Iowa's new law erases nonbinary students |
Iowa's recent legislation mandates that schools report student demographic data strictly as male or female, resulting in the erasure of nonbinary students from official counts. Previously, over three hundred nonbinary students were recognized, but the latest data shows none. Landen Hoadley, a Mason City High School sophomore, expressed the emotional impact of this change, commenting: "It hits hard because knowing that other people are going through the same stuff that I'm going through, it hurts." The law, Senate File 418, removed gender identity as a protected class, compelling schools to categorize students solely by biological sex. Advocates argue that this legislation undermines the visibility and rights of LGBTQ+ students, with Zach Rus, executive director of Iowa Safe Schools, noting that "data collection, a critical tool for policymakers, has been effectively nullified for this population." The implications of this law extend beyond data collection, affecting the overall support and recognition of nonbinary students in Iowa's educational landscape.