Transgender girl, 6, barred from using school bathroom

FOUNTAIN, Colo. (AP) - At first, Jeremy and Kathryn Mathis didn't think much of their son's behavior. Coy took his sister's pink blanket, and shunned the car they gave him for Christmas.
Then, Coy told them he only wanted to wear girls' clothes. At school, he became upset when his teacher insisted he line up with the boys. All the while, he was becoming depressed and withdrawn, telling his parents at one point he wanted to get "fixed" by doctors.
When the Mathises learned he had gender identity disorder - a condition in which someone identifies as the opposite gender - they decided to help Coy live as a girl. And suddenly, she came out of her shell.
"We could force her to be somebody she wasn't, but it would end up being more damaging to her emotionally and to us because we would lose the relationship with her," Kathryn Mathis said. "She was discussing things like surgery and things like that before and she's not now, so obviously we've done something positive."
Now, her family is locked in a legal battle with the school district in Fountain, a town 82 miles south of Denver, over where Coy, 6, should go to use the bathroom - the girls' or, as school officials suggest, one in the teachers' lounge or another in the nurse's office. Her parents say using anything other than the girls' bathroom could stigmatize her, and open her up to bullying.
Fountain-Fort Carson School District 8 declined to comment, citing a complaint filed on behalf of the Mathises with the Colorado Office of Civil Rights that alleges a violation of the state's anti-discrimination law. School officials, however, sent a letter to the family, explaining their decision to prevent Coy from using the girls' bathroom at Eagleside Elementary, where she is a first-grader.
"I'm certain you can appreciate that as Coy grows older and his male genitals develop along with the rest of his body, at least some parents and students are likely to become uncomfortable with his continued use of the girls' restroom," the letter read.
School districts in many states, including Colorado, have enacted policies that allow transgender students to use the bathroom of the gender with which they identify. Sixteen states, again including Colorado, have anti-discrimination laws that include protections for transgender people.
Legal battles such as the one the Mathises are facing are rare, said Michael Silverman of the New York-based Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund who is representing the Mathises. He sees about a dozen cases each year. Silverman refers most cases to social workers who work with districts to work out a solution to a well-recognized medical condition.
Psychologists don't know what causes the condition, but it was added to the American Psychiatric Association's diagnostic manual in 1980 - some three decades after the psychological concept of gender began to be developed.
The manual's fifth edition, due out in May, changes the name to Gender Dysphoria - which refers to the distress from the gender conflict - partly out of concerns that the current name is stigmatizing, said Dr. Jack Drescher, a New York psychiatrist who serves on the working group that suggested the changes.
There's no consensus on how to treat it in somebody Coy's age because of a lack of data on the disorder in prepubescent children. Research suggests that many children gradually become "comfortable with their natal gender," an APA task force reported in 2011. But the goal of any treatment should be to help the child adjust to its reality, the APA said.
Coy is a triplet, with a brother, Max, and a sister, Lily. At 5 months old, Coy was already expressing a preference for items associated with girls, the Mathises recalled. A friend gave them baby blankets, and Coy took a pink blanket meant for Lily. The Mathises didn't think too much of it.
They bought Coy toys normally associated with boys, but she showed little interest. While Max was excited when Coy opened her Christmas present in 2009 to find a toy car from the Disney movie "Cars," Coy simply set it down and walked away.
As Coy got older, she found and wore her older sister's bathing suit, which had fringe that made it look like a tutu.
Still they pressed on in raising a boy, encouraging Coy to wear boy clothes and bought shirts that had pictures of sports, monsters and dinosaurs on them. She showed little interest, and refused to leave the house if she had to wear boy's clothes.
It didn't bother her father, an ex-Marine, that Coy liked to wear pink bows and dress up in girls clothes. That is, until Coy insisted on leaving the house with them on.
"She would see the stereotypical outfits laid out and then get this look of defeat and then would go, 'I'd just rather stay home,'" her mother said. "It wasn't about the pink. It was about people knowing she was a girl."
When Coy asked to be taken to the doctor to be "fixed," they took her to a psychologist who diagnosed her.
Coy started kindergarten in August 2011 but once the Mathises learned that Coy's behavior wasn't a phase, they allowed her to wear dresses and identify herself as a girl in the middle of the school year. The withdrawn child who was lagging behind in school began to flourish.
In kindergarten, the children used unisex bathrooms. Last fall, in first grade, the district allowed her to use the girls' bathroom. But then they told the Mathises that Coy would have to either use the staff bathroom or the one in the nurse's office starting in January. Coy is being home-schooled now, along with her siblings, while the issue is being litigated.
The family hopes that the district will reconsider, especially since using the bathroom is done in private anyway, and that Coy isn't stigmatized by being forced to use a different bathroom than her peers.
"The doctor's bathroom is only for sick people and I'm not sick," said Coy, wearing white tights, a red dress and sweater and sitting on the living room couch at her house as her siblings played a computer game nearby at the kitchen table.
Then, Coy told them he only wanted to wear girls' clothes. At school, he became upset when his teacher insisted he line up with the boys. All the while, he was becoming depressed and withdrawn, telling his parents at one point he wanted to get "fixed" by doctors.
When the Mathises learned he had gender identity disorder - a condition in which someone identifies as the opposite gender - they decided to help Coy live as a girl. And suddenly, she came out of her shell.
"We could force her to be somebody she wasn't, but it would end up being more damaging to her emotionally and to us because we would lose the relationship with her," Kathryn Mathis said. "She was discussing things like surgery and things like that before and she's not now, so obviously we've done something positive."
Now, her family is locked in a legal battle with the school district in Fountain, a town 82 miles south of Denver, over where Coy, 6, should go to use the bathroom - the girls' or, as school officials suggest, one in the teachers' lounge or another in the nurse's office. Her parents say using anything other than the girls' bathroom could stigmatize her, and open her up to bullying.
Fountain-Fort Carson School District 8 declined to comment, citing a complaint filed on behalf of the Mathises with the Colorado Office of Civil Rights that alleges a violation of the state's anti-discrimination law. School officials, however, sent a letter to the family, explaining their decision to prevent Coy from using the girls' bathroom at Eagleside Elementary, where she is a first-grader.
"I'm certain you can appreciate that as Coy grows older and his male genitals develop along with the rest of his body, at least some parents and students are likely to become uncomfortable with his continued use of the girls' restroom," the letter read.
School districts in many states, including Colorado, have enacted policies that allow transgender students to use the bathroom of the gender with which they identify. Sixteen states, again including Colorado, have anti-discrimination laws that include protections for transgender people.
Legal battles such as the one the Mathises are facing are rare, said Michael Silverman of the New York-based Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund who is representing the Mathises. He sees about a dozen cases each year. Silverman refers most cases to social workers who work with districts to work out a solution to a well-recognized medical condition.
Psychologists don't know what causes the condition, but it was added to the American Psychiatric Association's diagnostic manual in 1980 - some three decades after the psychological concept of gender began to be developed.
The manual's fifth edition, due out in May, changes the name to Gender Dysphoria - which refers to the distress from the gender conflict - partly out of concerns that the current name is stigmatizing, said Dr. Jack Drescher, a New York psychiatrist who serves on the working group that suggested the changes.
There's no consensus on how to treat it in somebody Coy's age because of a lack of data on the disorder in prepubescent children. Research suggests that many children gradually become "comfortable with their natal gender," an APA task force reported in 2011. But the goal of any treatment should be to help the child adjust to its reality, the APA said.
Coy is a triplet, with a brother, Max, and a sister, Lily. At 5 months old, Coy was already expressing a preference for items associated with girls, the Mathises recalled. A friend gave them baby blankets, and Coy took a pink blanket meant for Lily. The Mathises didn't think too much of it.
They bought Coy toys normally associated with boys, but she showed little interest. While Max was excited when Coy opened her Christmas present in 2009 to find a toy car from the Disney movie "Cars," Coy simply set it down and walked away.
As Coy got older, she found and wore her older sister's bathing suit, which had fringe that made it look like a tutu.
Still they pressed on in raising a boy, encouraging Coy to wear boy clothes and bought shirts that had pictures of sports, monsters and dinosaurs on them. She showed little interest, and refused to leave the house if she had to wear boy's clothes.
It didn't bother her father, an ex-Marine, that Coy liked to wear pink bows and dress up in girls clothes. That is, until Coy insisted on leaving the house with them on.
"She would see the stereotypical outfits laid out and then get this look of defeat and then would go, 'I'd just rather stay home,'" her mother said. "It wasn't about the pink. It was about people knowing she was a girl."
When Coy asked to be taken to the doctor to be "fixed," they took her to a psychologist who diagnosed her.
Coy started kindergarten in August 2011 but once the Mathises learned that Coy's behavior wasn't a phase, they allowed her to wear dresses and identify herself as a girl in the middle of the school year. The withdrawn child who was lagging behind in school began to flourish.
In kindergarten, the children used unisex bathrooms. Last fall, in first grade, the district allowed her to use the girls' bathroom. But then they told the Mathises that Coy would have to either use the staff bathroom or the one in the nurse's office starting in January. Coy is being home-schooled now, along with her siblings, while the issue is being litigated.
The family hopes that the district will reconsider, especially since using the bathroom is done in private anyway, and that Coy isn't stigmatized by being forced to use a different bathroom than her peers.
"The doctor's bathroom is only for sick people and I'm not sick," said Coy, wearing white tights, a red dress and sweater and sitting on the living room couch at her house as her siblings played a computer game nearby at the kitchen table.
@colorowdy and @PleaseBeSmart ..The meaning of my comment was that at the age of 6, I was not mature enough to make life changing decisions.  Evidently I should speak more slowly and plainly when addressing you.
@Phil Evidently you should say what you mean. At what age did you choose to be comfortable with having a penis and being identified as a male?
@PleaseBeSmart @Phil I...Don't...Remember...It...Was...Many...Years....Ago
@Phil Ah, so you have memory issues. Does that mean you suspect there was a time you were uncomfortable with having a penis and being identified as a male? Would this not be something your parents would remember and discussed? Oddly, you do seem to remember your maturity level at age 6.
The Bible warns us of "doctrines of devils" - this is one of them.
@Robbie Rainbow The bible also tells you how to treat slaves properly.
@colorowdy and @slumlord420 -just stating my opinion like you are,  who is JC by the way?  You both need to put away your hammers.Â
@Mary if you don't know who JC is maybe you don't read your bible as much as you like to preach a filtered doctrine spewed from whomever you are choosing to listen to at the time. - wow.Â
@Mary @colorowdy @slumlord420 if you consider my comment to be hammering you then you are probably too sensitive to participate in these conversations.
@slumlord420Â -are you judging me?Â
@Mary @slumlord420 No. What did I say that you feel like I am hammering you ? Was I being uncivil?
God created male and female-why must mankind blur the line?Â
@Mary LOL. Then why did your god also create so many genders in between? Hermaphrodites? XY females and XX males? Chimeras with both gender features?Â
@PleaseBeSmart @Mary -I thought this was about a lttle boy.
@Mary So you're saying that XY females and XX males do not exist? That hermaphrodites do not exist? That their existence is simply my opinion and not proven scientific facts?
It is very apparent that you don't care, that doesn't make you right.. I can't change your opinion (yes you've been talking about your opinion) and you can't change mine. Â Further back and forth is pretty much pointless.Â
@Mary Valuing science does not imply a lack of "values." Quite frankly, I haven't been talking about my opinions and values. I've been talking about pure and simple facts. And no, I don't really care if you don't like facts forced upon you. Welcome to reality... where we've long since proven beyond a shadow of a doubt that there is more to physical gender than pure male and pure female.
you say you value science-many on here also have values. Â Intolerance, nonsense and forcing ones opinions/values on others swings both ways.
@Mary I value science and completely disregard any religious nonsense that is blatantly wrong in saying there is only 100% male and 100% female. For those of you for whom it is "simply male and female," you're simply sticking your head in the sand. I recognize it is a bizarre situation for you, but it being uncomfortable is no reason to not acknowledge the facts of the situation and and deal with them head-on.Â
@PleaseBeSmart @Mary for some of us  it is simply male and female.  The article is about letting a little boy in a dress use the little girls' bathroom.  The issue with him (Coy) is not something that should be forced on other young children or their parents.  You value your own thoughts and convictions  on the issue, as you're entitled to, just as I  am entitled to my thoughts and convictions. Maybe you're right, maybe I'm right.  Believe it or not this is still considered a rather bizare  situation.
@Mary It absolutely is. A little boy whose gender identity, thus far, seems to be female. Sexual orientation, gender identity and gender are spectrum... there isn't simply male and female, as you so claim.
@Mary if you believe that god made people then god made this child the way she is.
@slumlord420Â yes this is a little boy
@Mary You take it for granted that everyone shares your belief, that is not the case. Not everyone is of the same thinking in following a belief of what has created our internal moral compass - i.e. not everyone is of the christian faith so this narrow minded approach will only cause friction and is disrespectful to others and their beliefs - I think JC would agree.
Wow reading through this thread - Men seem to be very threaten by this - interesting very interesting.
@colorowdy Do you have a theory for that?
@slumlord420 @colorowdy nope just an observation - @Mary seems to have a bigger problem with facts and fitting them into the doctrine she has adopted for her belief system - head in the sand type
So why are there "Family" restrooms in Malls, Airports, City buildings where everyone can go in together?Â
With the evolution of our society becoming more accepting of trans gender and the gay community - everything will have to evolve with that.
This child's gender identity is not out of the norm, it happens more than most know. - obviously the child's brain has made up it's mind - no pun intended.Â
There are many parents that raise their children non gender - without the influence of either gender and let the child develop into what comes natural. What is wrong with that? nothing nothing at all.Â
Those that are getting their undies in a wad over this have no tolerance for what they consider as normal nor do they have the acceptance needed to embrace a human being for what they are - naturally.
What ever happens with this child, its going to be really hard growing up. And the family are going to be dealing with bullies in school, and adult bullies in the community, (or as I prefer to call anyone who would purposefully hurt someone because they don't understand something or don't like something.Cowards) for the rest of their lives, just because this child is different than most.Â
The "true colors of people in and around the community" will surface, and most of the time it won't be pretty. I don't envy these parents one bit!
When I was 6 years old, I wanted a gun, and to be an "Army Man" so I could go and kill all the "Bad Guys". Â My parents did not give me one. Â
@Phil I notice that you didn't say you wanted a dress so you could be a "stay-at-home mommy."
@Phil It is very interesting you equate a gun to your genitals - are you showing your true colors?Â
At the most basic level, DNA...the child is ultimately a boy. Those parents are distorting reality for reasons that are not being told as yet. Feel bad for the boy...look closely at the parents.
@flor3nc3 DNA matters little to gender identity, sexual orientation... and it can even differ from physical gender. What of the XX males or XY females?
I've heard it before, but I'm of the mindset that it's junk science.
@flor3nc3Â Someone possessing XX chromosomes and a penis is "junk science?"
@flor3nc3 I think you hit the nail right on the head, there is something happening here with the parents. Hope someone gets to the bottom of it before the child is destroyed.
Children do not know what sex they want to be until much older in life.Psychology teaches,that a child does not have the ability to reason until they reach the age of 12.Children are like "sponges" they soak up everything a parent says or does,in other words,learned behavior.I would place blame on the parents here for their inept enabling of their son.They keep saying that Americans are dumbing down,and each and every day we see these examples on every news media across the nation.
Enabling parentsthat that expect the rest of the world to be as enabling as they are. This kid is to young to be deciding something as big as this on his/her ownu under any circumstance. Shame on those parents for trying to force everyone else to enable him/her too. Maybe a private outhouse in the playground? How about homeschool?
The school district is not discriminating, they have made a reasonable accommodation. She is able to use a restroom, unlike the headline for this story implies. Just because someone is different doesn't entitle them to special treatment. The decision obviously was made with all students in mind and what would be the best solution. Other children aren't going to understand, using a different bathroom would probably prevent bullying.
Another bunch of B.S.
don't do that to children. Â The doctors are the large part of the problem.Â
"you were born that way"... no, not quite.Â
Unbelievable, totally unbelievable, and we wonder why young person suicides are on the rise. Parents of this child, get hold of yourself and get the child some help fast. You are responsible for this child's well being. No six year old has the maturity to decide any of this stuff. Unbelievable.
@souptonuts It's interesting that you mention suicide rates, because rates for teens who are homosexual or have a gender identity that differs from their physical gender are ridiculously high. Thanks in large part to not feeling accepted.Â
I PRAISE THESE PARENTS!!! THIS CHILD NEEDS TO FIND HER. I SAID HER PLACE. DO YOU REALLY THINK USING A GIRLS BATHROOM WITH STALLS IS ANYTHING MORE THAT FEELING OF BEING COMFY OR AT HOME. OR FINDING YOUR PLACE. KIDS THIS AGE DO NOT MAKE UP THESE FEELINGS. KEEPING THIS KID UNHAPPY WILL DO MORE DAMAGE TO HER THAN ANYTHING. IF ANY OF YOU WERE TO SEE HER IN THE STORE..WOULD YOU KNOW??? NO YOU WOULD SEE A HAPPY LITTLE GIRL, WHO IS OUR FUTURE.
how would a 6 year old just know about gender surgery?? unless HE was told such things, this is a little boy very young, and they don't know about things like that unless they are told, its all very frightening, as he becomes a teen, it will very much show anyway, I'm not sure encouraging this at such a young age is so healthy, most kids experiment, but to dress them up and send them to school is another thing, God help us
Sexual orientation, gender identity, and physical gender are all spectrums. It obviously makes plenty of people uncomfortable, but that's the reality of our species.
@PleaseBeSmart Not for six year olds, do you remember when you were six years old? What do you remember?
@souptonuts I remember plenty. I've always been perfectly comfortable with being female.Â
When you were six, how would you have felt being forced to go to school with bows in your hair and a pretty dress on?
"he wanted to get "fixed" by doctors."Â I am the Doctor and my boot is my scalpel.
@dkgiovenco It sounds like you are threatening to kick a six year old?
@slumlord420 wearing the hat of the doctor it is still in debate, further information is needed to determine if it is meant for the parent or the kid.
@slumlord420@dkgiovenco I GOT IT!!!! Dad is in the Marines and he said in his Marine voice " son you keep crying like a little girl when your brothers beat you up I am going to put a dress on you! and here we are.Â
Â
@dkgiovenco @slumlord420 you don't know which one to assault until you gather more info? What do you need to know before you get violent?