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  • LPGA and wymyn born wymyn

    Posted by Anonymous on 01/12/2010 at 10:19 pm

    http://abc.com.au/news/stories/2010/12/02/3082244.htm

    I had thought this had already been addressed, but I realise it was only in Australian women’s golf.

    Nar! Silly that supposedly mature adults want to spent all day hitting a little ball with a stick

    Quote:
    by Amanda:
    LPGA to end ‘female at birth’ requirement

    A requirement for players to be “female at birth” will be removed from the LPGA Tour constitution, commissioner Michael Whan said.

    Whan said players voted on Tuesday night to make the change, which will be finalised in the coming weeks and would open the door to transgender players starting with the 2011 campaign.

    The move came in the wake of a federal lawsuit filed last October in San Francisco by Lana Lawless, a 57-year-old American who underwent a sex change operation five years ago to become a woman.

    Lawless claimed the “female at birth” requirement violated California’s civil rights laws and was seeking a ban on LPGA events in the state until the tour changed the policy.

    The LPGA’s first major championship every season, the $2 million Kraft Nabisco Championship, is staged in California.

    Anonymous replied 14 years, 2 months ago 0 Member · 2 Replies
  • 2 Replies
  • Anonymous

    Guest
    01/12/2010 at 10:49 pm

    irrespective of the merits of any sporting activity, my view is that all sporting codes should have the same entry requirements and protocols. the lpga has finally caught up with what has been the standard for the international olympic committee since 2003 (yes, three years after sydney). The 2003 protocol effectively meant that those athletes who have had srs, had been officially recognised as that gender by the home country authorities, and had completed “sufficient period of hormone therapy” could compete in their identified gender. why would any sporting code think that the medical research carried out by the ioc be insufficinet for their particular code? some things take time, but generally, i think there is progress being made. of course the ioc protocol does not address “non-op” transgender athletes (yet).

    reference: http://multimedia.olympic.org/pdf/en_report_905.pdf

  • Anonymous

    Guest
    02/12/2010 at 12:29 am

    more – from associated press via espn – looks like it’s fairly much a non-issue with most – it’s just not been addressed (through necessity). only have to address the longest drive competition:

    http://sports.espn.go.com/golf/news/story?id=5869693&campaign=rss&source=ESPNHeadlines

    Quote:
    LPGA scraps ‘female at birth’ policy

    Associated Press

    ORLANDO, Fla. — LPGA players have voted to allow transgender players to compete on tour in response to a lawsuit filed by a California woman who had her sex changed five years ago.

    The players voted to remove the “female at birth” requirement from the tour’s constitution at a year-end meeting at the LPGA Tour Championship, commissioner Michael Whan said. He said steps will be taken in the coming weeks to make the change.

    Lana Lawless, a former police officer who had the sex change operation, filed the federal lawsuit in San Francisco in October claiming the “female at birth” requirement violated California’s civil rights law. The 57-year-old Lawless wanted to prevent the LPGA from conducting tournaments in the state until it changed its policy and was seeking unspecified damages.

    Lawless also sued three tour sponsors and the Long Drivers of America, which followed the LPGA policy. Lawless won the annual women’s long-drive golf championship in 2008 with a 254-yard drive, but was barred from competing this year after organizers adopted the LPGA’s gender rules.

    “I think it is a major civil rights victory,” Christopher Dolan, an attorney for Lawless, told The Associated Press in a phone interview Wednesday. “We are pleased that the LPGA has voted to end this archaic and outdated policy.”

    Dolan cautioned that the final changes are not expected for a couple weeks. But he was optimistic the LPGA’s amended policy would allow complete access for transgenders.

    “You can vote to end nuclear proliferation, but if you’re still pointing the weapons, all you have is a vote,” Dolan said.

    He added there were no immediate plans to drop the lawsuit, especially with Long Drivers of America offering no immediate changes to the policy, but that the lawsuit could be amended before a January hearing.

    Players competing this week in Orlando were mostly satisfied with the change.

    “We don’t need to comment on this because it’s a dead issue,” Cristie Kerr said. “She can compete if she can qualify. We certainly don’t want to discriminate against anybody, that’s not what the LPGA is about. And if she can qualify, she’ll be able to play. We’re like, the last sports organization to do it, it’s just we’ve never really had to look at it before.

    Others who were asked about the vote said they didn’t think a transgender player would be an issue should one qualify to play on tour.

    “There’s really nothing to say,” Suzann Pettersen said. “When an organization like the [International Olympic Committee] decides to accept those changes, there’s no reason for the LPGA not to. So for my point of view, it was the natural way to go.”

    Copyright 2010 by The Associated Press