Committee delays vote on Nebraska bill to define male, female in law for sports, bathrooms
Supporters of State Sen. Kathleen Kauth of Omaha's Stand With Women Act join a news conference. In front is State Sen. Rita Sanders of Bellevue, chair of the Government, Military and Veterans Affairs Committee. Jan. 10, 2025. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)
LINCOLN — A Nebraska legislative committee has delayed, for now, a final vote on whether to advance a proposal to define 'male' and 'female' in state law and restrict student-athlete participation by sex at birth.
The Government, Military and Veterans Affairs Committee elected to not yet vote on advancing Legislative Bill 89, the 'Stand With Women Act' from State Sen. Kathleen Kauth of Omaha, over questions from some committee members about whether a proposed amendment would require all students to get a notarized doctor's note of that student's sex to participate in single-sex sports.
State Sen. Rita Sanders of Bellevue, the committee chair, said 'more clarity would provide a better debate' after Omaha State Sens. John Cavanaugh, Dunixi Guereca and Megan Hunt asked whether a a doctor's 'attestation' would implicate the need for a notary.
Hunt said this would increase costs for some families. She asked her colleagues to consider if they lived in the land of the free and thought of all the people who died for the freedom to play sports who would need to find a notary to do so. Cavanaugh said the requirement should lead to a new public hearing.
State Sen. Dan Lonowski of Hastings responded that the committee needed to consider the freedom of other kids, which State Sen. Bob Andersen of north-central Sarpy County echoed.
State Sen. Dave Wordekmper of Fremont said he had talked with Kauth about the amendment because both desired a way to verify a child's sex for participation in single-sex sports. His thought, he said, was that a doctor could document a child's sex during a routine physical.
Kauth told the Nebraska Examiner after the committee's decision that she felt good the one word was the only hold up, which she described as an 'easy fix' to change the word 'attestation.'
'Knowing that it's a term of legal art, we'll pick a word that doesn't mean 'notarized,' and I appreciate them figuring that out,' Kauth said. 'What I'm talking about is a sports physical.'
Sanders said the committee will take a few days to consider possible tweaks to the bill and a path forward before reconsidering Kauth's bill.
Public schools and universities would need to designate all bathrooms and locker rooms for use by males, females or single-occupancy. Restrooms could also be designated for family use.
LB 89 initially sought similar designations for state agency bathrooms, which the amendment would remove. Instead agencies such as the Nebraska Department of Correctional Services and Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services would need to define a person's sex as male or female.
The bill mirrors executive orders from President Donald Trump earlier this year and Gov. Jim Pillen in 2023 that sought to define sex as binary, including for athletics, school bathrooms and state agencies.
The Nebraska School Activities Association, for most K-12 sports, and the National Collegiate Athletic Association have already announced that they would comply with the executive orders.
Kauth said the declaration of a student's sex is important in the case of the NCAA, which said it would determine a child's sex by birth certificate, which Kauth said can be changed in about 44 states, including Nebraska.
She added: 'If we're talking about keeping girls safe on the field and privacy, we need to make sure that we're actually doing that.'
Kauth's bill, with the proposed amendment, would define sex as male or female based on whether someone 'naturally has, had, will or would have, but for a congenital anomaly or intentional or unintentional disruption, the reproductive system that at some point produces, transports and utilizes' either eggs (female) or sperm (male) for fertilization.
Trump's Feb. 5 executive order pledges to pull federal funds from educational programs that fail to comply with his order.
From 2018 through February, eight students had applied to participate in Nebraska high school sports based on their gender identity under the NSAA's Gender Participation Policy. It offers a path for students to participate on sports teams different than the student's sex at birth and requires medical and physiological testing. The organization has declined to say how many students it approved under the policy.
In December, NCAA President Charlie Baker told a U.S. Senate panel that he was aware of fewer than 10 active transgender student-athletes out of the NCAA's 510,000 participants.
At least a couple of Nebraska school districts have already adopted separate local sports participation policies similar to Kauth's bill and the executive orders.
State Sen. Merv Riepe of Ralston, prior to seeing the latest amendment, told the Examiner this week that he was 'leaning' to not vote for Kauth's bill. He said he wants to protect women's sports but that the NSAA, NCAA and executive orders had already done so.
Legislation seeking to enshrine the executive orders into federal and state law have stalled.
In Congress, a bill passed the U.S. House but stalled in the Senate. Nebraska's congressional members supported the bills.
In Nebraska, Riepe and State Sen. Tom Brandt of Plymouth were the two Republicans to not vote in favor of Kauth's 'Sports and Spaces Act' in 2024 that was limited at the time to K-12 sports and bathrooms.
Kauth has praised the executive orders but has repeatedly said that executive orders can be reversed.
However, Riepe said in February that 'if Trump's executive order can stand for the four years of his term, then LB 89 can wait four years.'
Contentious bills require 33 votes to advance, and Republicans in the officially nonpartisan Legislature hold just enough seats. No Democrats supported Kauth's previous, narrower bill.
State Sen. Jane Raybould of Lincoln on Thursday withdrew a competing bill to Kauth's proposal, LB 605, that sought to largely put the NSAA's now-defunct Gender Participation Policy into law.
The bill had not yet received a public hearing, and Raybould's withdrawal motion passed 34-0.
Kauth has designated LB 89 as her 2025 priority, the first senator to do so, which increases the likelihood that her bill will be debated this year. Speaker John Arch of La Vista sets the daily agenda.
Sanders told reporters that Kauth has indicated she is 'very close' to getting 33 votes.
Asked how she would vote, Sanders told reporters: 'I'm not real sure until we have some more clarity on the bill, because how do you debate a bill when you're not sure what exactly we're debating, right? So let's clean up some language so we have a more focused bill for floor debate.'
SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
24 minutes ago
- News24
Siyahleba: McKenzie fears illness JZ will always be JZee MKP chaos saved KZN
Tebogo Letsie McKenzie fears illness from economy class flights Our Sport, Arts and Culture Minister, Gayton McKenzie, forgets that he is working for government and the people and not for himself. This week, he threw a fit, complaining that being on too many economy class flights would make him sick. He even disclosed that he was not the type to use Uber as transport, but that government requirements were forcing him to downgrade to that level! Poor Gayton. He was replying to a question about his spending on travel since he became a minister a year ago, which amounts to R4.8 million. The loquacious McKenzie said: Official trips are not holidays or joyrides. I am personally no stranger to international travel as a successful businessman. I was well travelled long before I became a minister. To expect ministers to [take long flights in economy class] in relentless working conditions would simply be impractical and even sadistic. Ag shame! JZ will always be JZee Umkhonto weSizwe Party (MKP) members were left surprised when they saw pictures of their Jacob Zuma frolicking and playing with former Mpumalanga MKP convener, Mary Phadi, who was allegedly suspended from the party's activities. Phadi has been running parallel structures in Mpumalanga when the party officially endorsed Busisiwe Mkhwebane to lead the province. Members have been expecting the party to take a hard line against her. But, lo and behold, she is being entertained in Nkandla by a smiling Zuma. But anyone who knows Zuma, who had five wives at some point, will know that he was always going to fold in front of the rather pretty Phadi! Gallo Images / Darren Stewart MKP chaos saved KZN Talking of the MKP, the party pulled another shocker – Floyd Shivambu was booted out as secretary-general and moved to Parliament, all thanks to his Easter visit to Shepherd Bushiri's church in Malawi. Word is that the holy trip didn't sit well with the MKP's top brass. The party scored a hefty 45% of the vote in KwaZulu-Natal, just a few seats short of taking full control of the province, only needing 5% plus one to govern outright. With reshuffles happening more often than load shedding in the party, it's clear that if negotiations hadn't dragged on and they had taken control of KwaZulu-Natal, we would probably be on premier number six by now. Prayers might still be needed. HOT Our wheelchair tennis star Kgothatso Montjane and her Japanese team-mate Yui Kamiji displayed an incredible come-from-behind 4-6 7-5 (10-7) victory to seal the 2025 Wheelchair Tennis Doubles title at the French Open in Paris on Friday – their second title win in the French capital. The pair have made reaching finals a habit, having participated in the last four finals and taken their first title in 2023. The duo also won the US Open title together in 2023, as well as the Wimbledon crown last year. Despite falling short in the semifinals of the singles competition, Montjane can be proud of the fact that she's bringing home another title. NOT Power is a drug. And, like most drugs, it is addictive and dangerous to both the user and those close to them. Higher Education Minister Nobuhle Nkabane clearly does not understand this. In recent months, she has found herself at the receiving end of criticism for behaviour that is unbecoming of a person in her position. Like a person typically drunk on power, she has been dismissive of criticism. The latest incident relates to a viral video showing her chewing gum while taking questions in a portfolio committee meeting in Parliament. In addition to chewing gum like a typical tart at a brothel, she was rude and dismissive of a question that had been asked. Even after social media denizens attacked her for her behaviour, she refused to apologise. It was only after President Cyril Ramaphosa requested a report from her regarding her lack of decorum that she released a statement clarifying her behaviour. The 'apology' is insincere and comes from a dishonest heart. Bad behaviour by our MPs is becoming endemic. The president must deal with Nkabane sternly, to send a message to the rest that rudeness and Trumpish antics shall not be tolerated.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Musk's efficiency model fails, Israel needs excellence
In a nation known worldwide for innovation, shouldn't our governmental systems reflect the same ingenuity that powers our most successful sectors? Imagine two government offices side by side. In the first, budget cuts eliminate 30% of the staff, forcing the remaining workers to process paperwork faster, yet citizens still wait hours, frustrated and unserved. In the second, a complete digital redesign allows most services to be completed online in minutes, with personalized guidance available for complex cases. Both claim 'efficiency,' but only the second delivers excellence. When Elon Musk took charge of US President Donald Trump's Department of Government Efficiency, he promised a revolution in government operations. Within weeks, over 200,000 federal employees were dismissed. 'We are moving fast,' Musk admitted, 'but we'll also fix mistakes quickly.' This bulldozer model captured global attention, including in Israel, where bureaucracy has long been a national punchline. The temptation to import this model is understandable. Yet what Israel needs is not America's DOGE but rather to reimagine the concept entirely, where the 'E' evolves from mere 'Efficiency' to true 'Excellence.' This distinction isn't semantic wordplay. Efficiency asks, 'How can we do the same with less?' Excellence asks, 'How can we create more value for citizens?' The first measure reduced inputs; the second focused on improved outcomes. Excellence often costs less in the long run by eliminating the hidden expenses of poor service: repeated visits, economic opportunities lost to delays, and the massive collective waste of citizens' time. As Israelis, we maintain a consistent expectation that our government should deliver quality services year after year. This social contract is fundamental to our society. We're willing to contribute through taxes and military service, but we expect competent governance in return. The excellence approach recognizes that well-functioning public institutions form the foundation of this mutual commitment and our national resilience. The irony is that Israel, the Start-up Nation, lags dramatically behind in government innovation. The same country that pioneers cutting-edge technologies in cybersecurity, agriculture, and healthcare still processes many government services using methods from the previous century. What the American DOGE does get right is creating a national conversation about government performance. Before DOGE, government reform was largely a technical discussion among experts. Now, it's front-page news. This visibility creates accountability and builds the political will necessary for meaningful change – precisely what Israel's public sector reforms have lacked. Excellence doesn't mean abandoning necessary protections; strong regulatory frameworks safeguard public health, safety, and essential services. The goal isn't to eliminate these safeguards but to redesign them intelligently. Consider business licensing: smart reform maintains high standards while eliminating redundant approvals and creating clear, predictable paths for entrepreneurs. What would an excellence-focused approach look like in practice? The solutions are largely known, and numerous committee reports have outlined necessary reforms for Israel's public service. What's missing isn't ideas but rather the sustained political commitment and public support to implement them. Three key initiatives must take priority. First, government services must be fundamentally redesigned with citizens at the center of the process. This goes beyond mere digitization to rethinking how services are structured and delivered. Estonia offers an instructive example. They've built an integrated digital government platform where services are designed around life events and user needs, not agency structures. Their transformation saves an estimated 2% of GDP annually while dramatically improving citizen satisfaction. The key insight isn't just technology; it's the citizen-centric redesign of the entire service experience. Second, excellence demands investing strategically in our public servants. This means creating diverse entry pathways to attract top talent, ensuring competitive compensation for key positions, and establishing cultures of innovation where continuous improvement is rewarded. Third, we need structured collaboration across sectors. Government doesn't have to solve every problem alone; it can leverage expertise from private industry, civil society, and academia. This multi-sectoral approach enables faster adaptation to evolving challenges while ensuring public services remain relevant and effective. The blueprints for transformation already exist in Israel. What's needed now is the determination to implement them, not through indiscriminate cuts but through thoughtful redesign backed by a genuine political commitment to better service. The citizens of Israel deserve a civil service that matches the excellence they demonstrate in their own fields. In a nation known worldwide for innovation, shouldn't our governmental systems reflect the same ingenuity that powers our most successful sectors? The question isn't whether we can afford such a transformation but whether we can afford to continue without it. The writer is the executive director of Tashtit, which works to promote professional and effective public service in Israel. He is also a member of the leadership team at Eco Memshal, a multi-sectoral space for organizations working to strengthen the public service in Israel.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
DOGE Staffers Fear Getting DOGE'd Themselves
WASHINGTON—In the aftermath of President Trump's epic falling out with Elon Musk, staffers within the Department of Government Efficiency face an ironic position after spending months paring back jobs and spending: They now fear being DOGE'd. The White House is publicly standing behind its work with DOGE. The future of DOGE, Trump and Musk's joint project to reshape the federal government, is one of the major looming questions in the aftermath of this past week's high-profile rupture between the U.S. president and the world's richest man, whose falling out was prompted by disagreements over the president's tax-and-spending package.