A federal appeals court on Tuesday ruled that the Mid Vermont Christian School must be allowed to participate in state athletics, two years after being banned for forfeiting against a team with a transgender player. The court returned the case to district court for further proceedings.
The ruling comes after several years of litigation by the pre-K-12 private Christian school in Quechee. The Vermont Principalsโ Association barred the school from participating in state athletics after the school forfeited a girlsโ playoff basketball game in February 2023 to avoid playing the Long Trail School, which had a transgender player on the team.

School officials at the time said they were concerned that playing against โa biological male jeopardizes the fairness of the game and the safety of the players,โ and its head of school, Vicky Fogg, told Valley News that allowing โbiological males to participate in womenโs sports sets a bad precedent for the future of womenโs sports in general.โ
The Vermont Principalsโ Association governs rules around school sports in Vermont, and said at the time that Mid Vermont Christian violated its anti-discrimination and gender identity policies.
The school, along with several parents and students, sued in federal court in 2023, seeking reinstatement of the schoolโs membership to the Vermont Principalsโ Association.
According to Tuesdayโs court ruling, Mid Vermont Christian School argued that โforcing girls to compete against the biological males would affirm that those males are females,โ in violation of their religious beliefs.
U.S. District Court Judge Geoffrey Crawford in June 2024 denied the schoolโs request to be readmitted to the principalsโ association.
But on Tuesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed that decision and agreed with the schoolโs claims, writing that they were โlikely to succeedโ in showing that the associationโs exclusion of the school โwas not neutral because it displayed hostility toward the schoolโs religious beliefs.โ
Judge Michael H. Park, writing for the court, wrote that the principalsโ association โpublicly castigated Mid Vermont โ and religious schools generally โ while the VPA rushed to judgment on whether and how to discipline the school.โ Park said that the punishment they imposed on the school โwas unprecedented, overbroad, and procedurally irregular.โ
The court sent the case back to the federal district court for further proceedings.
Jay Nichols said Tuesday the Vermont Principalsโ Association, its officers and employees โdo not harbor any hostility towards religious viewpoints,โ but declined to comment further, citing pending litigation.
A spokesperson for the stateโs Agency of Education declined to comment, also citing pending litigation.
The school was represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom, a preeminent conservative Christian legal group that has had a growing presence in Vermont education and politics.
The group, in a news release, called the ruling a โvictory for religious schools.โ
David Cortman, senior counsel and vice president of U.S. litigation for the group, said in the news release that the appeals court was โright to uphold constitutional protections by guaranteeing the school can fully participate while still adhering to its religious beliefs.โ
Chris Goodwin, the Mid Vermont Christian School girlsโ basketball coach, said in the news release that the school strives โto exemplify biblical truth in and through everything we do.โ
โWeโre grateful for our legal team at Alliance Defending Freedom who helped us get back in the game,โ he said.
Some advocacy organizations disagreed with the ruling. Amanda Rohdenburg, the senior director of advocacy and land stewardship at Outright Vermont, a statewide nonprofit advocacy group for LGBTQ+ people, called the court decision โyet another affront to Vermontโs core values, policies, and laws, which are clear on their commitments to anti-discrimination based on gender identity.โ
โAllowing private schools to violate these policies is not only a setback in the progress weโve made to support all youth, but it also fuels a dangerous collective delirium about kids simply trying to be themselves,โ she said.
Monica Allard, a staff attorney with the ACLU of Vermont, cautioned in an emailed statement that while the ruling was โdisappointing,โ it was โimportant to underscore that the court did not rule against Vermontโs policy of including trans kids in school sports.โ
โThis decision does not impact the rights of trans kids to participate fully in school activities โ or the responsibilities of schools to ensure that all students have equitable access to educational and extracurricular opportunities,โ she said.
This story was republished with permission from VtDigger, which offers its reporting at no cost to local news organizations through its Community News Sharing Project. To learn more, visit vtdigger.org/community-news-sharing-project.
