Politics & Government
Father-Daughter Dance Bill Moves On
The Senate bill would allow Rhode Island school districts to have gender-exclusive events as long as similar events are offered to the opposite gender.

A Senate Committee has approved a bill that will allow school districts to have father-daughter dances and other gender-exclusive events as long as a comparable event for the opposite gender is offered.
The bill now heads to the Senate floor.
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The bill, 2013-S 0012, was submitted by Cranston Sen. Hannah Gallo with several co-sponsors, including Sen. Daniel Da Ponte (D-East Providence). It would alter state gender-discrimination laws, which Cranston school lawyers have said traditional father-daughter dances violate.
A complaint from the mother of a Cranston girl triggered the review. It prompted Cranston Superintendent Judith Lundsten to cancel the district's dance.
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“I understand that the superintendent was acting out of an abundance of caution when he announced the cancellation of the dances,” Gallo said. “I also understand the reaction of the parents of school children in the face of having a wonderful school tradition so abruptly cancelled.”
“Events such as these dances are important traditions and we should be able to ensure that they can continue to be held without schools or school administrators running afoul of the law,” Gallo continued. “I don’t believe the intent of these events was ever to be overtly discriminatory, but we all have to live with the language of the law. This bill, if approved and enacted, should ensure that these events can continue without weakening our resolve to oppose discriminatory activities.”
The Gallo legislation proposes to add language to existing state law (R.I.G.L. 16-38-1.1) regarding “discrimination because of sex” as it pertains to schools. The proposed new language will allow schools to “provide activities for students of one sex, including, but not limited to, father-daughter/mother-son activities, but if such activities are provided for students of one sex, opportunities for reasonably comparable activities shall be provided for students of the other sex.”
Gallo said the reaction from the community, and elsewhere, that arose following the announcement of the dance cancellation “clearly shows how important these traditions are. This language will allow those traditions to continue without fear of violating the law.”
Earlier in the school year, parents were notified that father-daughter and mother-son activities will no longer be held in Cranston Public Schools because school lawyers concluded the traditions violate state gender discrimination laws.
The action was triggered by a letter from the American Civil Liberties Union, said Lundsten. The letter was written on behalf of a mother who said her daughter was unable to go to the father-daughter dance.
Federal laws under Title IX allow father-son and mother-daughter events but state law is more restrictive, Lundsten said.
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