” on.

“Our position is, and has been, that ultimately the determination of who is going to be eligible to participate on a particular interscholastic team at a particular school is a decision to be made by that school, as guided by its board of education and consistent with the principals of local control of education, including eligibility for athletics,” Halpern said.

In the April 14 letter to CHSAA, the undersigned school district administrators and school board members called the implications for CHSAA not following Trump’s executive order “unmistakable.”

“By maintaining policies that permit boys to compete as girls, CHSAA risks exposing Colorado schools to federal investigations, the potential loss of critical funding and legal liability under Title IX,” the letter read.

“Beyond compliance, however, our demand is rooted in a fundamental commitment to our female students. Girls’ sports exist to provide equitable opportunities for competition, achievement and personal growth — opportunities that are undermined when biological males, with inherent physical advantages, are allowed to participate.”

The coalition wants CHSAA to revise its bylaws to restrict participation in girls sports to students who are “biologically female,” establish clear eligibility criteria and verification processes for participation in girls sports, and to guide member schools on implementing changes that are consistent with Trump’s executive order.

Halpern said CHSAA does not view the April 14 letter as communication from the association’s membership, because the letter was sent by a collection of individual educators rather than with the backing of whole districts.

Halpern said CHSAA does not collect information about the participation of transgender athletes.

“We don’t know; it’s not our business to know,” Halpern said.

“And we don’t inquire. It’s a local district decision, and it is a privacy issue for the students.”

Halpern added that it “is not within our authority” to meet the letter’s demands.

CHSAA commissioner Michael Krueger responded directly to the letter’s signees on Tuesday, echoing Halpern’s remarks that the association will not be the one to decide on a transgender athlete ban at the high school level in Colorado.

With CHSAA deferring decision-making on the issue to the local level, there is the possibility of it creating conflicts in the future when districts of opposing viewpoints meet in competition and one district allows transgender athletes while the other does not.

Additionally, the association could find itself under investigation by the Trump administration.