" Dear Mr. Speaker and Members of the House of Representatives,
I respectfully return to you House Bill 1008, with my VETO.
House Bill 1008 does not address any pressing issue concerning the
school districts of South Dakota. As policymakers in South Dakota, we
often recite that the best government is the government closest to the
people. Local school districts can, and have, made necessary restroom
and locker room accommodations that serve the best interests of all
students, regardless of biological sex or gender identity.
This bill seeks to impose statewide standards on “every restroom,
locker room, and shower room located in a public elementary or secondary
school.” It removes the ability of local school districts to determine
the most appropriate accommodations for their individual students and
replaces that flexibility with a state mandate.
If and when these rare situations arise, I believe local school
officials are best positioned to address them. Instead of encouraging
local solutions, this bill broadly regulates in a manner that invites
conflict and litigation, diverting energy and resources from the
education of the children of this state.
Preserving local control is particularly important because this bill
would place every school district in the difficult position of following
state law while knowing it openly invites federal litigation. Although
there have been promises by an outside entity to provide legal defense
to a school district, this provision is not memorialized in the bill.
Nor would such defense eliminate the need for school or state legal
counsel, nor avoid expenses relating to expert witnesses, depositions
and travel, or other defense costs. Nor does the commitment extend to
coverage over settlement or damage expenses. This law will create a
certain liability for school districts and the state in an area where no
such liability exists today.
For these reasons, I oppose this bill and ask that you sustain my veto. "
South Dakota Governor Dennis Daugaard vetoed HB 1008 - an act to restrict access by transgender students to certain restrooms and locker rooms in public schools - March 1, 2016.
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