LPGA to change policy on ‘female at birth’
by Steve DiMeglio on Nov. 30, 2010, under USA Today Sports
Players on the LPGA tour will no longer have to be female at birth.
At a year-end meeting Tuesday before this week’s LPGA Tour Championship in Orlando, players voted to change the association’s constitution and allow transgender women a chance to compete on the tour.
“The players voted in favor of amending the LPGA Constitution, eliminating the requirement that competitors must be ‘female at birth,’ ” LPGA Commissioner Michael Whan said in a statement. “Steps will be taken in the coming weeks to make the appropriate changes in the language of the Constitution.”
The change is in response to a lawsuit filed by Lana Lawless on Oct. 12 in U.S. District Court in San Francisco. Lawless, a 57-year-old retired police officer who had gender-reassignment surgery five years ago, alleges in her suit that her civil rights were violated when the LPGA rejected her application for tour membership.
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