kentucky bans transgender educators
In Kentucky, a quiet bill could bar trans teachers over outdated diagnoses—what happens when licensure turns private identity into grounds for exclusion?

Although Kentucky lawmakers say Senate Bill 351 is about protecting students and parental rights, the proposal would deny or strip teaching licenses from educators based on outdated mental-health classifications—including “gender identity disorders”—by forcing applicants to swear they’ve never received certain diagnoses or treatment and empowering the state to investigate, order medical exams, and discipline them under DSM-III-R standards that modern psychiatry and current ADA practice no longer recognize.

SB 351 would police educators’ medical histories with obsolete psychiatric standards, turning licensure into state-enforced stigma masquerading as student protection.

Filed by Sen. Gex Williams before the deadline, SB 351 reaches beyond classroom conduct into teachers’ medical histories. It would block issuance or renewal of certification for anyone ever treated for conditions excluded from the ADA’s original 1990 text. That design creates serious privacy concerns because applicants would have to submit sworn denials about past diagnoses, while the Education Professional Standards Board could investigate complaints and compel examinations. In policy terms, that’s an unusually intrusive licensing regime.

The bill’s evidentiary foundation is weak. Critics note that DSM-III-R, published in 1987, no longer reflects current psychiatric standards, and later ADA practice doesn’t track those exclusions the same way. By tying professional eligibility to obsolete classifications, the state would invite legal challenge and administrative inconsistency. AFT-120 and the Kentucky Psychological Association argue the measure would deter educators from seeking care, a predictable public-health cost in a profession already strained by burnout and shortages.

Williams says a report involving a student, a teacher’s pronouns, and a family’s withdrawal from public school prompted the bill. But a single anecdote doesn’t justify broad professional discrimination across Kentucky’s educator workforce. Opponents argue the proposal targets LGBTQ+ staff, stigmatizes identity as illness, and diverts attention from better-supported priorities such as school funding, recruitment, retention, and student services. Evaluated as education policy, SB 351 looks less like safeguarding children than institutionalizing outdated medicine in licensure law.

Profile Author / Editor / Publisher

Dora Saparow
Dora Saparow
Dora Kay Saparow came out in a conservative Nebraskan town where she faced both misunderstanding and acceptance during her transition. Seeking specialized support, she moved to a big city, where she could access the medical, legal, and social resources necessary for her journey. Now, thirteen years later, Dora is fully transitioned, happily married, and well-integrated into society. Her story underscores the importance of time, resources, and community support, offering hope and encouragement to others pursuing their authentic selves.

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