n December 2016, The National Women’s Hockey League (NWHL) released a new Policy on Participation of Transgender Athletes. The new policy was created through “a joint effort between the NWHL and You Can Play” along with “additional counsel from policy and law advisors from the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR)” and outlines the guidelines and process for determining eligibility for “athletes choosing to express their gender beyond the binary of female and male.”
Read the entire policy below:
National Women’s Hockey League Policy on Participation of Transgender Athletes
December, 2016
The National Women’s Hockey League (NWHL) is committed to
creating safe and inclusive spaces while maintaining competitive equity
in women’s professional hockey.
Guiding Principles
The NWHL will use the following principles to determine eligibility for tryouts and play in accordance with this policy:
a) This policy exists to reassure transgender athletes of
the protections and support they have, both within law and within the
NWHL policies and protocols.
b) The implementation and administration of this policy
will consider a fair and equitable level of monitoring that is
respectful, inclusive, and respects a person’s human rights.edical and expert information.
Purpose
The NWHL recognizes all forms of gender expression.
Therefore, the NWHL supports athletes choosing to express their gender
beyond the binary of female and male. The NWHL will use the eligibility
guidelines set out in this policy in order to ensure a fair and level
playing field for all participants.
Eligibility Guidelines
Considering the most up-to-date medical and expert
information available at the time of the implementation of this policy,
participation is open to:
1. People designated female at birth, regardless of their gender identity.
1.1 The athlete may not take testosterone hormone
therapy. Athletes transitioning to male who undergo hormone therapy will
be ineligible to compete.
2. Those who transition from male to female are eligible to compete under the following conditions:
2.1. The athlete has declared that her gender identity is
female. The declaration cannot be changed, for sporting purposes, for a
minimum of four years.
2.2. The athlete must demonstrate that her total testosterone level in serum is within typical limits of women athletes.
2.3. The athlete’s total testosterone level in serum must
remain in the typical range of women athletes throughout the period of
desired eligibility to compete in the female category.
2.4. Compliance with these conditions may be monitored by
testing. In the event of non-compliance, the athlete’s eligibility in
the league will be suspended for 12 months.
Process
An athlete may initiate the process by contacting the
NWHL prior to try-outs outlining their wish to participate in accordance
to the NWHL’s Transgender Athlete policy. The NWHL may, with a credible
basis for believing that the athlete is asserting a transgender
identity for an improper purpose, ask for additional information before
moving forward with registration. Upon review of information and if it
is deemed sufficient, the athlete will immediately be eligible to try
out or compete if offered a position, and will continue to do so unless
circumstances dictate that another gender declaration should be made.
Athletes currently participating in the NWHL who wish to
make changes to their gender identity, name, pronoun, or other markers
within the league should contact the NWHL to assist in making these
changes on official publications and listings.
Confidentiality
All of the information and documents related to the
eligibility of a transgender athlete will be treated as highly
confidential. The Parties agree that they will not at any time disclose
that information or documents (other than in the ordinary and usual
course of implementing this policy) without the prior written consent of
the disclosing party, unless required by law.
Definitions:
a) Gender identity is
each person’s sense of belonging to a particular gender, such as woman,
man, both, neither, or anywhere along the gender spectrum. Current
science recognizes that gender identity is innate or fixed at a young
age and strongly indicates that gender identity has a biological basis. A
person’s gender identity may be the same as or different from their
birth-assigned sex. When a person’s gender identity is different from
that person’s birth-assigned sex, gender identity is determinative of
that person’s sex.
b) Gender expression is
how a person publicly presents their gender. This can include behavior
and outward appearance such as dress, hair, make-up, body language and
voice. A person’s chosen name and pronoun are also common ways of
expressing gender.
c) Trans or transgender is
a term that refers to a person whose gender identity, or affirmed sex,
that is different from the sex they were assigned or assumed to be at
birth.
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