The U.S. Education Department has ruled that Denver Public Schools violated Title IX protections against sex-based discrimination after the district introduced all-gender bathrooms and allowed students to use facilities matching their gender identity.
The decision follows a federal investigation into Denver’s East High School, marking one of the most high-profile cases in a nationwide shift under President Donald Trump’s administration. The move underscores the administration’s pushback against local and state policies designed to accommodate transgender students, signaling a sharp reversal from the approach taken under former President Joe Biden.
The probe was triggered earlier this year when East High converted a girls’ restroom into an all-gender facility, while leaving a boys’ restroom on the same floor unchanged. The district said the change was the result of a student-led initiative and emphasized that the bathroom was equipped with 12-foot partitions for privacy and security.
To address fairness concerns, Denver Public Schools later introduced a second all-gender restroom on the same floor, assuring parents and students that gender-specific restrooms and single-stall gender-neutral bathrooms would remain available.
But federal officials were not satisfied. The Education Department has now ordered the district to reverse course within 10 days or face enforcement action. That includes converting multi-stall all-gender bathrooms back into gender-specific facilities and rewriting policies to adopt biology-based definitions of “male” and “female” in all Title IX-related matters.
“Denver is free to endorse a self-defeating gender ideology, but it is not free to accept federal taxpayer funds and harm its students in violation of Title IX,” said Craig Trainor, acting assistant secretary of the Office for Civil Rights.
In response, Denver Public Schools acknowledged receipt of the findings and said officials are “determining our next steps.”
The Denver ruling comes amid a broader national clash over transgender rights in education. According to nonprofit newsroom The Hechinger Report, the Trump administration has launched nearly two dozen investigations into school policies involving transgender students. About half of these probes focus specifically on bathroom access in K-12 schools across Virginia, Kansas, Washington, and Colorado.
Earlier this year, Trump signed an executive order banning transgender girls from competing on sports teams consistent with their gender identity, a move supporters called necessary to “restore fairness” but critics condemned as discriminatory.
In June, federal officials determined that California’s Department of Education violated civil rights laws by allowing transgender girls to compete in girls’ sports. The administration has also filed lawsuits against Maine and launched an investigation in Oregon over similar issues.
This latest Denver case highlights how bathroom access, school sports, and gender identity remain flashpoints in America’s ongoing debate over civil rights, education policy, and federal funding.