Skirts

Peltier v. Charter Day School

Location: North Carolina
Court Type: U.S. Supreme Court
Status: Closed
Last Update: August 9, 2021

What's at Stake

This case involves a public charter school in North Carolina that requires girls to wear skirts to receive their state-guaranteed and state-provided education, based on the belief that every girl is 鈥渁 fragile vessel鈥 and that girls wearing skirts would promote 鈥渃hivalry.鈥

Girls at Charter Day School, together with their parents, challenged the skirts requirement as sex discrimination under the Equal Protection Clause of the U.S. Constitution and Title IX. They are represented by the 老澳门开奖结果 Women鈥檚 Rights Project, the 老澳门开奖结果 of North Carolina, and the law firm Ellis & Winters LLP. In 2019, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina blocked the school from requiring girls to wear skirts.

The girls sought a change to the uniform policy because being required to wear skirts鈥攁nd prohibited from wearing pants or shorts鈥攔estricted their movement, and the change would allow them to be more active during recess, avoid exposing their underwear when they crawled during tornado and fire drills, and keep them warmer in the winter. They also explained that the skirts requirement 鈥渟ends the message that girls should be less active than boys and that they are more delicate than boys,鈥 with the result that boys 鈥渇eel empowered鈥 and 鈥渋n a position of power over girls.鈥 In the words of another girl, the skirts requirement conveys the school鈥檚 view that girls 鈥渟imply weren鈥檛 worth as much as boys,鈥 and that 鈥済irls are not in fact equal to boys.鈥

In 2022, the full U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit agreed that Charter Day School cannot require girls to wear skirts. Charter Day School had argued that its students do not have any constitutional rights at school and therefore that girls at the school are not entitled to equal protection of the law. The court rejected that argument, concluding that the public charter school must respect its students鈥 constitutional rights and that the skirts requirement violated girls鈥 rights. As the court observed, it is 鈥渄ifficult to imagine a clearer example of a rationale based on impermissible gender stereotypes.鈥

Additionally, the Fourth Circuit recognized that Title IX, the federal law that prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded education programs, applies to dress codes. It sent the case back to the district court to assess whether the skirts requirement denies girls full and equal opportunity to access education.

In Fall 2022, Charter Day School petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the Fourth Circuit鈥檚 decision that, as a public charter school, Charter Day School must respect its students鈥 constitutional rights as other public schools do. On June 26, 2023, the Supreme Court denied Charter Day School鈥檚 petition for certiorari.

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