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Ky. Education Commissioner Says ‘Dangerous’ Anti-LGBTQ Law Led to His Resignation

By Valarie Honeycutt Spears, Lexington Herald-Leader — August 02, 2023 2 min read
People gather for a rally organized by LGBTQ youth and adults in opposition to Senate Bill 150 and also to celebrate Trans Day of Visibility in Lexington, Ky., Friday, March 31, 2022.
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Kentucky’s top education leader said he’s leaving his job, and the state, because he didn’t want to enforce the new “dangerous and unconstitutional” Senate Bill 150 that critics have called an anti-LGBTQ measure.

“It is time for me to move on,” Education Commissioner Jason Glass told reporters Tuesday.

Glass announced Monday that he was and would leave his job September 29 to become an associate vice-president at Western Michigan University.

Although the Kentucky Department of Education had taken politically motivated criticism lately, Glass said the agency had remained independent and stood for the best interests of students and the education system.

GOP lawmakers and politicians have urged his ouster this year over KDE’s inclusive LGBTQ stances.

The strife with lawmakers in the 2023 General Assembly when Glass stood by a previous statement that teachers who would not follow a district’s policy to use a student’s preferred pronoun might want to find another place to work. He told a committee that politicians were the one introducing politics into schools, not his office.

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Protesters cheer outside Senate chambers at the Indiana Statehouse on March 22, 2023, in Indianapolis. Indiana schools may soon be required to notify parents if their child requests a name or pronoun change at school, after state Senators on April 10, 2023, advanced a bill that some worry could out transgender kids to their parents.
Protesters cheer at the Indiana Statehouse on March 22, 2023, in Indianapolis. Indiana schools may soon be required to notify parents if their child requests a name or pronoun change at school, after state lawmakers advanced a bill that some advocates worry could out transgender kids to their parents.
Arleigh Rodgers/AP

Glass said Tuesday he knew his job could get political. He said it was becoming a common exit story for education chiefs around the country, including the last few in Kentucky.

He said he was “wide-eyed” knowing that “this sort of thing was a possibility,” referring to political rancor.

Glass was appointed commissioner in 2020 by the state. He said another factor in his leaving was the new law requiring the state Senate to confirm future Commissioners of Education.

He said the vitriol stems from the current gubernatorial campaign.

Glass praised Gov. Andy Beshear, a Democratic gubernatorial candidate against Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron, as a decent human being. But Glass said he had been an independent education commissioner. Cameron had criticized Glass.

Glass said hyper-partisan politics have been increasingly injected into education policy decisions.

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Illustration of tug of war.
Illustration by Laura Baker/Education Week, SvetaZi, and iStock/Getty

Senate Bill 150 banned puberty blockers, hormones and surgeries for kids under 18, bans lessons on gender identity and sexual orientation, prevents transgender students from using the bathroom that corresponds with their gender identity, and stops school districts from requiring teachers to use a students pronouns if they don’t align with their sex assigned at birth.

Glass said he was concerned about the future of education given the partisan divide.

He said it is resulting in educator turnover.

Policy makers are making it hard, Glass said. “It’s starting to show.”

Copyright (c) 2023, . Distributed by Tribune Content Agency.

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