Transgender Texas Teen Wants to Run for Prom Queen

Kilian Melloy READ TIME: 4 MIN.

A Texas school won't allow a student to run for homecoming queen--because she is transgendered.

Andy Moreno, a student at North Dallas High School, dresses and identifies as a girl, but the school sees her as a male student and refuses to allow her to make a bid for the crown as a competitor for the title of homecoming queen, reported local Fox affiliate KDFW on Oct. 6. The student said the problem is not the other students at the school, but rather the adults.

"I don't have anyone [among the students] that doesn't want me to run, the only people that have a problem with it is the administration," Andy told the news channel. "I was told by one of the counselors that I should prepare myself because a lot of the administration has a problem with me running."

Moreno said that the principal told her to run for homecoming king instead, but "I don't feel comfortable with [that] because I identify myself as a woman and not as a male, and a king is a male."

Just as Moreno described, the students are supportive. "I don't think it is fair because there is no rule in the book that says a male cannot do anything like that," student Ignacio Ortega said.

The Dallas Independent School District noted that the issue is left to the principal's discretion, in absence of a district policy. "The district fully supports the decision of the principal at North Dallas High School," a statement from the DISD read. "It should be noted that the Dallas Independent School District is proud to have one of the most aggressive anti-harassment policies among school districts in the state of Texas."

The case is similar to one in Muskegon, Michigan, where a number of seniors voted for Oak Marshall as their homecoming king--but administrators refused to allow Oak, a young transman, to compete for the title.

Like all transgendered individuals, Oak--the name is short for "Oakleigh"-- doesn't see himself as belonging to the gender of his body. His mind and personality--his sense of himself--are male, and he's generally accepted as such by his teachers, who call him by masculine pronouns, reported Grand Rapids news channel WOOD-8 on Sept. 26.

But that acceptance of Oak's gender identity did not extend to his run for Homecoming King. Oak mounted a campaign for the title that the administration of Mona Shores High School quickly shut down.

"I just said, 'Vote for me for homecoming king,' " Oak said of his Facebook-based campaign. "I don't see why there's any reasons why someone who's different shouldn't be on court. I thought, 'Hey, why not put myself out there? I have just as much qualifications as anyone else in the school.' "

Oak is secure in his gender identity, after being in counseling for years. The 17-year-old plans to make the physical transition to male when he's 18. What seems odd is that the school--which has already agreed to allow him to wear male clothing for certain school functions--now refuses to honor Oak's gender identity. "They let me wear a male tux for band uniform, and they're going to let me wear the male robe and cap for graduation," Oak told WOOD-8. As for the Homecoming vote, ""It's the senior class that votes for their representative," Oak noted. "What they did was taking away the voice of the senior class."

But Assistant Superintendent Todd Geerlings told the news channel that Oak is listed as female with the school, meaning that he is ineligible to run for the title of Homecoming King. A visit to the school's principal brought an end to Oak's run for the title. "They told me that they took me off because they had to invalidate all of my votes because I'm enrolled at Mona Shores as a female," he told the news channel.

The ACLU has expressed interest in the case, reported a Sept. 27 follow-up story at WOOD-8, and the teen said that he would be open to the idea. "I'd be willing to talk to them," Oak told the news channel.

The case "raises some concern about how the school has chosen to treat people based on gender," said lawyer Jay Kaplan, who is with the organization's Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender Legal Project. "Hopefully, they'll reconsider the action that they've taken," Kaplan said of the school.

But the school's principal, Jennifer Bustard, reaffirmed the school's stance. "In order to be eligible for homecoming king, the ballot clearly states you must be a boy," Bustard told WOOD-8. "For homecoming queen, you must be a girl." Added Bustard, "He--as I use the pronoun correctly out of respect--is not a boy."

A Facebook page supporting Oak says that the teenager received a majority of votes for Homecoming King, but Bustard denied this, saying that votes for Oak were not counted once the administration realized who was running. Text at the page also says that in disqualifying Oak, the school "promoted transphobia."

Bustard sees the issue differently. "The school must be consistent when it comes to gender," she told WOOD-8.

Allowing a gay or transgendered student to run for school event royalty would not be without precedent. Earlier this year, two boys at a high school in Hudson, New York, ran jointly for the titles of Prom King and Queen, and won.

The ACLU was involved in the case of Constance McMillen, the lesbian high school student who sued her school earlier this year for refusing to allow her to wear a tuxedo and escort a female date to her school's prom in rural Mississippi. The school canceled the prom rather than allow McMillen to bring another girl as a date to the event; a private prom was then hosted, but McMillen and a handful of other classmates did not attend. They ended up at another, poorly attended, dance at a different location. The school denied accusations that McMillen and the others had been shunted to a "sham prom."


by Kilian Melloy , EDGE Staff Reporter

Kilian Melloy serves as EDGE Media Network's Associate Arts Editor and Staff Contributor. His professional memberships include the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the Boston Online Film Critics Association, The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association, and the Boston Theater Critics Association's Elliot Norton Awards Committee.

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