Gavin Grimm v. Gloucester County School Board ( 2020 )


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  •                                          PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 19-1952
    GAVIN GRIMM,
    Plaintiff – Appellee,
    v.
    GLOUCESTER COUNTY SCHOOL BOARD,
    Defendant – Appellant.
    -----------------------------
    NAACP LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION FUND, INC.; INTERACT:
    ADVOCATES FOR INTERSEX YOUTH; FAIRFAX COUNTY SCHOOL
    BOARD; ALEXANDRIA CITY SCHOOL BOARD; ARLINGTON SCHOOL
    BOARD; FALLS CHURCH CITY SCHOOL BOARD; TREVOR PROJECT;
    NATIONAL PARENT TEACHER ASSOCIATION; GLSEN; AMERICAN
    SCHOOL COUNSELOR ASSOCIATION; NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF
    SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGISTS; PFLAG, INC.; TRANS YOUTH EQUALITY
    FOUNDATION; GENDER SPECTRUM; GENDER DIVERSITY; CAMPAIGN
    FOR SOUTHERN EQUALITY; HE SHE ZE AND WE; SIDE BY SIDE; GENDER
    BENDERS; AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS; AMERICAN
    ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY; AMERICAN
    ACADEMY OF PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS; AMERICAN COLLEGE OF
    PHYSICIANS; AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN
    MEDICAL STUDENTS ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN MEDICAL WOMEN'S
    ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN NURSES ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN
    PSYCHIATRIC    ASSOCIATION;   AMERICAN      PUBLIC     HEALTH
    ASSOCIATION; ASSOCIATION OF MEDICAL SCHOOL PEDIATRIC
    DEPARTMENT CHAIRS; GLMA: HEALTH PROFESSIONALS ADVANCING
    LGBT EQUALITY; LBGT PA CAUCUS; PEDIATRIC ENDOCRINE SOCIETY;
    SOCIETY FOR ADOLESCENT HEALTH AND MEDICINE; SOCIETY FOR
    PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS IN PEDIATRICS; WORLD PROFESSIONAL
    ASSOCIATION FOR TRANSGENDER HEALTH; LEAH FREGULIA; ADELITA
    GRIJALVA; DAVID VANNASDALL, Ed.D.; LOS ANGELES UNIFIED
    SCHOOL DISTRICT; JUDY CHIASSON, Ph. D.; MONICA GARCIA; WENDY
    RANCK-BUHR, Ph. D.; SAN DIEGO UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT;
    ELDRIDGE GREER, Ph. D.; GREGORY R. MEECE; FRANKLIN NEWTON,
    Ed.D.; DIANA K. BRUCE; DANIEL F. GOHL; DENISE PALAZZO; JEREMY
    MAJESKI; KAREN CARNEY; SARAH SHIRK; BETH BAZER, Ed.D.; PAULA
    INSLEY MILLER, Ed.D.; THOMAS WEBER; THOMAS A. ABERLI, Ed.D.;
    HOWARD COLTER; MATTHEW HANEY; KEN KUNIN; ROBERT A.
    MOTLEY; CATHERINE FROM; ROGER BOURGEOIS; CYNDY TAYMORE;
    LIZBETH DESELM; DYLAN PAULY; DELOIS COOKE SPRYSZAK; CRAIG
    MCCALLA; MARY DORAN; WASHOE COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT;
    JAMES C. MORSE, SR., Ed.D.; THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF SOUTH ORANGE
    AND MAPLEWOOD; THOMAS SMITH, Ed.D.; CRAIG VAUGHN; ARTHUR
    DIBENEDETTO; LAS CRUCES PUBLIC SCHOOLS; WENDI MILLER-
    TOMLINSON, M.D., Ph.D.; JOHN O'REILLY; HEIDI CARTER; ANTHONY
    GATTO; ERIC DOSS; PEYTON CHAPMAN; ZIAD W. MUNSON, Ph. D.;
    RACHEL SANTA, Ed.D.; KELLIE M. HARGIS, Ed.D.; LINDSEY POLLOCK,
    Ed.D.; BRIAN SCHAFFER; THE WASHINGTON CENTRAL UNIFIED UNION
    SCHOOL DISTRICT; WILL BAKER; LISA LOVE; SHERIE HOHS; SHERRI
    CYRA; LAURA H. LOVE, Ed.D.; JILL GURTNER; MONICA SCHOMMER;
    BRYAN DAVIS, Ph. D.; PARU SHAH, Ph. D.; TIM KENNEY; STATE OF NEW
    YORK; STATE OF WASHINGTON; STATE OF CALIFORNIA; STATE OF
    COLORADO; STATE OF CONNECTICUT; STATE OF DELAWARE; STATE
    OF HAWAII; STATE OF ILLINOIS; STATE OF MAINE; STATE OF
    MARYLAND; STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS; STATE OF MICHIGAN; STATE
    OF MINNESOTA; STATE OF NEVADA; STATE OF NEW JERSEY; STATE OF
    NEW MEXICO; STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA; STATE OF OREGON;
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA; STATE OF RHODE ISLAND;
    STATE OF VERMONT; COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA; DISTRICT OF
    COLUMBIA,
    Amici Supporting Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at
    Newport News. Arenda L. Wright Allen, District Judge. (4:15-cv-00054-AWA-RJK)
    Argued: May 26, 2020                                       Decided: August 26, 2020
    Amended: August 28, 2020
    Before NIEMEYER, WYNN, and FLOYD, Circuit Judges.
    2
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Floyd wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge
    Wynn joined. Judge Wynn wrote a concurring opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote a
    dissenting opinion.
    ARGUED:          David Patrick Corrigan, HARMAN CLAYTON CORRIGAN &
    WELLMAN, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. Joshua A. Block, AMERICAN CIVIL
    LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION, New York, New York, for Appellee. ON BRIEF:
    Jeremy D. Capps, M. Scott Fisher, Jr., George A. Somerville, HARMAN CLAYTOR
    CORRIGAN & WELLMAN, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant. Eden B. Heilman,
    Jennifer Safstrom, Nicole Tortoriello, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION OF
    VIRGINIA FOUNDATION, INC., Richmond, Virginia; Leslie Cooper, AMERICAN
    CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION, New York, New York, for Appellee.
    Sherrilyn A. Ifill, President and Director-Counsel, Janai S. Nelson, Samual Spital, Jin Hee
    Lee, Kevin E. Jason, New York, New York, Christopher Kemmitt, NAACP LEGAL
    DEFENSE & EDUCATIONAL FUND, INC., Washington, D.C.; Suzanne B. Goldberg,
    COLUMBIA LAW SCHOOL SEXUALITY AND GENDER LAW CLINIC, New York,
    New York, for Amicus NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc. Aron Fischer,
    Jonah M. Knobler, PATTERSON BELKNAP WEBB & TYLER LLP, New York, New
    York, for Amicus interACT: Advocates for Intersex Youth. Stuart A. Raphael, Sona
    Rewari, Washington, D.C., Trevor S. Cox, HUNTON ANDREWS KURTH LLP,
    Richmond, Virginia, for Amici Fairfax County School Board and Other Virginia School
    Boards. Howard S. Hogan, Washington, D.C., Abbey Hudson, Corey G. Singer, Keshia
    Afia Bonner, GIBSON, DUNN & CRUTCHER LLP, Los Angeles, California, for Amicus
    The Trevor Project. Wesley R. Powell, Mary Eaton, WILLKIE FARR & GALLAGHER
    LLP, New York, New York, for Amici The National PTA, GLSEN, American School
    Counselor Association, and National Association of School Psychologists. Asaf Orr,
    Shannon Minter, NATIONAL CENTER FOR LESBIAN RIGHTS, San Francisco,
    California; Lynly Egyes, TRANSGENDER LAW CENTER, Oakland, California;
    Maureen P. Alger, John C. Dwyer, Palo Alto, California, Kyle Wong, Audrey J. Mott-
    Smith, COOLEY LLP, San Francisco, California, for Amici PFLAG, Inc, Trans Youth
    Equality Foundation, Gender Spectrum, Gender Diversity, Campaign for Southern
    Equality, He She Ze and We, Side by Side, and Gender Benders. Aaron M. Panner,
    KELLOGG, HANSEN, TODD, FIGEL & FREDERICK, PLLC, Washington, D.C.; Devi
    M. Rao, Washington, D.C., Ethan C. Wong, JENNER & BLOCK LLP, New York, New
    York, for Amici Medical, Public Health, and Mental Health Organizations. Richard M.
    Segal, San Diego, California, Cynthia Cook Robertson, Robert C.K. Boyd, William C.
    Miller, PILLSBURY WINTHROP SHAW PITTMAN LLP, Washington, D.C.; Tara L.
    Borelli, LAMBDA LEGAL DEFENSE AND EDUCATION FUND, INC., Atlanta,
    Georgia, for Amici School Administrators from Twenty-Nine States and the District of
    Columbia. Robert W. Ferguson, Attorney General, Noah G. Purcell, Solicitor General,
    3
    Alan D. Copsey, Deputy Solicitor General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
    OF WASHINGTON, Olympia, Washington, for Amicus State of Washington. Letitia
    James, Attorney General, Barbara D. Underwood, Solicitor General, Anisha S. Dasgupta,
    Deputy Solicitor General, Linda Fang, Assistant Solicitor General, OFFICE OF THE
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF NEW YORK, New York, New York, for Amicus State of
    New York. Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY
    GENERAL, Sacramento, California, for Amicus State of California. Phil Weiser, Attorney
    General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF COLORADO, Denver,
    Colorado, for Amicus State of California. William Tong, Attorney General, OFFICE OF
    THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CONNECTICUT, Hartford, Connecticut, for Amicus
    State of Connecticut. Kathy Jennings, Attorney General, DELAWARE DEPARTMENT
    OF JUSTICE, Wilmington, Delaware, for Amicus State of Delaware. Clare E. Connors,
    Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF HAWAII, Honolulu,
    Hawaii, for Amicus State of Hawaii. Kwame Raoul, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF ILLINOIS, Chicago, Illinois, for Amicus State of Illinois.
    Aaron M. Frey, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
    MAINE, Augusta, Maine, for Amicus State of Maine. Brian E. Frosh, Attorney General,
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MARYLAND, Baltimore, Maryland, for
    Amicus State of Maryland. Maura Healey, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MASSACHUSETTS, Boston, Massachusetts, for Amicus
    Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Dana Nessel, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE
    ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Amicus State of Michigan. Keith
    Ellison, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF MINNESOTA,
    St. Paul, Minnesota, for Amicus State of Minnesota. Aaron D. Ford, Attorney General,
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF NEVADA, Carson City, Nevada, for
    Amicus State of Nevada. Gubrir S. Grewal, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF NEW JERSEY, Trenton, New Jersey, for Amicus State of
    New Jersey. Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY
    GENERAL OF NEW MEXICO, Santa Fe, New Mexico, for Amicus State of New Mexico.
    Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
    NORTH CAROLINA, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Amicus State of North Carolina. Ellen
    F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
    OREGON, Salem, Oregon, for Amicus State of Oregon. Josh Shapiro, Attorney General,
    OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF PENNSYLVANIA, Harrisburg,
    Pennsylvania, for Amicus Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Peter F. Neronha, Attorney
    General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF RHODE ISLAND, Providence,
    Rhode Island, for Amicus State of Rhode Island. Thomas J. Donovan, Jr., Attorney
    General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VERMONT, Montpelier,
    Vermont, for Amicus State of Vermont. Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, OFFICE OF
    THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia, for Amicus
    Commonwealth of Virginia. Karl A. Racine, Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE
    ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, Washington, D.C., for
    Amicus District of Columbia.
    4
    FLOYD, Circuit Judge:
    At the heart of this appeal is whether equal protection and Title IX can protect
    transgender students from school bathroom policies that prohibit them from affirming their
    gender. We join a growing consensus of courts in holding that the answer is resoundingly
    yes.
    Now a twenty-year-old college student, Plaintiff-Appellee Gavin Grimm has spent
    the past five years litigating against the Gloucester County School Board’s refusal to allow
    him as a transgender male to use the boys restrooms at Gloucester County High School.
    Grimm’s birth-assigned sex, or so-called “biological sex,” is female, but his gender identity
    is male. Beginning at the end of his freshman year, Grimm changed his first name to Gavin
    and expressed his male identity in all aspects of his life. After conversations with a school
    counselor and the high school principal, Gavin entered his sophomore year living fully as
    a boy. At first, the school allowed him to use the boys bathrooms. But once word got out,
    the Gloucester County School Board (the “Board”) faced intense backlash from parents,
    and ultimately adopted a policy under which students could only use restrooms matching
    their “biological gender.”
    The Board built single-stall restrooms as an “alternative” for students with “gender
    identity issues.” Grimm suffered from stigma, from urinary tract infections from bathroom
    avoidance, and from suicidal thoughts that led to hospitalization.         Nevertheless, he
    persevered in his transition; he underwent chest reconstruction surgery, received a
    state-court order stating that he is male, and amended his birth certificate to accurately
    5
    reflect his gender. But when he provided the school with his new documentation, the Board
    refused to amend his school records.
    Grimm first sued in 2015, alleging that, as applied to exclude him from the boys
    bathrooms, the Board’s policy violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment and constituted discrimination on the basis of sex, in violation of Title IX of
    the Education Amendments of 1972, 
    20 U.S.C. § 1681
    (a). Since then, Grimm amended
    his complaint to add that the Board’s refusal to amend his school records similarly violates
    both equal protection and Title IX. In 2019, after five winding years of litigation, the
    district court finally granted Grimm summary judgment on both claims. It awarded Grimm
    nominal damages, declaratory relief, attorney’s fees, and injunctive relief from the Board’s
    refusal to correct his school records. The Board timely appealed. Agreeing with the district
    court’s considered opinion, we affirm.
    I. Background
    A.
    To be sure, many of us carry heavy baggage into any discussion of gender and sex.
    With the help of our amici and Grimm’s expert, we start by unloading that baggage and
    developing a fact-based understanding of what it means to be transgender, along with the
    implications of gendered-bathroom usage for transgender students.
    Given a binary option between “Women” and “Men,” most people do not have to
    think twice about which bathroom to use. That is because most people are cisgender,
    meaning that their gender identity—or their “deeply felt, inherent sense” of their gender—
    6
    aligns with their sex-assigned-at-birth. See Br. of Amici Curiae Med., Pub. Health, &
    Mental Health Orgs. in Supp. of Pl.-Appellee 4–5 (hereinafter “Br. of Medical Amici”)
    (primarily relying on Am. Psychol. Ass’n, Guidelines for Psychological Practice with
    Transgender and Gender Nonconforming People, 70 Am. Psychologist 832 (2015)). 1 But
    there have always been people who “consistently, persistently, and insistently” express a
    gender that, on a binary, we would think of as opposite to their assigned sex. See 
    id. at 8
    ;
    see also J.A. 174–75 (Dr. Penn Expert Report & Decl. at 3–4).
    Such people are transgender, and they represent approximately 0.6% of the United
    States adult population, or 1.4 million adults. See Br. of Medical Amici 5. Just like being
    cisgender, being transgender is natural and is not a choice. See 
    id. at 7
    .
    Being transgender is also not a psychiatric condition, and “implies no impairment
    in judgment, stability, reliability, or general social or vocational capabilities.” See 
    id. at 6
    (quoting Am. Psychiatric Ass’n, Position Statement on Discrimination Against
    Transgender and Gender Variant Individuals (2012)); see also Br. of Amicus Curiae the
    Trevor Project in Supp. of Pl.-Appellee 4 (hereinafter “Br. of Trevor Project”) (explaining
    that the World Health Organization also declassified being transgender as a mental illness).
    1
    Amici curiae party to this brief include the following seventeen leading medical,
    public health, and mental health organizations: American Academy of Pediatrics,
    American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, American Academy of PAs,
    American College of Physicians, American Medical Association, American Medical
    Students Association, American Medical Women’s Association, American Nurses
    Association, American Psychiatric Association, American Public Health Association,
    Association of Medical School Pediatric Department Chairs, GLMA: Health Professionals
    Advancing LGBTQ Equality, LBGT PA Caucus, Pediatric Endocrine Society, Society for
    Adolescent Health and Medicine, Society for Physician Assistants in Pediatrics, and World
    Professional Association for Transgender Health.
    7
    However, transgender people face major mental health disparities: they are up to three
    times more likely to report or be diagnosed with a mental health disorder as the general
    population, Am. Med. Ass’n & GLMA: Health Professionals Advancing LGBTQ Equality,
    Issue Brief: Transgender Individuals’ Access to Public Facilities 2 (2018), and nearly nine
    times more likely to attempt suicide than the general population, see Sandy E. James et al.,
    Nat’l Ctr. for Transgender Equal., The Report of the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey 114
    (Dec. 2016) (hereinafter “USTS Report”).
    Moreover, many transgender people are clinically diagnosed with gender dysphoria,
    “a condition that is characterized by debilitating distress and anxiety resulting from the
    incongruence between an individual’s gender identity and birth-assigned sex.” Br. of
    Medical Amici 9; see also Edmo v. Corizon, Inc., 
    935 F.3d 757
    , 768–69 (9th Cir. 2019).
    Gender dysphoria is defined in the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic &
    Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. “[T]o be diagnosed with gender dysphoria, the
    incongruence [between gender identity and assigned sex] must have persisted for at least
    six months and be accompanied by clinically significant distress or impairment in social,
    occupational, or other important areas of functioning.” See J.A. 175 (Dr. Penn Expert
    Report & Decl. at 4); see also Br. of Medical Amici 9 (citing Am. Psychiatric Ass’n,
    Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 451–53 (5th ed. 2013) (hereinafter
    “DSM-5”)). Incongruence between gender identity and assigned sex must be manifested
    by at least two of the following markers:
    (1) “[a] marked incongruence between one’s experienced/expressed gender
    and primary and/or secondary sex characteristics”;
    8
    (2) “[a] strong desire to be rid of one’s primary and/or secondary sex
    characteristics because of a marked incongruence with one’s
    experienced/expressed gender”;
    (3) “[a] strong desire for the primary and/or secondary sex characteristics of
    the other gender”;
    (4) “[a] strong desire to be of the other gender”;
    (5) “[a] strong desire to be treated as the other gender”; or
    (6) “[a] strong conviction that one has the typical feelings and reactions of
    the other gender.”
    See DSM-5 at 452 (J.A. 1117).
    Puberty is a particularly difficult time for transgender children, who “often
    experience intensified gender dysphoria and worsening mental health” as their bodies
    diverge further from their gender identity. Br. of Medical Amici 10. Left untreated, gender
    dysphoria can cause, among other things, depression, substance use, self-mutilation, other
    self-harm, and suicide. 
    Id. at 11
    .      Being subjected to prejudice and discrimination
    exacerbates these negative health outcomes. 
    Id. at 11
    .
    For many years, mental health practitioners attempted to convert transgender
    people’s gender identity to conform with their sex assigned at birth, which did not alleviate
    dysphoria, but rather caused shame and psychological pain. 
    Id.
     at 11–12. Fortunately, we
    now have modern accepted treatment protocols for gender dysphoria. Developed by the
    World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH), the Standards of Care
    for the Health of Transsexual, Transgender, and Gender Nonconforming People (7th
    Version 2012) (hereinafter “WPATH Standards of Care”) represent the consensus
    approach of the medical and mental health community, Br. of Medical Amici 13, and have
    9
    been recognized by various courts, including this one, as the authoritative standards of care,
    see De’lonta v. Johnson, 
    708 F.3d 520
    , 522–23 (4th Cir. 2013); see also Edmo, 935 F.3d
    at 769; Keohane v. Jones, 
    328 F. Supp. 3d 1288
    , 1294 (N.D. Fla. 2018), vacated sub nom.
    Keohane v. Fla. Dep’t of Corr. Sec’y, 
    952 F.3d 1257
     (11th Cir. 2020). 2 “There are no other
    competing, evidence-based standards that are accepted by any nationally or internationally
    recognized medical professional groups.” Edmo, 935 F.3d at 769 (quoting Edmo v. Idaho
    Dep’t of Corr., 
    358 F. Supp. 3d 1103
    , 1125 (D. Idaho 2018)). 3
    2
    To be sure, some courts have held in the Eighth Amendment deliberate-
    indifference context that there remains medical disagreement as to the necessity of sex
    reassignment surgery (SRS), which the WPATH Standards of Care include as a treatment
    necessary for some patients. See Gibson v. Collier, 
    920 F.3d 212
    , 219–20 (5th Cir. 2019);
    Kosilek v. Spencer, 
    774 F.3d 63
    , 90 (1st Cir. 2014) (discussing one expert’s dismissal of
    the WPATH Standards of Care as they pertain to SRS, and later holding that prison officials
    were not deliberately indifferent when presented with “two alternative treatment plans” by
    “competent professionals”). But see Flack v. Wis. Dep’t of Health Servs., 
    395 F. Supp. 3d 1001
    , 1017 (W.D. Wis. 2019) (explaining that the record in Kosilek was developed in 2006,
    “at which time medical experts disagreed” as to the necessity of SRS for Kosilek, and that
    the Fifth Circuit in Gibson was not presented with new record evidence, but rather relied
    on the same 2006 evidentiary record in Kosilek). We need not offer an opinion one way
    or the other.
    3
    That did not prevent the Board from finding an expert, Dr. Quentin Van Meter,
    who disagrees with the WPATH Standards of Care, and who treats transgender youth by
    encouraging them to live in accordance with their sex assigned at birth. It goes without
    saying that one can always find a doctor who disagrees with mainstream medical
    professional organizations on a particular issue. Aspects of Dr. Van Meter’s report
    blatantly contradict the views of Grimm’s expert, as well as the American Academy of
    Pediatrics and our other medical amici. On appeal, however, the Board relies on Dr. Van
    Meter’s testimony only for its assertion that Grimm remained biologically female. See
    Opening Br. 12, 27, 46. The Board does not assert that Dr. Van Meter’s report creates any
    genuine factual questions that would impact our legal analysis below. Therefore, we need
    not consider the remainder of his assertions, and may rely on the overwhelming evidence
    regarding the accepted standards of care.
    10
    The WPATH Standards of Care outline appropriate treatments for persons with
    gender dysphoria, including “[c]hanges in gender expression and role (which may involve
    living part time or full time in another gender role, consistent with one’s gender identity),”
    hormone treatment therapy, sex reassignment surgery, “[s]urgery to change primary and/or
    secondary sex characteristics,” and psychotherapy “for purposes such as exploring gender
    identity, role, and expression; addressing the negative impact of gender dysphoria and
    stigma on mental health; alleviating internalized transphobia; enhancing social and peer
    support; improving body image; or promoting resilience.” See J.A. 200–01 (WPATH
    Standards of Care 9–10). “The number and type of interventions applied and the order in
    which these take place may differ from person to person,” J.A. 200 (WPATH Standards of
    Care 9), and special considerations are taken before adolescents are provided with physical
    transition treatments such as hormone therapy, J.A. 209–212 (WPATH Standards of Care
    18–21).
    There is no question that there are students in our K-12 schools who are
    transgender. For many of us, gender identity is established between the ages of three and
    four years old. Br. of Medical Amici 7. Thus, some transgender students enter the K-12
    school system as their gender; others, like Grimm, begin to live their gender when they are
    older. By the time youth are teenagers, approximately 0.7% identify as transgender. That
    means that there are about 150,000 transgender teens in the United States. That is not to
    suggest that people are either cisgender or transgender, and that everyone identifies as a
    binary gender of male or female. Of course, there are other gender-expansive youth who
    may identify as nonbinary, youth born intersex who do or do not identify with their sex-
    11
    assigned-at-birth, and others whose identities belie gender norms. See generally PFLAG,
    PFLAG National Glossary of Terms (July 2019), http://pflag.org/glossary (explaining that
    “transgender” is “also used as an umbrella term to describe groups of people who transcend
    conventional expectations of gender identity or expression”). But today’s question is
    limited to how school bathroom policies implicate the rights of transgender students who
    “consistently, persistently, and insistently” express a binary gender.
    Transgender students face unique challenges in the school setting. In the largest
    nationwide study of transgender discrimination, the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey
    (USTS), 77% of respondents who were known or perceived as transgender in their K-12
    schools reported harassment by students, teachers, or staff. Br. of Amici Curiae Sch.
    Adm’rs from Twenty-Nine States & D.C. in Supp. of Pl.-Appellee 6 (hereinafter “Br. of
    School Administrator Amici”) (citing USTS Report at 132–35). For such students who
    were known or perceived to be transgender:
    -   54% reported verbal harassment;
    -   52% reported that they were not allowed to dress in a way expressing their
    gender;
    -   24% reported being physically attacked because people thought they were
    transgender;
    -   20% believed they were disciplined more harshly because teachers or staff
    thought they were transgender;
    -   13% reported being sexually assaulted because people thought they were
    transgender; and
    -   17% reported having left a school due to severe mistreatment.
    12
    USTS Report at 11. Unsurprisingly, then, harassment of transgender students is also
    correlated with academic success: students who experienced greater harassment had
    significantly lower grade point averages. Br. of School Administrator Amici 11. And
    harassment at school is similarly correlated with mental health outcomes for transgender
    students. The opposite is also true, though: transgender students have better mental health
    outcomes when their gender identity is affirmed. See Br. of Trevor Project 8.
    Using the school restrooms matching their gender identity is one way that
    transgender students can affirm their gender and socially transition, but restroom policies
    vary. In one survey, 58% of transgender youth reported being discouraged from using the
    bathroom that corresponds with their gender. See 
    id.
     When being forced to use a special
    restroom or one that does not align with their gender, more than 40% of transgender
    students fast, dehydrate, or find ways not to use the restroom. Br. of Amici Curiae the
    Nat’l PTA, GLSEN, Am. Sch. Counselor Ass’n, and Nat’l Assoc. of Sch. Psychologists in
    Support of Pl.-Appellee 5 (hereinafter “Br. of Education Association Amici”) (citing
    Joseph Kosciw et al., GLSEN, The 2017 National School Climate Survey: The Experiences
    of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Youth in Our Nation’s Schools 14
    (2018)). Such restroom avoidance frequently leads to medical problems. See 
    id.
     at 16
    (citing Jody L. Herman, Gendered Restrooms and Minority Stress: The Public Regulation
    of Gender and its Impact on Transgender People’s Lives, 19 J. Pub. Mgmt. & Soc. Pol’y
    65, 74–75 (2013)). To respond to the needs of transgender students, school districts across
    the country have implemented policies that allow transgender students to use the restroom
    matching their gender identity, and they have done so without incident. See generally Br.
    13
    of School Administrator Amici; Br. of Education Association Amici; Br. of Fairfax Cty.
    Sch. Bd. & Other Va. Sch. Bds. as Amici Curiae in Support of Appellee and in Favor of
    Affirmance (hereinafter “Br. of Virginia School Board Amici”).
    B.
    With that essential grounding, we turn to the facts of this case. In so doing, we
    recount the district court’s factual findings, adding only undisputed facts from the record
    when helpful to our analysis.
    When Gavin Grimm was born, he was identified as female, and his sex so indicated
    on his birth certificate. But Grimm always knew that he was a boy. For example, when
    given the choice, he would opt to wear boys’ clothing. He recounts how uncomfortable he
    was when made to wear a dress to a sibling’s wedding. Grimm also related to male
    characters, and he felt joy whenever he was “mis”-identified as a male—whether by an
    adult lining children up in “boy-girl” fashion, or by a good friend who recognized that
    Grimm was male. At the time, though, Grimm did not have the language to describe
    himself as transgender.
    In September 2013, Grimm began attending Gloucester High School, a public high
    school in Gloucester County, Virginia. He was enrolled as a female.
    In April 2014, during Grimm’s freshman year, he disclosed to his mother that he
    was transgender. At Grimm’s request, he began therapy the following month with Dr. Lisa
    Griffin, Ph.D., a psychologist with experience counseling transgender youth. Dr. Griffin
    diagnosed Grimm with gender dysphoria.           Dr. Griffin then prepared a treatment
    14
    documentation letter stating that Grimm had gender dysphoria, that he should present as a
    male in his daily life, that he should be considered and treated as a male, and that he should
    be allowed to use restrooms consistent with that identity. Dr. Griffin also referred Grimm
    to an endocrinologist for hormone treatment.
    By the end of his freshman year, Grimm was out to his whole family, had changed
    his first name to Gavin, and was expressing his male identity in all aspects of his life. He
    used male pronouns to describe himself. He even used men’s restrooms when in public,
    with no incidents or questions asked.
    In August 2014, before the beginning of Grimm’s sophomore year, Grimm and his
    mother met with a school guidance counselor, Tiffany Durr, to discuss his transition. They
    gave Durr a copy of Dr. Griffin’s treatment documentation letter and requested that
    Grimm be treated as a boy at school. At the time, the student bathrooms were all multi-
    stalled and single-sex—i.e., boys and girls bathrooms. Those bathrooms were located
    throughout the school. The only other options were apparently a restroom located in the
    nurse’s office, and the faculty restrooms. Grimm agreed to use the restroom in the nurse’s
    office. But once school started, he “soon found it stigmatizing to use a separate restroom”
    and “began to feel anxiety and shame surrounding [his] travel to the nurse’s office.” J.A.
    113 (Gavin Grimm Decl. at ¶ 29). He also realized that using the restroom in the nurse’s
    office caused him to be late to class because of its location in the school.
    After a few weeks of using the nurse’s office, Grimm met with Durr again and asked
    for permission to use the boys restrooms. Durr asked the high school principal, Principal
    Collins, who spoke with the Superintendent, Dr. Clemons. The Superintendent deferred to
    15
    Principal Collins’s judgment, and Principal Collins allowed Grimm to use the male
    restrooms. At that time, the Board was not yet involved. Grimm was given permission to
    complete his physical education courses online and never needed to use the locker rooms
    at school.
    For seven weeks, Grimm used the boys restrooms at Gloucester County High
    School without incident. Despite that smooth transition, adults in the community caught
    wind of the arrangement and began to complain. Superintendent Clemons, Principal
    Collins, and Board members began receiving numerous complaints via email and phone
    not only from adults within that school district but also from adults in neighboring
    communities and even other states. Only one student personally complained to Principal
    Collins, and that student did so before the restroom privacy improvements discussed below.
    Following these complaints, Board member Carla Hook, who had expressed her
    opposition to having a transgender male in the boys bathrooms, proposed the following
    policy at the Board’s public meeting on November 11, 2014:
    Whereas the [Gloucester County Public Schools (GCPS)] recognizes that
    some students question their gender identities, and
    Whereas the GCPS encourages such students to seek support, advice, and
    guidance from parents, professionals and other trusted adults, and
    Whereas the GCPS seeks to provide a safe learning environment for all
    students and to protect the privacy of all students, therefore
    It shall be the practice of the GCPS to provide male and female restroom and
    locker room facilities in its schools, and the use of said facilities shall be
    limited to the corresponding biological genders, and students with gender
    identity issues shall be provided an alternative appropriate private facility.
    16
    J.A. 775. Neither the Board nor the school informed either Grimm or his family that
    Grimm’s bathroom usage would be up for debate at that Board meeting. Rather, news of
    the topic for the meeting spread on Facebook, and Grimm’s mother found out from a friend
    the day before. Grimm and his parents attended the meeting, at which twenty-four other
    community members spoke.
    Although some community members supported creating a separate restroom for
    Grimm, by and large, they vehemently opposed allowing Grimm to use the boys restrooms.
    Two common themes arose: (1) that the “majority” must be protected from such minority
    intrusion, see, e.g., School Board Meeting, Gloucester County School Board (Nov. 11,
    2014), at 14:48–15:20 (hereinafter, “November Meeting”), http://gloucester.granicus.com/
    player/clip/1065?view_id=10 (“It is a disruption. . . . [W]e have more to consider than just
    the rights of one student. . . . what about the rights of other students, the majority of the
    students at Gloucester High School.”), cited by Opening Br. 11 n.2; 
    id.
     at 18:57–19:06
    (“While we have an obligation to provide minority rights, we still are a majority rule
    country . . . .”), and (2) that allowing transgender students to use the bathroom matching
    their gender identity would open the door to predatory behavior, particularly by male
    students pretending to be transgender in order to use the girls bathroom, see, e.g., 
    id.
     at
    14:27–14:39 (“When we have a situation with a young man that says they want to identify
    themselves as a young lady and they go in . . . the ladies’ room with ill intent, where does
    it end?”); 
    id.
     at 20:57–21:02 (“A young man can come up and say, ‘I’m a girl, I need to use
    the ladies’ rooms now.’ And they’d be lying through their teeth.”).
    17
    The Board was set to vote on the proposed policy at that very meeting but voted 4-
    3 to delay the vote. Come the next meeting, held on December 9, 2014, the comment
    period was even uglier. One person called Grimm a “freak” and likened him to a dog,
    asking: “must we use tax dollars to install fire hydrants where you can publicly relieve
    yourselves?” School Board Meeting, Gloucester County School Board (Dec. 9, 2014), at
    1:22:54–1:23:34, http://gloucester.granicus.com/ player/clip/1090?view_id=10, cited by
    Opening Br. 11 n.3. Another likened Grimm to a “European” asking for a “bidet.” 
    Id.
     at
    1:40:45–1:40:48. More than one person talked about Grimm’s gender identity as a choice.
    See 
    id.
     at 1:13:58–1:14:09 (“Is it morally right for us to kneel or bow to the very few who
    demand that they receive a special identification to meet needs of their own perceived body
    functions?”); 
    id.
     at 1:18:48–1:19:49 (woman discussing her “former” lesbianism as an
    “addiction” from which “Jesus Christ set [her] free”). And more than one citizen stated
    that they would vote out the Board members if they allowed Grimm to use the boys
    restroom. See 
    id.
     at 42:21–42:32, 50:53–50:56, 1:18:00–1:18:05.
    At both meetings, Grimm and his parents spoke out against the proposed policy.
    Grimm explained in part how “alienating” and “humiliating” it had been to use the nurse’s
    office, and that it “took a lot of time away from [his] education.” November Meeting at
    24:36–24:58. He also explained that he was currently using the men’s public restrooms in
    Gloucester County without “any sort of confrontation of any kind.” 
    Id.
     at 25:05–25:26.
    The Board passed the proposed policy on December 9, 2014 by a 6-1 vote. The
    following day, Principal Collins sent a letter to Grimm explaining that he was no longer
    18
    allowed to use the boys bathrooms, effective immediately, and that his further use of those
    bathrooms would result in disciplinary consequences.
    As a corollary to the policy, the Board approved a series of updates to the school’s
    restrooms to improve general privacy for all students. The updates included the addition
    or expansion of partitions between urinals in male restrooms, the addition of privacy strips
    to the doors of stalls in all restrooms, and the construction of three single-stall unisex
    restrooms available to all students.
    At the same time that the bathroom policy was going into place in December 2014,
    Grimm began hormone therapy. Hormone therapy “deepened [his] voice, increased [his]
    growth of facial hair, and [gave him] a more masculine appearance.” J.A. 120 (Gavin
    Grimm Decl. ¶ 60). But until the single-stall bathrooms were completed, Grimm’s only
    option was to use the girls bathrooms or the restroom in the nurse’s office. Grimm recalls
    an incident when he stayed after school for an event, realized the nurse’s office was locked,
    and broke down in tears because there was no restroom he could use comfortably. A
    librarian witnessed this and drove him home. In a similar vein, and even after the single-
    user restrooms had been built, Grimm could not use those restrooms when at football
    games. He recounts a friend having to drive him to a hardware store to use the restroom;
    on another occasion, his mother had to come pick him up early.
    The single-stall restrooms were completed on December 16, 2014, one week after
    the Board enacted the policy. Once completed, however, they were located far from classes
    that Grimm attended. A map of the school confirms that no single-user restrooms were
    located in Hall D, where Grimm attended most classes.
    19
    Moreover, the single-stall restrooms made Grimm feel “stigmatized and
    isolated.” J.A. 117 (Gavin Grimm Decl. ¶ 47). He never saw any other student use these
    restrooms. J.A. 117 (Gavin Grimm Decl. ¶ 48). Principal Collins testified at his deposition
    that he never saw a student use the single-user restrooms, but that he assumed that they
    were used because they were cleaned daily.
    As commonly occurs for transgender students prohibited from using the restroom
    matching their gender identity, see supra Part I.A, Grimm practiced restroom avoidance.
    This caused Grimm to suffer from recurring urinary tract infections, for which his mother
    kept medication “always stocked at home.” J.A. 133 (Deirdre Grimm Decl. ¶ 26).
    During his junior year, Grimm was hospitalized for suicidal ideation resulting from
    being in an environment where he felt “unsafe, anxious, and disrespected.” J.A. 119 (Gavin
    Grimm Decl. ¶ 54). In a moment of affirmation, the hospital admitted him to the boys
    ward. The situation at Gloucester County High School had proved untenable for him, and
    he sought other schooling options. Grimm spent his junior year in a Gloucester County
    High School program in a separate building. But that program was cancelled, and he had
    to return to the same restroom situation for his senior year. Having collected credits in the
    prior program, he spent as little time at the high school as possible during his senior year.
    At the same time, Grimm’s gender transition progressed. In June 2015, before his
    junior year, the Virginia Department of Motor Vehicles issued Grimm state identification
    reflecting that he was male. In June 2016, Grimm underwent chest reconstruction surgery
    20
    (a double mastectomy). 4 The Gloucester County Circuit Court found this to be a type of
    “gender reassignment surgery,” and on September 9, 2016, it issued an order declaring that
    Grimm is “now functioning fully as a male” and directing the Virginia Department of
    Health to issue him a birth certificate accordingly. Grimm’s new birth certificate was
    issued on October 27, 2016.
    Shortly thereafter, Grimm and his mother provided Gloucester County High School
    with his new birth certificate and asked that his school records be updated to reflect his
    gender as male. The decision of whether to amend Grimm’s records accordingly, though,
    lay with the Board. In January 2017, through legal counsel, the Board informed Grimm in
    a letter that it declined to update his records. The Board did not provide a reason, but did
    inform Grimm of his right to a hearing, which Grimm did not request.
    As part of this litigation, the Board’s 30(b)(6) witness, Troy Andersen, testified that
    the Board refused to update Grimm’s records because, in its view, Grimm’s amended birth
    certificate was not issued in accordance with Virginia law and because it was marked
    “void.” Grimm submitted a declaration from State Registrar and Director of the Division
    of Vital Records Janet Rainey, who administers Virginia’s vital records. Rainey affirmed
    the validity of Grimm’s birth certificate, stating: “On October 27, 2016, I issued a birth
    certificate to Gavin Elliot Grimm. The birth certificate states his sex as male.” J.A. 982
    (Decl. of Janet M. Rainey).
    4
    The parties agree that Grimm could not have undergone gender confirmation
    surgery of the genitalia until he was at least eighteen years old.
    21
    Grimm graduated high school on June 10, 2017. He now attends community
    college in California and intends to transfer to a four-year university. To do so, he will
    need to provide his high school transcript, which still identifies him as female.
    II. Procedural History
    The procedural history of this case is winding and has outlasted Grimm’s high
    school career, shaping both the claims and relief sought. Grimm first sued the Board on
    June 11, 2015, at the end of his sophomore year. Grimm alleged that the Board’s restroom
    policy impermissibly discriminated against him in violation of both Title IX of the
    Education Amendments of 1972, 
    20 U.S.C. § 1681
    (a), and the Equal Protection Clause of
    the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.           As relief, he sought
    compensatory damages and an injunction allowing him to use the boys restrooms.
    Although the Board’s policy similarly applies to locker room facilities, Grimm did not need
    to use the locker rooms and never challenged that aspect of the policy. Because he only
    challenges his exclusion from the boys restrooms, we refer to the policy as the “bathroom”
    or “restroom” policy throughout.
    The Board filed a motion to dismiss Grimm’s claims. In the first ruling in Grimm’s
    case, the district court denied Grimm’s motion for a preliminary injunction and dismissed
    his Title IX claim, holding that it would not defer to a Guidance Document issued by the
    Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR), which, at that time, directed in
    part that “[u]nder Title IX, a recipient must generally treat transgender students consistent
    with their gender identity . . . .” See G.G. ex rel. Grimm v. Gloucester Cty. Sch. Bd., 132
    
    22 F. Supp. 3d 736
    , 746 (E.D. Va. 2015). The district court held that an implementing
    regulation of Title IX, 
    34 C.F.R. § 106.33
    , “clearly allows the School Board to limit
    bathroom access ‘on the basis of sex,’ including birth of biological sex.” 
    Id.
    Grimm filed an interlocutory appeal, and this Court reversed, holding that the
    Guidance Document was entitled to deference. See G.G. ex rel. Grimm v. Gloucester Cty.
    Sch. Bd., 
    822 F.3d 709
    , 715 (4th Cir. 2016). However, after that decision, the Department
    of Education and Department of Justice withdrew its prior Guidance Document, issuing a
    new one. Accordingly, the Supreme Court, which had granted the Board’s petition for writ
    of certiorari and had scheduled oral arguments, summarily vacated this Court’s decision
    and remanded for reconsideration in light of the shift in agency perspective. See Gloucester
    Cty. Sch. Bd. v. G.G. ex rel. Grimm, 
    137 S. Ct. 1239
     (2017).
    Having graduated from high school, Grimm then filed an amended complaint, which
    was assigned to a different district court judge. The amended complaint did not seek
    compensatory damages—only nominal damages and declaratory relief. 5 It also adjusted
    Grimm’s Title IX claim in time to extend throughout his time at Gloucester County High
    School. Finally, it incorporated more recent factual developments, including that Grimm
    underwent chest reconstruction surgery, had his sex legally changed under Virginia law by
    the Gloucester County Circuit Court, and received a new birth certificate from the
    Department of Health, listing his sex as male. The Board once again filed a motion to
    dismiss for failure to state a claim. In an opinion that would build the basis for summary
    5
    Initially, the amended complaint retained Grimm’s request for a permanent
    injunction, but Grimm voluntarily dismissed that request.
    23
    judgment, the district court denied the Board’s motion to dismiss. As to Grimm’s Title IX
    claim, the district court held that “claims of discrimination on the basis of transgender
    status are per se actionable under a gender stereotyping theory,” and that Grimm had
    sufficiently pleaded sex discrimination that harmed him. See Grimm v. Gloucester Cty.
    Sch. Bd., 
    302 F. Supp. 3d 730
    , 746–47 (E.D. Va. 2018) (quoting M.A.B. v. Bd. of Educ. of
    Talbot Cty., 
    286 F. Supp. 3d 704
    , 715 (D. Md. 2018)). As to his equal protection claim,
    the district court held that heightened scrutiny applied both because “transgender
    individuals constitute at least a quasi-suspect class,” and because Grimm pleaded a sex-
    stereotyping claim. 
    Id.
     at 749–50. And the policy could not withstand heightened scrutiny,
    the district court reasoned, because it was not substantially related to the government’s
    interest in protecting the privacy of other students. See 
    id. at 751
     (explaining that Grimm
    used the boys bathroom without incident until adults complained, that transgender students
    are not more likely than others to peep, and that pre-pubescent and post-pubescent children
    share bathrooms without issue). Students enjoyed the added privacy of partitions installed
    in the boys bathroom, and if any students felt that the partitions were insufficient, they
    could use the single-stalled bathrooms. See 
    id.
     But to tell Grimm alone that he could not
    use the multi-stalled boys bathrooms “singled out and stigmatized” him. 
    Id.
    After this win, Grimm filed a second amended complaint, adding a claim that the
    Board’s refusal to update his gender on his school transcripts violates Title IX and equal
    protection. Grimm and the School Board then filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
    Again, the district court ruled in Grimm’s favor, granting him summary judgment on both
    his Title IX and equal protection claims.
    24
    Grimm filed various exhibits in support of his motion, including medical treatment
    records and letters documenting his treatment. The district court rejected the Board’s
    Motion to Strike these exhibits, holding that the authoring doctors were not being treated
    as expert witnesses, and that they were business records falling within a hearsay exception.
    The district court did grant the Board’s Motion to Strike as to one piece of evidence,
    however. In February 2019, the Board had considered a new policy “that would allow
    transgender students to use restrooms consistent with their gender identity if certain criteria
    were met.” Grimm v. Gloucester Cty. Sch. Bd., 
    400 F. Supp. 3d 444
    , 455–56 (E.D. Va.
    2019). The district court found that this policy was inadmissible because it was considered
    as a part of settlement negotiations. 
    Id.
    On the merits, and applying its prior Title IX holding as further supported by
    additional intervening caselaw, the district court granted Grimm’s Motion for Summary
    Judgment on the Title IX claim. In doing so, it rejected the Board’s contention that Grimm
    failed to prove harm, see infra Section V, because Grimm’s declaration under oath
    explained that going to the bathroom was like a “walk of shame,” and because he suffered
    urinary tract infections from trying to avoid the bathroom and was even hospitalized for
    suicidal thoughts. See 
    id. at 458
    . This was enough to prove that he was harmed; he did
    not need expert testimony. See 
    id.
    The district court also granted Grimm’s Motion for Summary Judgment on his equal
    protection claim, again finding more intervening support for its prior holding. The Board
    had presented a witness by deposition, Troy Andersen, who testified that using the toilet
    or urinal implicates students’ privacy concerns.        However, “[w]hen asked why the
    25
    expanded stalls and urinal dividers could not fully address those situations, Mr. Andersen
    responded that he ‘was sure’ the policy also protected privacy interests in other ways, but
    that he “[couldn’t] think of any other off the top of [his] head.’” See 
    id. at 461
     (alterations
    in original). Therefore, the district court found that the Board’s privacy argument was
    “based upon sheer conjecture and abstraction.’” See 
    id.
     (quoting Whitaker ex rel. Whitaker
    v. Kenosha Unified Sch. Dist. No. 1 Bd. of Educ., 
    858 F.3d 1034
    , 1052 (7th Cir. 2017)).
    Regarding Grimm’s school records, the Board had argued that Grimm’s amended
    birth certificate did not comply with Virginia law. But according to the district court, any
    question of compliance was “dispelled by the Declaration of Janet M. Rainey,” the State
    Registrar and Director of the Division of Vital Records, who issued Grimm’s amended
    birth certificate. See 
    id. at 458
    . The court went on to declare that the Board’s “continued
    recalcitrance” to fix his school records violated both Title IX and equal protection, and it
    issued a permanent injunction ordering the Board to correct Grimm’s school records. 
    Id.
    In addition to declaratory relief, the district court awarded nominal damages to
    Grimm in the amount of one dollar for the Board’s Title IX and equal protection violations,
    as well as attorney’s fees. The Board timely appealed.
    III. The Board’s Threshold Challenges to Grimm’s Claims
    At the outset, we reject the Board’s two threshold challenges to Grimm’s claims on
    appeal: (1) that his claims pertaining to the restroom policy are moot, and (2) that his claims
    pertaining to his school records must be administratively exhausted.
    26
    A. Mootness of Challenge to Restroom Policy
    First, the Board contends that we lack jurisdiction over Grimm’s challenges to the
    restroom policy because those claims are mooted by his own amendments to the complaint,
    which removed his request for injunctive relief and compensatory damages.                As
    characterized by the Board, by only seeking nominal damages and declaratory relief as to
    the restroom policy, “Grimm seeks nothing more than a judicial stamp of approval, which
    is not a proper remedy.” Reply Br. 1. Finding a live controversy, we reject this argument.
    Our jurisdiction is restricted by Article III of the Constitution to “Cases” and
    “Controversies.” See Chafin v. Chafin, 
    568 U.S. 165
    , 171 (2013). A case becomes moot
    and jurisdiction is lost if, at any time during federal judicial proceedings, “the issues
    presented are no longer ‘live’ or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the
    outcome.’” See 
    id. at 172
     (quoting Already, LLC v. Nike, Inc., 
    568 U.S. 85
    , 91 (2013)).
    But the bar for maintaining a legally cognizable claim is not high: “As long as the parties
    have a concrete interest, however small, in the outcome of the litigation, the case is not
    moot.” See 
    id.
     (quoting Knox v. Serv. Emps. Int’l Union, Local 1000, 
    567 U.S. 298
    , 307
    (2012)). Naturally, then, plausible claims for damages defeat mootness challenges. See
    Mission Prod. Holdings, Inc. v. Tempnology, LLC, 
    139 S. Ct. 1652
     (2019) (“If there is any
    chance of money changing hands, [the] suit remains live.”); see also 13C Charles Alan
    Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 3533.3 (3d ed. April 2020 Update)
    (hereinafter “Wright & Miller”).
    That is true even when the claim is for nominal damages. See Wright & Miller
    § 3533.3, n.47 (collecting cases); see also N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc. v. City of
    27
    New York, 
    140 S. Ct. 1525
    , 1536 (2020) (Alito, J., dissenting) (same). Under this Circuit’s
    precedent, “even if a plaintiff’s injunctive relief claim has been mooted, the action is not
    moot if the plaintiff may be ‘entitled to at least nominal damages.’” Rendelman v. Rouse,
    
    569 F.3d 182
    , 187 (4th Cir. 2009) (quoting Covenant Media of S.C., LLC v. City of N.
    Charleston, 
    493 F.3d 421
    , 429 n.4 (4th Cir. 2007)). And the implications are particularly
    important in the civil rights context, because such rights are often vindicated through
    nominal damages. See N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc., 140 S. Ct. at 1535 (Alito, J.,
    dissenting) (citing Riverside v. Rivera, 
    477 U.S. 561
    , 574 (1986) (plurality opinion)); see
    also Riverside, 
    477 U.S. at 574
     (plurality opinion) (“Regardless of the form of relief he
    actually obtains, a successful civil rights plaintiff often secures important social benefits
    that are not reflected in nominal or relatively small damages awards.”). 6
    Nevertheless, the Board analogizes to an Eleventh Circuit en banc decision,
    Flanigan’s Enterprises, Inc. of Georgia v. City of Sandy Springs, 
    868 F.3d 1248
    , 1263
    (11th Cir. 2017). But Flanigan’s Enterprises is unpersuasive because it is not on point.
    In Flanigan’s Enterprises, the Eleventh Circuit held that the plaintiff-appellants’
    request for declaratory and injunctive relief from a city ordinance became moot when the
    City repealed that ordinance “unambiguously and unanimously, in open session,” with
    6
    Additionally, winning nominal damages under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     allows for a
    recovery of attorney’s fees under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1988
    , thereby allowing plaintiffs with
    insufficient funds to hire an attorney at market rate, and with little prospect of a great
    recovery, to be matched with a civil rights attorney. See generally Riverside, 
    477 U.S. at
    576–80 (plurality opinion) (discussing the importance of the § 1988 framework for
    vindicating civil rights). Holding that claims for nominal damages are moot would
    undermine this framework by discouraging attorneys from taking cases such as Grimm’s.
    28
    “persuasive reasons for doing so.” 868 F.3d at 1263. The City had “expressly, repeatedly,
    and publicly disavowed any intent to reenact [the challenged] provision,” which it had
    “never enforced in the first place.” Id. (emphasis added). The Eleventh Circuit then turned
    to the appellants’ “lone” remaining request, nominal damages. It explained that, in some
    situations, nominal damages have a “practical effect” or are the “appropriate remedy”; in
    others, nominal damages “would serve no purpose other than to affix a judicial seal of
    approval to an outcome that has already been realized.”            Id. at 1264.   Flanigan’s
    Enterprises was “squarely of that last variety,” the court said, because the appellants had
    “already won.” Id.
    Flanigan’s Enterprises is distinct at every turn. Whereas the ordinance at issue in
    that case had never been enforced, and had been publicly retracted, here the Board
    unquestionably applied its policy against Grimm. To this day, the Board and Grimm
    “vigorously contest” the legality of the bathroom policy as applied to Grimm. See Chafin,
    
    133 S. Ct. at 1024
     (holding that a case was not moot when the parties continued to
    “vigorously contest the question of where their daughter w[ould] be raised”). Unlike the
    Eleventh Circuit in Flanigan’s Enterprise, we are presented with a “live controversy,” Hall
    v. Beals, 
    396 U.S. 45
    , 48 (1969), that is “likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial
    decision,” Lewis v. Cont’l Bank Corp., 
    494 U.S. 472
    , 477 (1990). As seen by this drawn-
    out litigation, it will only be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.
    29
    B. Administrative Exhaustion of School Records Decision
    Second, the Board asserts that Grimm was required to exhaust his administrative
    remedies by requesting a hearing after he learned of the Board’s final decision. “Where
    relief is available from an administrative agency, the plaintiff is ordinarily required to
    pursue that avenue of redress before proceeding to the courts; and until that recourse is
    exhausted, suit is premature and must be dismissed.” Reiter v. Cooper, 
    507 U.S. 258
    , 269
    (1993). The Board is correct that the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974
    (FERPA), 20 U.S.C. § 1232g, under which Grimm requested that his records be amended,
    provides for a hearing. See 
    34 C.F.R. § 99.20
    (c) (“If the educational agency or institution
    decides not to amend the record as requested, it shall inform the parent or eligible student
    of its decision and of his or her right to a hearing under § 99.21.”). When read together
    with broader agency principles, the Board believes that FERPA’s regulatory hearing
    provision demands exhaustion.
    In sharp contrast to a statute like the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PLRA),
    which demands “proper exhaustion,” see Woodford v. Ngo, 
    548 U.S. 81
    , 93 (2006), the
    FERPA says nothing about exhausting administrative remedies. Cf. PLRA, 42 U.S.C.
    § 1997e(a) (“No action shall be brought . . . until such administrative remedies as are
    available are exhausted.”). Facing Congressional silence, rather than an express exhaustion
    provision, “sound judicial discretion governs.” McCarthy v. Madigan, 
    503 U.S. 140
    , 144
    (1992), superseded on other grounds by statute, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a).
    Even when considering a different education statute with an explicit exhaustion
    requirement, the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), 
    20 U.S.C. § 1415
    (l),
    30
    the Supreme Court held that its exhaustion requirement is not implicated when the
    gravamen of the suit is disability discrimination in violation of other federal laws, rather
    than a more direct violation of the IDEA itself. See Fry v. Napoleon Cmty. Schs., 
    137 S. Ct. 743
    , 755 (2017). And here, the “gravamen” of Grimm’s suit is discrimination, rather
    than technical violations of the FERPA. See Fry, 
    137 S. Ct. at 755
    . 7 Grimm is not
    complaining that the Board failed to follow the FERPA, but rather that it acted in a
    discriminatory manner when it refused to amend his records.
    We may ask ourselves what benefit a hearing could have provided Grimm, when
    the Board continues to deny his request in the face of both a court order stating that his sex
    is male and a declaration from the State Registrar affirming the validity of his new birth
    certificate. If the FERPA ever implicitly demands such complete exhaustion, it does not
    do so in a discrimination case such as this one.
    IV. Grimm’s Equal Protection Claim
    Holding that Grimm’s challenges to the bathroom policy are not moot, and that he
    need not have strictly exhausted his administrative remedies as to his school records, we
    turn to the merits of his claims, beginning with his constitutional claim that both the
    7
    The Board cites one case that, in its view, suggests that FERPA has an exhaustion
    requirement. But that case holds only that the student must at least provide the school with
    documentation of a gender change before suing. See Johnston v. Univ. of Pittsburgh of
    Com. Sys. of Higher Educ., 
    97 F. Supp. 3d 657
    , 663 (W.D. Pa. 2015) (rejecting transgender
    student’s claims arising out of the school’s failure to amend his records because the student
    had not presented a court order or birth certificate, and never followed through).
    31
    restroom policy and the failure to amend his school records violated equal protection, as
    applied to him.
    We address the Board’s two challenged actions in turn. In doing so, we review the
    district court’s grant of summary judgment to Grimm de novo. See Bostic v. Schaefer, 
    760 F.3d 352
    , 370 (4th Cir. 2014). Summary judgment is only appropriate when there is “no
    genuine dispute as to any material fact” and “the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law.” Ret. Comm. of DAK Ams. LLC v. Brewer, 
    867 F.3d 471
    , 479 (4th Cir. 2017)
    (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a)).
    A. The Board’s Restroom Policy
    To analyze Grimm’s as-applied constitutional challenge to the Board’s restroom
    policy, we must begin with the equal protection framework. The Equal Protection Clause
    of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that “[n]o State shall . . . deny to any person within
    its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. It is
    “essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike.” City of
    Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 
    473 U.S. 432
    , 439 (1985). The Equal Protection Clause
    protects us not just from state-imposed classifications, but also from “intentional and
    arbitrary discrimination.” See Vill. of Willowbrook v. Olech, 
    528 U.S. 562
    , 564 (2000) (per
    curiam) (quoting Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Dakota Cty., 
    260 U.S. 441
    , 445 (1923)); see also
    Jack M. Balkin & Reva B. Siegel, The American Civil Rights Tradition: Anticlassification
    or Antisubordination?, 
    58 U. Miami L. Rev. 9
     (2003) (explaining that the Equal Protection
    Clause contains both anticlassification and antisubordination principles). Put another way,
    32
    state action is unconstitutional when it creates “arbitrary or irrational” distinctions between
    classes of people out of “a bare . . . desire to harm a politically unpopular group.”
    Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at
    446–47 (quoting U.S. Dep’t of Agric. v. Moreno, 
    413 U.S. 528
    , 534
    (1973)); see also United States v. Virginia, 
    518 U.S. 515
    , 534 (1996) (sex-based
    classifications “may not be used, as they once were, to create or perpetuate the legal, social,
    and economic inferiority of women” (citation omitted)).
    When considering an equal protection claim, we first determine what level of
    scrutiny applies; then, we ask whether the law or policy at issue survives such scrutiny.
    For the reasons that follow, we conclude that heightened scrutiny applies to Grimm’s claim
    because the bathroom policy rests on sex-based classifications and because transgender
    people constitute at least a quasi-suspect class. Therefore, to withstand judicial scrutiny,
    the Board’s bathroom policy must be “substantially related to a sufficiently important
    governmental interest.” See Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at 441
    . Because we hold that the Board’s
    policy as applied to Grimm is not substantially related to the important objective of
    protecting student privacy, we affirm summary judgment to Grimm.
    1.
    In determining what level of scrutiny applies to a plaintiff’s equal protection claim,
    we look to the basis of the distinction between the classes of persons. See generally United
    States v. Carolene Products Co., 
    304 U.S. 144
    , 152 n.4 (1938). Representing two ends of
    the scrutiny spectrum, most classifications are generally benign and are upheld so long as
    they are “rationally related to a legitimate state interest,” Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at 440
    ,
    33
    whereas race-based classifications are “inherently suspect” and must be “strictly
    scrutinized,” Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 
    515 U.S. 200
    , 223–24 (1995) (internal
    quotation mark omitted).
    Sex is somewhere in the middle, constituting a quasi-suspect class. Sex 8 is only
    quasi-suspect because, although it “frequently bears no relation to the ability to perform or
    contribute to society,’” Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at
    440–41 (quoting Frontiero v. Richardson,
    
    411 U.S. 677
    , 686 (1973) (plurality opinion)), the Supreme Court has recognized “inherent
    differences” between the biological sexes that might provide appropriate justification for
    distinctions, see Virginia, 
    518 U.S. at
    534 (citing, as examples of appropriate sex-based
    distinctions, “compensat[ing] women for particular economic disabilities” and
    “promot[ing] equal employment opportunity” (internal quotation marks omitted)); see also
    Tuan Anh Nguyen v. I.N.S., 
    533 U.S. 53
    , 73 (2001) (holding that less burdensome
    citizenship application requirements for the child of a citizen mother than that of a citizen
    father withstands intermediate scrutiny, in part because “[t]o fail to acknowledge even our
    most basic biological differences—such as the fact that a mother must be present at birth
    but the father need not be—risks making the guarantee of equal protection superficial, and
    so disserving it”).
    8
    We acknowledge that the Supreme Court has, in certain equal protection cases,
    used both the terms “gender” and “sex” interchangeably. See, e.g., Miss. Univ. for Women
    v. Hogan, 
    458 U.S. 718
     (1982); Virginia, 
    518 U.S. at 515
    . Therefore, Grimm has preserved
    an argument that transgender individuals necessarily fall under this line of cases based on
    gender discrimination. Because we need not reach this question in order to resolve
    Grimm’s appeal, we treat this line of cases on perhaps its narrower terms—that is, as
    referring to classifications based on biological sex.
    34
    Because sex-based classifications are quasi-suspect, they are subject to a form of
    heightened scrutiny. Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at
    440–41. Specifically, they are subject to
    intermediate scrutiny, meaning that they “fail[] unless [they are] substantially related to a
    sufficiently important governmental interest.” See 
    id. at 441
    . To survive intermediate
    scrutiny, the state must provide an “exceedingly persuasive justification” for its
    classification. See Virginia, 
    518 U.S. at 534
    .
    a.
    On its face, the Board’s policy creates sex-based classifications for restrooms. It
    states that the school district will “provide male and female restroom and locker room
    facilities in its schools, and the use of said facilities shall be limited to the corresponding
    biological genders.” J.A. 775. The only logical reading is that “corresponding biological
    genders” refers back to “male and female.” And, although the Board did not define
    “biological gender,” it has defended its policy by taking the position that it will rely on the
    sex marker on the student’s birth certificate. We agree with the Seventh and now Eleventh
    Circuits that when a “School District decides which bathroom a student may use based
    upon the sex listed on the student’s birth certificate,” the policy necessarily rests on a sex
    classification.   See Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1051 (applying heightened scrutiny to a
    transgender student’s equal protection claim regarding a bathroom policy); see also Adams
    ex. rel. Kasper v. Sch. Bd. of St. Johns Cty., No. 18-13592, 
    2020 WL 4561817
    , at *5 (11th
    Cir. Aug. 7, 2020) (same). As in Whitaker, such a policy “cannot be stated without
    35
    referencing sex.” See id.; accord M.A.B., 286 F. Supp. 3d at 719. On that ground alone,
    heightened scrutiny should apply.
    Moreover, and as the district court held, “Grimm was subjected to sex
    discrimination because he was viewed as failing to conform to the sex stereotype
    propagated by the Policy.” Grimm, 302 F. Supp. 3d at 750. Many courts, including the
    Seventh and Eleventh Circuits, have held that various forms of discrimination against
    transgender people constitute sex-based discrimination for purposes of the Equal
    Protection Clause because such policies punish transgender persons for gender non-
    conformity, thereby relying on sex stereotypes. See, e.g., Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1051
    (holding that the School District’s bathroom policy “treat[ed] transgender students . . . who
    fail to conform to the sex-based stereotypes associated with their assigned sex at birth,
    differently”); Glenn v. Brumby, 
    663 F.3d 1312
    , 1319 (11th Cir. 2011) (“Ever since the
    Supreme Court began to apply heightened scrutiny to sex-based classifications, its
    consistent purpose has been to eliminate discrimination on the basis of gender
    stereotypes.”); Smith v. City of Salem, 
    378 F.3d 566
    , 573–75; 578 (6th Cir. 2004) (applying
    a sex-stereotyping theory, albeit without mentioning a level of scrutiny, and holding that
    the transgender plaintiff stated a sex discrimination claim in violation of equal protection);
    M.A.B., 286 F. Supp. 3d at 719 (holding that a school locker room policy was subject to
    heightened scrutiny because it “classifie[d] [the plaintiff] differently on the basis of his
    transgender status, and, as a result, subject[ed] him to sex stereotyping”); see also Doe 1 v.
    Trump, 
    275 F. Supp. 3d 167
    , 210 (D.D.C. 2017) (military bans on transgender persons
    subject to heightened scrutiny because they “punish individuals for failing to adhere to
    36
    gender stereotypes”), vacated sub nom. Doe 2 v. Shanahan, 755 F. App’x 19 (D.C. Cir.
    2019); Stone v. Trump, 
    280 F. Supp. 3d 747
    , 768 (D. Md. 2017) (adopting Doe 1 rationale);
    Norsworthy v. Beard, 
    87 F. Supp. 3d 1104
    , 1119 (N.D. Cal. 2015) (holding that
    discrimination on the basis of transgender status is subject to intermediate scrutiny in part
    under sex-stereotyping theory). 9 In so holding, these courts have recognized a central tenet
    of equal protection in sex discrimination cases: that states “must not rely on overbroad
    generalizations” regarding the sexes. See Virginia, 
    518 U.S. at 533
    ; see also Miss. Univ.
    for Women, 
    458 U.S. at
    724–25 (“Although the test for determining the validity of a gender-
    based classification is straightforward, it must be applied free of fixed notions concerning
    the roles and abilities of males and females.”).
    For each of these independent reasons, we hold that the Board’s policy constitutes
    sex-based discrimination as to Grimm and is subject to intermediate scrutiny. And
    although the Board raises two related counterarguments in an effort to convince us
    otherwise, we reject them both.
    First, the Board contends that all students are treated the same, regardless of sex,
    because the policy applies to everyone equally. See Reply Br. 16 (noting that any student
    may use a “private, single-stall restroom,” and “[n]o student is permitted to use the
    9
    As relied on by the Board, one 2015 district court case goes the other way,
    Johnston, 97 F. Supp. 3d at 671, but the same district court later chose not to follow that
    decision, see Evancho v. Pine–Richland Sch. Dist., 
    237 F. Supp. 3d 267
    , 287 (W.D. Pa.
    2017) (“Johnston also acutely recognized that cases involving transgender status implicate
    a fast-changing and rapidly-evolving set of issues that must be considered in their own
    factual contexts. To be sure, Johnston's prognostication of that reality was profoundly
    accurate.” (citation omitted)).
    37
    restroom of the opposite sex”). But that is like saying that racially segregated bathrooms
    treated everyone equally, because everyone was prohibited from using the bathroom of a
    different race. No one would suppose that also providing a “race neutral” bathroom option
    would have solved the deeply stigmatizing and discriminatory nature of racial segregation;
    so too here. Rather, the Board said what it meant: “students with gender identity issues
    shall be provided an alternative appropriate private facility.” J.A. 775. The single-stall
    restrooms were created for “students with gender identity issues.” And by “students,” the
    Board apparently meant Grimm, as, per its own deposition witness, it “only ha[d] a sample
    size of one.” J.A. 458. The Board suggests that this purpose insulates its policy from
    intermediate scrutiny, because it shows that the policy “relies solely on transgender status.”
    See Opening Br. 46. But again, how does the Board determine transgender status, if not
    by looking to what it calls “biological gender”?
    Second, the Board contends that even if the policy necessarily involves sex-based
    discrimination, it cannot violate equal protection because Grimm is not similarly situated
    to cisgender boys. Instead, it asks us to compare Grimm’s treatment under the policy to
    the treatment of students it would consider to be “biological” girls, because Grimm’s
    “choice of gender identity did not cause biological changes in his body, and Grimm
    remain[ed] biologically female.” Opening Br. 46. But embedded in the Board’s framing
    is its own bias: it believes that Grimm’s gender identity is a choice, and it privileges sex-
    assigned-at-birth over Grimm’s medically confirmed, persistent and consistent gender
    identity. The policy itself “recognizes that some students question their gender identities,”
    and states that such students have “gender identity issues.” J.A. 775. Grimm, however,
    38
    did not question his gender identity at all; he knew he was a boy. See Adams ex rel. Kasper
    v. Sch. Bd. of St. Johns Cty., 
    318 F. Supp. 3d 1293
    , 1317 (M.D. Fla. 2018) (“There is no
    evidence to suggest that [the transgender plaintiff’s] identity as a boy is any less consistent,
    persistent and insistent than any other boy.”). The overwhelming thrust of everything in
    the record—from Grimm’s declaration, to his treatment letter, to the amicus briefs—is that
    Grimm was similarly situated to other boys, but was excluded from using the boys restroom
    facilities based on his sex-assigned-at-birth. Adopting the Board’s framing of Grimm’s
    equal protection claim here would only vindicate the Board’s own misconceptions, which
    themselves reflect “stereotypic notions.” See Miss. Univ. for Women, 
    458 U.S. at 725
    (“Care must be taken in ascertaining whether the [state’s] objective itself reflects archaic
    and stereotypic notions.”). 10
    b.
    Alternatively, and as held by the district court in this case, we conclude that
    heightened scrutiny applies because transgender people constitute at least a quasi-suspect
    class.
    Although the Seventh Circuit declined to reach the question of whether heightened
    scrutiny applies to transgender persons in Whitaker, many district courts, including the
    10
    Our dissenting colleague’s opinion reveals why this is so. To avoid a conclusion
    that Grimm was similarly situated to other boys, the dissent fails to “meaningfully reckon
    with what it means for [Grimm] to be a transgender boy.” See Adams, 
    2020 WL 4561817
    ,
    at *2 n.2; see also Dissenting Op. at 93–94. We have been presented with a strong record
    documenting the modern medical understanding of what it means to be transgender, and
    considering that evidence is definitively the role of this Court.
    39
    district court here, have analyzed the relevant factors for determining suspect class status
    and held that transgender people are at least a quasi-suspect class. See Evancho v. Pine–
    Richland Sch. Dist., 
    237 F. Supp. 3d 267
    , 288 (W.D. Pa. 2017) (holding that transgender
    people constitute a quasi-suspect class); Adkins v. City of New York, 
    143 F. Supp. 3d 134
    ,
    139 (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (same); Bd. of Educ. of the Highland Local Sch. Dist. v. U.S. Dep’t
    of Educ., 
    208 F. Supp. 3d 850
    , 873 (S.D. Ohio 2016) (same); M.A.B., 286 F. Supp. 3d at
    718–19 (same); Norsworthy, 87 F. Supp. 3d at 1119 (same); F.V. v. Barron, 
    286 F. Supp. 3d 1131
    , 1145 (D. Idaho 2018) (same); Flack v. Wis. Dep’t of Health Servs., 
    328 F. Supp. 3d 931
    , 951–53 (W.D. Wis. 2018) (explaining in a ruling on a preliminary injunction why
    heightened scrutiny would likely apply to transgender persons). 11 As articulated by one
    district court, “one would be hard-pressed to identify a class of people more discriminated
    against historically or otherwise more deserving of the application of heightened scrutiny
    when singled out for adverse treatment, than transgender people.” Flack, 328 F. Supp. 3d
    at 953. Moreover, the Ninth Circuit recently joined the many district courts in holding that
    transgender people constitute a quasi-suspect class. See Karnoski v. Trump, 
    926 F.3d 1180
    ,
    1200 (9th Cir. 2019) (affirming the district court’s reasoning as to why transgender people
    are a quasi-suspect class). Only one court of appeals decision holding otherwise remains
    good law, but it reluctantly followed a since-overruled Ninth Circuit opinion. See Brown
    v. Zavaras, 
    63 F.3d 967
    , 971 (10th Cir. 1995) (noting that “[r]ecent research concluding
    11
    The Eleventh Circuit was not presented with this question in Adams because the
    parties agreed that heightened scrutiny applied to the plaintiff’s claim based on that
    Circuit’s precedent in Glenn, 663 F.3d at 1319. See Adams, 
    2020 WL 4561817
    , at *4.
    40
    that sexual identity may be biological suggests reevaluation of [Holloway v. Arthur
    Andersen & Co. 
    566 F.2d 659
     (9th Cir. 1977),]” but following it regardless because the
    plaintiff’s allegations were “too conclusory to allow proper analysis”).
    Engaging with the suspect class test, it is apparent that transgender persons
    constitute a quasi-suspect class. We consider four factors to determine whether a group of
    people constitutes a suspect or quasi-suspect class. First, we consider whether the class
    has historically been subject to discrimination. Bowen v. Gilliard, 
    483 U.S. 587
    , 602
    (1987). Second, we determine if the class has a defining characteristic that bears a relation
    to its ability to perform or contribute to society. Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at
    440–41. Third, we
    look to whether the class may be defined as a discrete group by obvious, immutable, or
    distinguishing characteristics. Bowen, 
    483 U.S. at 602
    . And fourth, we consider whether
    the class is a minority lacking political power. 
    Id.
     Each factor is readily satisfied here.
    First, take historical discrimination. Discrimination against transgender people
    takes many forms. Like the district court, we provide but a few examples to illustrate the
    broader picture. See Grimm, 302 F. Supp. 3d at 749 (“[T]here is no doubt that transgender
    individuals historically have been subjected to discrimination on the basis of their gender
    identity, including high rates of violence and discrimination in education, employment,
    housing, and healthcare access.” (collecting cases)). As explained in the Brief of the
    Medical Amici, being transgender was pathologized for many years. As recently as the
    DSM-3 and DSM-4, one could receive a diagnosis of “transsexualism” or “gender identity
    disorder,” “indicat[ing] that the clinical problem was the discordant gender identity.” See
    John W. Barnhill, Introduction, in DSM-5 Clinical Cases 237–38 (John W. Barnhill ed.,
    41
    2014). Whereas “homosexuality” was removed from the DSM in 1973, “gender identity
    disorder” was not removed until the DSM-5 was published in 2013. See Kevin M. Barry
    et al., A Bare Desire to Harm: Transgender People and the Equal Protection Clause, 
    57 B.C. L. Rev. 507
    , 509–10, 517 (2016). What is more, even though being transgender was
    marked as a mental illness, coverage for transgender persons was excluded from the
    Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) after a floor debate in which two senators
    referred to these diagnoses as “sexual behavior disorders.” See Barry et al., supra, at 510;
    see also 
    42 U.S.C. § 12211
    (b)(1). The following year, Congress added an identical
    exclusion to the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, “stripping transgender people of civil rights
    protections they had enjoyed for nearly twenty years.” Barry et al., supra, at 556; see also
    H.R. Rep. No. 102-973, at 158 (1992).
    The transgender community also suffers from high rates of employment
    discrimination, economic instability, and homelessness.        According to the National
    Transgender Discrimination Survey (NTDS), 12 people who are transgender are twice as
    likely as the general population to have experienced unemployment. When employed, 97%
    of NTDS respondents reported experiencing some form of mistreatment at work, or “hiding
    their gender transition to avoid such treatment.” Barry et al., supra, at 552. NTDS
    respondents were “four times more likely than the general population to have a household
    12
    The NTDS is a major national survey on transgender discrimination. Along with
    its successor, the USTS, the NTDS has been relied upon by many amici to this case, as
    well as other courts. See, e.g., Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1051 (citing to the NTDS); M.A.B.,
    286 F. Supp. 3d at 720 (citing to both the NTDS and the USTS); Adkins, 143 F. Supp. 3d
    at 139 (relying on the NTDS).
    42
    income of less than $10,000 per year,” and two and a half times more likely to have
    experienced homelessness. Id.
    That is not all. Transgender people frequently experience harassment in places such
    as schools (78%), medical settings (28%), and retail stores (37%), and they also experience
    physical assault in places such as schools (35%) and places of public accommodation (8%).
    See id. at 553. Indeed, transgender people are more likely to be the victim of violent crimes.
    Id. So, in 2009, Congress expanded federal protections against hate crimes to include
    crimes based on gender identity. Id. at 555. In so doing, the House Judiciary Committee
    recognized the “extreme bias against gender nonconformity” and the “particularly violent”
    crimes perpetrated against transgender persons. See id.
    Of course, current measures and policies continue to target transgender persons for
    differential treatment. Without opining on the legality of such measures, we note that
    policies precluding transgender persons from military service, even after the repeal of
    “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” see Gary J. Gates & Jody L. Herman, Transgender Military
    Service in the United States 1 (2014), have recently been re-implemented as to most
    transgender service members. And this year, the Governor of Idaho signed into law a bill
    that would ban transgender individuals from changing the gender marker on their birth
    certificates, as Virginia law allowed Grimm to do. Further still, the Department of Health
    and Human Services recently issued a final rule redefining “sex discrimination” for
    purposes of Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act to encompass only biological sex,
    and not gender identity. The list surely goes on.
    43
    Next, we turn to the second factor—whether the class has a defining characteristic
    that “bears [a] relation to ability to perform or contribute to society.’” Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at
    440–41 (quoting Frontiero, 441 U.S. at 677). Being transgender bears no such relation.
    Seventeen of our foremost medical, mental health, and public health organizations agree
    that being transgender “implies no impairment in judgment, stability, reliability, or general
    social or vocational capabilities.” See Br. of Medical Amici 6 (quoting Am. Psychiatric
    Ass’n, Position Statement on Discrimination Against Transgender and Gender Variant
    Individuals 1 (2012)).     Although some transgender individuals experience gender
    dysphoria, and that could cause some level of impairment, not all transgender persons have
    gender dysphoria, and gender dysphoria is treatable. See id. “Importantly, ‘transgender’
    and ‘impairment’ are not synonymous.” Barry et al., supra, at 558.
    That leaves the third and fourth factors. As to the third factor, transgender people
    constitute a discrete group with immutable characteristics: Recall that gender identity is
    formulated for most people at a very early age, and, as our medical amici explain, being
    transgender is not a choice. Rather, it is as natural and immutable as being cisgender. Br.
    of Medical Amici 7. But unlike being cisgender, being transgender marks the group for
    different treatment.
    Fourth and finally, transgender people constitute a minority lacking political power.
    Comprising approximately 0.6% of the adult population in the United States, transgender
    individuals are certainly a minority. Even considering the low percentage of the population
    that is transgender, transgender persons are underrepresented in every branch of
    government. It was not until 2010 that the first openly transgender judges took their place
    44
    on their states’ benches, see First Two Openly Transgender Judges in the U.S. Appointed
    Last       Month,        Women’s         Law            Project     (Dec.       7,        2010),
    https://www.womenslawproject.org/2010/12/07/first-two-openly-transgender-judges-in-
    the-u-s-appointed-last-month/, and we know of no openly transgender federal judges.
    There is a similar dearth of openly transgender persons serving in the executive and
    legislative branches. In 2017, nine openly transgender individuals were elected to office—
    more than doubling the total number of transgender individuals in any elected office across
    the country. See Brooke Sopelsa, Meet 2017’s Newly Elected Transgender Officials, NBC
    News (Dec. 28, 2017, 9:06 AM EST), https://www.nbcnews.com/feature/nbc-out/meet-
    2017-s-newly-elected-transgender-officials-n832826;          see   also     Logan    S.   Casey,
    Transgender Candidates, https://www.loganscasey.com/trans-candidates-project. And the
    examples of discrimination cited under the first factor affirm what we intuitively know:
    Transgender people constitute a minority that has not yet been able to meaningfully
    vindicate their rights through the political process.
    The Board does not, and truly cannot, contend that transgender people do not
    constitute a quasi-suspect class under these four factors. Instead, it counsels judicial
    modesty, suggesting that we are admonished not to name new suspect classes. See
    Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at
    441–42 (“[W]here individuals in the group affected by a law have
    distinguishing characteristics relevant to interests the State has the authority to implement,
    the courts have been very reluctant, as they should be in our federal system and with our
    respect for the separation of powers, to closely scrutinize legislative choices as to whether,
    how, and to what extent those interests should be pursued.”); see also Johnston, 
    97 F. Supp. 45
    3d at 668–69. But no hard-and-fast rule prevents this Court from concluding that a quasi-
    suspect class exits, nor have Cleburne’s dicta prevented many other courts from so
    concluding.
    For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the Board’s restroom policy constitutes sex-
    based discrimination and, independently, that transgender persons constitute a quasi-
    suspect class.
    2.
    Whether because the policy constitutes sex-based discrimination or because
    transgender persons are a quasi-suspect class, we apply heightened scrutiny to hold that the
    Board’s policy is not substantially related to its important interest in protecting students’
    privacy. 13
    No one questions that students have a privacy interest in their body when they go to
    the bathroom. But the Board ignores the reality of how a transgender child uses the
    bathroom: “by entering a stall and closing the door.” Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1052; see also
    Adams, 318 F. Supp. 3d at 1296, 1314 (“When he goes into a restroom, [the transgender
    student] enters a stall, closes the door, relieves himself, comes out of the stall, washes his
    hands, and leaves.”). Grimm used the boys restrooms for seven weeks without incident.
    When the community became aware that he was doing so, privacy in the boys restrooms
    actually increased, because the Board installed privacy strips and screens between the
    urinals. Given these additional precautions, the Board’s Rule 30(b)(6) deposition witness
    13
    Grimm argues on appeal that he wins even under rational basis review. In light
    of our holding above, we need not analyze his claim under that level of review.
    46
    could not identify any other privacy concern. The Board does not present any evidence
    that a transgender student, let alone Grimm, is likely to be a peeping tom, rather than
    minding their own business like any other student.            Put another way, the record
    demonstrates that bodily privacy of cisgender boys using the boys restrooms did not
    increase when Grimm was banned from those restrooms. Therefore, the Board’s policy
    was not substantially related to its purported goal.
    The insubstantiality of the Board’s fears has been borne out in school districts across
    the country, including other school districts in Virginia. Nearly half of Virginia’s public-
    school students attend schools prohibiting discrimination or harassment based on gender
    identity. See Br. of Virginia School Board Amici 4. Although community members
    espoused similar fears at school board meetings before the anti-discrimination measures,
    none of those fears have materialized. Id. at 17–19. Those Virginia school boards have
    had no difficulty implementing trans-inclusive bathroom policies and explain that they
    “have seen none of the negative consequences predicted by opponents of such policies.”
    Id. at 5.
    The same can be said across the country. See Br. of School Administrator Amici
    18–24 (explaining that in amici’s states, the concerns raised by the Board have not
    materialized). One school administrator in Kentucky, who was previously against allowing
    transgender students to use the bathroom corresponding to their gender, explained that his
    experience with shifting the policy demonstrated that all the concerns were
    “philosophical.” Id. at 17. In these administrators’ experiences, “showing respect for each
    student’s gender identity supports the dignity and worth of all students by affording them
    47
    equal opportunities to participate and learn.” Id. at 32. And the National PTA, GLSEN,
    American School Counselor Association, and National Association of School
    Psychologists similarly assure us that the experiences of schools and school districts across
    the country “put the lie to supposed legitimate justifications for restroom discrimination:
    preventing students who pretend to be transgender from obtaining access to opposite-
    gender restrooms and protecting privacy.” Br. of Education Association Amici 6.
    We thus agree with the district court’s apt conclusion that “the Board’s privacy
    argument ‘is based upon sheer conjecture and abstraction.’” Grimm, 400 F. Supp. 3d at
    461 (quoting Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1052). The Board cites to no incident, either in
    Gloucester County or elsewhere. It ignores the growing number of school districts across
    the country who are successfully allowing transgender students such as Grimm to use the
    bathroom matching their gender identity, without incident. And it ignores its own seven-
    week experience with doing the same in Gloucester County High School. Notably, both
    the Third and Ninth Circuits have now rejected privacy-related challenges brought by
    cisgender students to the shared use of restrooms with transgender students of the opposite
    biological sex. See Parents for Privacy v. Barr, 
    949 F.3d 1210
     (9th Cir. 2020); Doe ex rel.
    Doe v. Boyertown Area Sch. Dist., 
    897 F.3d 518
     (3rd Cir. 2018). And before this opinion
    was filed, the Eleventh Circuit, applying heightened scrutiny to a transgender student’s
    equal protection challenge to his high school’s bathroom policy, similarly held that
    application of the policy did not withstand such scrutiny due, in part, to the hypothetical
    nature of the asserted privacy concerns. See Adams, 
    2020 WL 4561817
    , at *4–5, 7.
    48
    Moreover, we conclude that the Board’s policy is “marked by misconception and
    prejudice” against Grimm. See Tuan Anh Nguyen, 
    533 U.S. at 73
    . The Board’s proposed
    policy was concocted amidst a flurry of emails from apparently concerned community
    members and adopted in the context of two heated Board meetings filled with vitriolic, off-
    the-cuff comments, such as referring to Grimm as a “freak.” Parents threatened to vote out
    the Board members if they allowed Grimm to continue to use the boys restrooms. One
    would be hard-pressed to look at the record and think that the Board sought to understand
    Grimm’s transgender status or his medical need to socially transition, as identified by his
    treating physician. Rather, in a moment when he was finally able to affirm his gender, the
    Board treated Grimm as “questioning” his identity and lumped his in with what it
    considered to be “gender identity issues.”
    By relying on so-called “biological gender,” the Board successfully excluded
    Grimm from the boys restrooms. But it did not create a policy that it could apply to other
    students, such as students who had fully transitioned but had not yet changed their sex on
    their birth certificate. As demonstrated by the record and amici such as interACT, the
    Board’s policy is not readily applicable to other students who, for whatever reason, do not
    have genitalia that match the binary sex listed on their birth certificate—let alone that
    matches their gender identity. See Br. for Amicus Curiae interACT: Advocates for Intersex
    Youth in Supp. of Pl.-Appellee 20–23. Instead, the Board reacted to what it considered a
    problem, Grimm’s presence, by isolating him from his peers.
    49
    B. The Board’s Failure to Amend Grimm’s School Records
    Having held that the Board’s bathroom policy violated Grimm’s equal protection
    rights, we easily conclude that the Board’s continued refusal to update his school records
    similarly violates those rights. 14 Unlike students whose gender matches their sex-assigned-
    at-birth, Grimm is unable to obtain a transcript indicating that he is male. The Board’s
    decision is not substantially related to its important interest in maintaining accurate records
    because Grimm’s legal gender in the state of Virginia is male, not female.
    The Board’s only rebuttal is that Grimm did not provide a lawfully obtained
    amended birth certificate. Recall that Grimm received a state-court order changing his
    gender to “male,” and he then presented the school with his amended birth certificate. The
    Board complains that the copy said “VOID,” that it did not say the word “amended,” and
    that the Gloucester County Circuit Court granted Grimm’s motion to change his sex to
    male based on chest reconstruction surgery. As found by the district court, however: “It is
    obvious from the face of the amended birth certificate that the photocopy presented to the
    Board was marked ‘void’ because it was a copy of a document printed on security paper,
    not because it was fabricated.” Grimm, 400 F. Supp. 3d at 458 n.6. Moreover, while the
    Board may disagree with the Gloucester County Circuit Court’s order granting Grimm’s
    motion to change his sex to male because it believes that chest reconstruction does not
    14
    The dissent does not address Grimm’s school records, presumably because it
    would hold that Grimm is not similarly situated to other boys—full stop. Yet Virginia
    recognized Grimm as male and amended his birth certificate. Although preserving sex-
    assigned-at-birth separated restrooms may rouse more sentiment, the less-contentious
    school records issue sheds light on why application of such a restroom policy to
    transgender students is problematic.
    50
    classify as gender reassignment surgery under Virginia law, we must give full faith and
    credit to that state court’s order, which cannot be collaterally attacked in this appeal. See
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1738
    . And in the face of the declaration of State Registrar and Director of the
    Division of Vital Records assuring that she issued Grimm a valid amended birth certificate,
    we grow weary of the Board’s repeated arguments that it received anything less than an
    official document.
    *      *       *
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment
    to Grimm on his equal protection claim.
    V. Grimm’s Title IX Claim
    We next address Grimm’s claim that the Board’s restroom policy and refusal to
    amend his school records also violated Title IX. Title IX provides that “[n]o person . . .
    shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or
    be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal
    financial assistance.” 
    20 U.S.C. § 1681
    (a). To grant summary judgment to Grimm on his
    Title IX claim, we must find (1) that he was excluded from participation in an education
    program “on the basis of sex”; (2) that the educational institution was receiving federal
    financial assistance at the time; and (3) that improper discrimination caused him harm. See
    Preston v. Va. ex rel. New River Cmty. Coll., 
    31 F.3d 203
    , 206 (4th Cir. 1994). There is
    no question that the Board received federal funding or that restrooms are part of the
    51
    education program. At issue in this case is whether the Board acted “on the basis of sex,”
    and if so, whether that was unlawful discrimination that harmed Grimm.
    A. The Board’s Restroom Policy
    We first address the restroom policy. After the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
    Bostock v. Clayton County, 
    140 S. Ct. 1731
     (2020), we have little difficulty holding that a
    bathroom policy precluding Grimm from using the boys restrooms discriminated against
    him “on the basis of sex.” Although Bostock interprets Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of
    1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e–2(a)(1), it guides our evaluation of claims under Title IX. See
    Jennings v. Univ. of N.C., 
    482 F.3d 686
    , 695 (4th Cir. 2007); cf. Fitzgerald v. Barnstable
    Sch. Comm., 
    555 U.S. 246
    , 258 (2009) (“Congress modeled Title IX after Title VI . . . and
    passed Title IX with the explicit understanding that it would be interpreted as Title VI
    was.” (citation omitted)). In Bostock, the Supreme Court held that discrimination against
    a person for being transgender is discrimination “on the basis of sex.” As the Supreme
    Court noted, “it is impossible to discriminate against a person for being homosexual or
    transgender without discriminating against that individual based on sex.” Bostock, 140 S.
    Ct. at 1741. That is because the discriminator is necessarily referring to the individual’s
    sex to determine incongruence between sex and gender, making sex a but-for cause for the
    discriminator’s actions. See id. at 1741–42. As explained above in the equal protection
    discussion, the Board could not exclude Grimm from the boys bathrooms without
    referencing his “biological gender” under the policy, which it has defined as the sex marker
    on his birth certificate. Even if the Board’s primary motivation in implementing or
    52
    applying the policy was to exclude Grimm because he is transgender, his sex remains a
    but-for cause for the Board’s actions. Therefore, the Board’s policy excluded Grimm from
    the boys restrooms “on the basis of sex.” 15
    We similarly have no difficulty holding that Grimm was harmed. As the district
    court found:
    In his Declaration, Mr. Grimm described under oath feeling stigmatized and
    isolated by having to use separate restroom facilities. His walk to the
    restroom felt like a “walk of shame.” He avoided using the restroom as much
    as possible and developed painful urinary tract infections that distracted him
    from his class work. This stress “was unbearable” and the resulting suicidal
    thoughts he suffered led to his hospitalization at Virginia Commonwealth
    University Medical Center Critical Care Hospital.
    Grimm, 400 F. Supp. 3d at 458 (citations omitted). Grimm also “broke down sobbing”
    when a restroom was unavailable after school, and he could not attend football games
    without worrying about where he would use the restroom. See id. at 459.
    15
    We pause to note another theory under which Grimm may have been
    discriminated “on the basis of sex.” In Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, the Supreme Court
    held that sex stereotyping constitutes discrimination on the basis of gender for purposes of
    Title VII. See 
    490 U.S. 228
    , 250 (1989) (“In the specific context of sex stereotyping, an
    employer who acts on the basis of a belief that a woman cannot be aggressive, or that she
    must not be, has acted on the basis of gender.”). Various circuits have applied Price
    Waterhouse to Title VII gender stereotyping claims in the LGBTQ+ context, although we
    have not. Most notably, in Hively v. Ivy Tech Community College, the Seventh Circuit
    applied the logic of Price Waterhouse and held in an en banc opinion that a lesbian woman
    who was fired could state a Title VII gender-stereotyping claim. See 
    853 F.3d 339
    , 351–
    52 (7th Cir. 2017) (en banc). The district court similarly relied on Price Waterhouse below.
    Grimm, 302 F. Supp. at 750. For the reasons discussed above in the equal protection
    section of our opinion, we agree that the policy punished Grimm for not conforming to his
    sex-assigned-at-birth. But having had the benefit of Bostock’s guidance, we need not
    address whether Grimm’s treatment was also “on the basis of sex” for purposes of Title IX
    under a Price Waterhouse sex-stereotyping theory.
    53
    The Board does not provide evidence contradicting Grimm’s or his mother’s
    declarations. Rather, it has quibbled with the amount of harm Grimm felt, asserting below,
    for example, that he needed a medical expert to prove urinary tract infections. But in a
    nominal damages case, Grimm’s harm need not be precisely calculated. For summary
    judgment purposes, it matters only that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to
    whether the bathroom policy harmed Grimm. There is no question that Grimm suffered
    legally cognizable harm for at least two reasons.
    First, on a practical level, the physical locations of the alternative restrooms were
    inconvenient and caused Grimm harm. The nurse’s room was far from his classes, as were
    the three single-user restrooms. The distance caused him to be late for class or away from
    class for longer than students and teachers perceived as normal. And when he attended
    after-school events, he had to be driven away just to use the restroom.
    Second, in a country with a history of racial segregation, we know that
    “[s]egregation not only makes for physical inconveniences, but it does something
    spiritually to an individual.” Martin Luther King, Jr., “Some Things We Must Do,”
    Address Delivered at the Second Annual Institute on Nonviolence and Social Change at
    Holt Street Baptist Church (Dec. 5, 1957); see also Br. of Amicus Curiae NAACP Legal
    Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc. in Supp. of Pl.-Appellee 7 (outlining the harms and erroneous
    rationales of racial segregation). The stigma of being forced to use a separate restroom is
    likewise sufficient to constitute harm under Title IX, as it “invite[s] more scrutiny and
    attention” from other students, “very publicly brand[ing] all transgender students with a
    scarlet ‘T’.” Boyertown, 897 F.3d at 530 (quoting Whitaker, 858 F.3d at 1045); see also
    54
    id. (rejecting the suggestion that transgender students be offered single-stall restrooms,
    rather than be allowed to use the regular restrooms matching their gender identity). Even
    Grimm’s high school principal “understood [Grimm’s] perception” that the policy sent the
    following message: Gavin was not welcome. J.A. 405–06. Although the principal assumed
    some students may have used that restroom, Grimm never saw anyone else use the
    restrooms created for students with “gender identity issues.” The resulting emotional and
    dignitary harm to Grimm is legally cognizable under Title IX. See Adams, 
    2020 WL 4561817
    , at *13, 16 (holding that a transgender student’s “psychological and dignitary
    harm” caused by a school bathroom policy was legally cognizable under Title IX).
    Having determined that Grimm was harmed, we finally turn to the heart of the Title
    IX question in this case: whether the policy unlawfully discriminated against Grimm.
    Bostock expressly does not answer this “sex-separated restroom” question. 140 S. Ct. at
    1753. In the Title IX context, discrimination “mean[s] treating that individual worse than
    others who are similarly situated.” Id. at 1740 (citing Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. v.
    White, 
    548 U.S. 53
    , 59 (2006)). In light of our equal protection discussion above, this
    should sound familiar: Grimm was treated worse than students with whom he was similarly
    situated because he alone could not use the restroom corresponding with his gender. Unlike
    the other boys, he had to use either the girls restroom or a single-stall option. In that sense,
    he was treated worse than similarly situated students.
    Nevertheless, the Board emphasizes a Department of Education implementing
    regulation, 
    34 C.F.R. § 106.33
    , which interprets Title IX to allow for “separate toilet, locker
    room, and shower facilities on the basis of sex,” so long as they are “comparable” to each
    55
    other. But Grimm does not challenge sex-separated restrooms; he challenges the Board’s
    discriminatory exclusion of himself from the sex-separated restroom matching his gender
    identity. See also Adams, 
    2020 WL 4561817
    , at *14 (holding that § 106.33 did not
    preclude a transgender student’s Title IX claim, because he was not challenging sex-
    separated restrooms, but “simply seeking access to the boys’ restroom as a transgender
    boy.”). And the implementing regulation cannot override the statutory prohibition against
    discrimination on the basis of sex. All it suggests is that the act of creating sex-separated
    restrooms in and of itself is not discriminatory—not that, in applying bathroom policies to
    students like Grimm, the Board may rely on its own discriminatory notions of what “sex”
    means. 16 See Adams, 
    2020 WL 4561817
    , at *15 (holding that “nothing in Bostock or the
    language of § 106.33 justifie[d] the School Board’s discrimination” against a male
    transgender student seeking access to the boys restrooms). 17
    16
    So too for the more generic Title IX provision allowing for sex-separated living
    facilities. See 
    20 U.S.C. § 1686
     (Title IX shall not “be construed to prohibit any
    educational institution” to which it applies “from maintaining separate living facilities for
    the different sexes.”). Again, this is a broad statement that sex-separated living facilities
    are not unlawful—not that schools may act in an arbitrary or discriminatory manner when
    dividing students into those sex-separated facilities. In any event, because 
    34 C.F.R. § 106.33
     is more specific to bathrooms, it is where the parties have focused their attention.
    17
    The dissent suggests that Grimm should have challenged Title IX as
    unconstitutional, because Grimm’s use of the boys restrooms would somehow upend sex-
    separated restrooms in schools. See Dissenting Op. at 90. But Grimm does not think that
    sex-separated restrooms are unconstitutional, and neither do we. The dissent’s feared loss
    of sex-separated restrooms has not been borne out in any of the many school districts that
    allow transgender students to use the sex-separated restroom matching their gender
    identity. So it cannot be the physical loss of sex-separated restrooms that the dissent
    laments, but some emotional, intangible loss wrought by the mere presence of transgender
    persons. This type of argument calls to mind recent arguments against gay marriage, to
    (Continued)
    56
    As explained above, Grimm consistently and persistently identified as male. He had
    been clinically diagnosed with gender dysphoria, and his treatment provider identified
    using the boys restrooms as part of the appropriate treatment. Rather than contend with
    Grimm’s serious medical need, the Board relied on its own invented classification,
    “biological gender,” for which it turned to the sex on his birth certificate. And even when
    Grimm provided the school with his amended birth certificate, the Board still denied him
    access to the boys restrooms.
    For these reasons, we hold that the Board’s application of its restroom policy against
    Grimm violated Title IX. 18
    the effect that allowing gay people to marry would “harm marriage as an institution.” See
    Obergefell v. Hodges, 
    135 S. Ct. 2584
    , 2606 (2015). With no “foundation for the
    conclusion” that such “harmful outcomes” would occur, see 
    id.,
     we similarly reject this
    institutional-harm type argument.
    18
    Noting that Title IX was passed under the Spending Clause, the Board also asserts
    that, if ambiguous, we must construe Title IX to allow application of its bathroom policy
    to Grimm in order to give the Board fair notice. See generally Pennhurst State Sch. &
    Hosp. v. Halderman, 
    451 U.S. 1
    , 17 (1981). But Bostock forecloses that “on the basis of
    sex” is ambiguous as to discrimination against transgender persons, and notes that Title
    VII “has repeatedly produced unexpected applications, at least in the view of those on the
    receiving end of them.” See Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1753 (“Congress’s key drafting
    choices—to focus on discrimination against individuals and not merely between groups
    and to hold employers liable whenever sex is a but-for cause of the plaintiff’s injuries—
    virtually guaranteed that unexpected applications would emerge over time.”). So too Title
    IX. And the Board knew or should have known that the separate facilities regulation did
    not override the broader statutory protection against discrimination. We reject the Board’s
    Pennhurst argument.
    57
    B. The Board’s Failure to Amend Grimm’s School Records
    Applying the same framework to the Board’s refusal to update Grimm’s school
    records, we hold that it too violated Title IX. Again, the Board based its decision not to
    update Grimm’s school records on his sex—specifically, his sex as listed on his original
    birth certificate, and as it presupposed him to be. This decision harmed Grimm because
    when he applies to four-year universities, he will be asked for a transcript with a sex marker
    that is incorrect and does not match his other documentation. And this discrimination is
    unlawful because it treats him worse than other similarly situated students, whose records
    reflect their correct sex.
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment on Grimm’s
    Title IX claim, and the relief granted, in full.
    VI. Conclusion
    Grimm’s four years of high school were shaped by his fight to use the restroom that
    matched his consistent and persistent gender identity.         In the face of adults who
    misgendered him and called him names, he spoke with conviction at two Board meetings.
    The solution was apparent: allow Grimm to use the boys restrooms, as he had been doing
    without incident. But instead, the Board implemented a policy that treated Grimm as
    “questioning” his identity and having “issues,” and it sent him to special bathrooms that
    might as well have said “Gavin” on the sign. It did so while increasing privacy in the boys
    bathrooms, after which its own deposition witness could not cite a remaining privacy
    concern. We are left without doubt that the Board acted to protect cisgender boys from
    58
    Gavin’s mere presence—a special kind of discrimination against a child that he will no
    doubt carry with him for life.
    The Board did so despite advances in the medical community’s understanding of
    the nature of being transgender and the importance of gender affirmation. It did so after a
    major nationwide survey, the NTDS, put stark numbers to the harmful discrimination faced
    by transgender people in many aspects of their lives, including in school.
    It also did so while schools across Virginia and across the country were successfully
    implementing trans-inclusive bathroom policies, again, without incident. Those schools’
    experiences, as outlined in three amicus briefs, demonstrate that hypothetical fears such as
    the “predator myth” were merely that—hypothetical.          Perhaps unsurprisingly, those
    schools also discovered that their biggest opponents were not students, but adults. See Br.
    of School Administrator Amici 10–11. One administrator noted:
    As to the students, I am most impressed. They are very understanding and
    accepting of their classmates. It feels like the adult community is struggling
    with it more.
    Id. at 10. As another explained, “Young people are pretty savvy and comfortable, and can
    understand and empathize with someone who just wants to use the bathroom.” Id.
    The proudest moments of the federal judiciary have been when we affirm the
    burgeoning values of our bright youth, rather than preserve the prejudices of the past.
    Compare Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 393 (1857), and Bowers v. Hardwick,
    
    478 U.S. 186
     (1986), with Brown v. Bd. of Educ. of Topeka, 
    349 U.S. 294
     (1955), and
    Obergefell v. Hodges, 
    135 S. Ct. 2584
     (2015). How shallow a promise of equal protection
    59
    that would not protect Grimm from the fantastical fears and unfounded prejudices of his
    adult community.
    It is time to move forward. The district court’s judgment is
    AFFIRMED.
    60
    WYNN, Circuit Judge, concurring:
    I fully concur in Judge Floyd’s opinion and write separately to emphasize several
    particularly troublesome aspects of the Board’s policy. In particular, the Board’s
    classification on the basis of “biological gender”—defined in this appeal as the sex marker
    on a student’s birth certificate—is arbitrary and provides no consistent reason to assign
    transgender students to bathrooms on a binary male/female basis. Rather, the Board’s use
    of “biological gender” to classify students has the effect of shunting individuals like
    Grimm—who may not use the boys’ bathrooms because of their “biological gender,” and
    who cannot use the girls’ bathrooms because of their gender identity—to a third category
    of bathroom altogether: the “alternative appropriate private facilit[ies]” established in the
    policy for “students with gender identity issues.”
    That is indistinguishable from the sort of separate-but-equal treatment that is
    anathema under our jurisprudence. No less than the recent historical practice of segregating
    Black and white restrooms, schools, and other public accommodations, the unequal
    treatment enabled by the Board’s policy produces a vicious and ineradicable stigma. The
    result is to deeply and indelibly scar the most vulnerable among us—children who simply
    wish to be treated as equals at one of the most fraught developmental moments in their
    lives—by labeling them as unfit for equal participation in our society. And for what gain?
    The Board has persisted in offering hypothetical and pretextual concerns that have failed
    to manifest, either in this case or in myriad others like it across our nation. I am left to
    conclude that the policy instead discriminates against transgender students out of a bare
    dislike or fear of those “others” who are all too often marginalized in our society for the
    61
    mere fact that they are different. As such, the policy grossly offends the Constitution’s
    basic guarantee of equal protection under the law.
    I.
    A.
    First, the Board’s policy provides no consistent basis for assigning transgender
    students—who often possess a mix of male and female physical characteristics—to a
    particular bathroom. The policy, which was drafted by a Board member without consulting
    medical professionals, purports to classify students based on their “biological gender.” J.A.
    775. As the district court noted, this term has no standard meaning (to say nothing of
    widespread acceptance) in the medical field. See Grimm v. Gloucester Cnty. Sch. Bd., 
    400 F. Supp. 3d 444
    , 457 (E.D. Va. 2019) (citing Wylie C. Hembree et al., Endocrine Treatment
    of Gender-dysphoric/Gender-Incongruent Persons: An Endocrine Society Clinical
    Practice Guideline, 102(11), J. CLIN. ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM 3869, 3875
    (2017)). Rather, “biological gender,” on its face, conflates two medical concepts: a
    person’s biological sex (a set of physical traits) and gender (a deeply held sense of self).
    
    Id.
    Given that the Board seemingly created the concept of “biological gender” sua
    sponte, it comes as no surprise that it has struggled to define the term in a way that provides
    any consistent reason to assign a given transgender student to a male or female restroom.
    62
    Broadly, the Board claims that “biological gender” is defined solely in terms of
    physiological characteristics. 1
    That suggests that the Board can identify some set of physical characteristics that
    fully identify someone as “male” or “female”—and thus neatly partition transgender
    students into those two categories. Yet the Board has offered no set of physical
    characteristics determinative of its “biological gender” classification in the five-year
    pendency of this case.
    Nor could it, given that transgender individuals often defy binary categorization on
    the basis of physical characteristics alone. For instance, although Grimm was born
    physically female and had female genitals during his time at Gloucester High, he also had
    physical features commonly associated with the male sex: he lacked breasts (due to his
    chest reconstruction surgery); had facial hair, a deepened voice, and a more masculine
    appearance (due to hormone therapy); and presented as male through his haircut. The
    Board conveniently ignores all these facts, other than to claim that Grimm’s chest
    reconstruction surgery “did not create any biological changes in Grimm, but instead, only
    a physical change.” Opening Br. at 46.
    Rather than address this reality, the Board has instead narrowed its definition of
    “biological gender” to refer to the sex marker on a student’s birth certificate—which,
    unless updated during a transgender individual’s transition, merely tells the Board what
    1
    I note that the Board’s use of the term “gender” in “biological gender,” along with the
    policy’s reference to students with “gender identity issues,” suggests that Grimm’s gender
    identity played a part in the Board’s bathroom designation, despite the Board’s
    protestations to the contrary. J.A. 775.
    63
    physical sex characteristics a person was born with. But, as this case shows, a person’s
    birth sex is not dispositive of their actual physiology.
    Moreover, by focusing on an individual’s birth certificate, the Board ensures the
    policy lacks a basic consistency: it fails to treat even transgender students alike.
    Specifically, the policy targets transgender students whose birth certificates do not match
    their outward physical characteristics while ignoring those transgender students whose
    birth certificates are consistent with their outward physiology.
    Consider a student physically identical to Grimm in every respect—that is, a student
    who appeared outwardly male, but who had female genitals. If, unlike Grimm, this
    hypothetical student had obtained a birth certificate identifying him as male prior to
    enrolling at Gloucester High, then that student would have been able to use the boys’
    restrooms under the Board’s current interpretation of its own policy. It is arbitrary that this
    hypothetical transgender student would not be subject to the policy, whereas Grimm would.
    See Adams By & Through Kasper v. Sch. Bd. of St. Johns Cnty., No. 18-13592, 
    2020 WL 4561817
    , at *5 (11th Cir. Aug. 7, 2020) (“To pass muster under the Fourteenth
    Amendment, a governmental gender classification must ‘be reasonable, not arbitrary.’”
    (quoting Reed v. Reed, 
    404 U.S. 71
    , 76 (1971) (quotation marks omitted)).
    Such a student would, of course, have female genitals. But genital characteristics
    are immaterial if, as the Board claims, it is solely concerned with the sex marker on a
    student’s birth certificate. However, the record shows that the Board was not only
    concerned with birth certificates below.
    64
    Apparently taking issue with the fact that Grimm’s genitals did not match his birth
    certificate, the Board attempted to extend its sex-assigned-at-birth definition of “biological
    gender” in its summary judgment briefing at the district court. The Board claimed that if a
    student were using the restroom associated with the sex listed on their birth certificate, but
    the school learned that the student had some as-yet-unspecified set of anatomical
    characteristics of the opposite sex, it would require the student to switch bathrooms on the
    basis of those physiological differences.
    The Board wisely abandoned that argument on appeal, given its inability to specify
    what set of physiological characteristics suffices to push an individual across its imagined
    line of demarcation between male and female classifications. But its shifting definitions of
    “biological gender” suggest that the policy is ends-driven and motivated more by
    discomfort with the presence of someone who appeared as a boy (but nonetheless had
    female genitals) using the boys’ bathroom than concerns for a person’s designation at birth.
    B.
    That suggestion is bolstered by another disturbing inconsistency in the policy: it
    produces the very privacy harms it purportedly seeks to avoid. Despite appearing wholly
    male except for his genitals, Grimm could have used the girls’ restroom under the policy.
    Female students would thus have found themselves in a private situation in front of
    someone with the physiology of the opposite biological sex—the exact harm to male
    students posited by the Board and my dissenting colleague, Judge Niemeyer. See Niemeyer
    Dis. Op. at 88-89, 93.
    65
    Specifically, the Board claims the policy protects the privacy interests of students
    who do not wish to be exposed to, or in a state of undress in front of, those with physical
    characteristics of the opposite sex. That is undoubtedly a long-recognized and important
    government interest, as Judge Niemeyer points out. Niemeyer Dis. Op. at 88-89. But, as
    Judge Floyd notes, the Board can identify no instance of such harms to the privacy interests
    of its students—a result consistent with the experiences of numerous school boards
    nationwide. Maj. Op. at 46-48.
    That is unsurprising because, as a matter of common sense, any individual’s
    appropriate use of a public bathroom does not involve exposure to nudity—an observation
    that is particularly true given the privacy enhancements installed in the bathrooms at
    Gloucester High. See Whitaker By Whitaker v. Kenosha Unified Sch. Dist. No. 1 Bd. of
    Educ., 
    858 F.3d 1034
    , 1052 (7th Cir. 2017) (“Common sense tells us that the communal
    restroom is a place where individuals act in a discreet manner to protect their privacy and
    those who have true privacy concerns are able to utilize a stall.”).
    Judge Niemeyer in dissent suggests that the “mere presence” of someone with
    female genitals in a male bathroom would create an untenable intrusion on male privacy
    interests. Niemeyer Dis. Op. at 89. That assertion is debatable at the least, in the context of
    both male and female bathrooms. And it echoes the sort of discomfort historically used to
    justify exclusion of Black, gay, and lesbian individuals from equal participation in our
    society, as discussed infra. But it is ultimately beside the point, because the Board
    identified only three scenarios of concern in which boys would have felt unduly exposed
    to Grimm: when they used the stalls, when they used the urinals, and when they opened
    66
    their pants to tuck in their shirts. The Board has identified no instances where such exposure
    occurred.
    Crucially, even if were we to accept the Board’s contention that the alleged
    infringements on student bodily privacy were in fact present, then the policy would, on
    balance, harm student privacy interests more than it helped them. Unlike his clothed
    genitals, Grimm’s male characteristics—no breasts, masculine features and voice timbre,
    facial hair, and a male haircut—would have been readily apparent to any person using the
    girls’ restroom. Put simply, Grimm’s entire outward physical appearance was male. As
    such, there can be no dispute that had he used the girls’ restroom, female students would
    have suffered a similar, if not greater, intrusion on bodily privacy than that the Board
    ascribes to its male students. The Board’s stated privacy interests thus cannot be said to be
    an “exceedingly persuasive” justification of the policy. United States v. Virginia, 
    518 U.S. 515
    , 532 (1996).
    Further, if the Board’s concern were truly that individuals might be exposed to those
    with differing physiology, it would presumably have policies in place to address
    differences between pre-pubescent and post-pubescent students, as well as intersex
    individuals who possess some mix of male and female physical sex characteristics and who
    comprise a greater fraction of the population than transgender individuals. See Whitaker,
    858 F.3d at 1052-53; Br. for Amicus Curiae interACT: Advocates for Intersex Youth in
    Supp. of Pl.-Appellee 5 (noting that 2% of all children born worldwide have variations in
    sex organs, chromosomes, and hormones that do not fit within binary anatomical gender
    classifications); Maj. Op. at 7 (noting that .6% of the United States adult population is
    67
    transgender). That the Board’s policy does not address those circumstances further
    suggests that its privacy justification is a post-hoc rationalization based on mere
    hypotheticals. Virginia, 
    518 U.S. at 533
    .
    C.
    One final note. Under the Board’s policy, Grimm should have been able to use the
    boys’ restroom if he had provided an updated birth certificate listing him as male. Of
    course, he did just that. But the Board baldly refused to apply its own policy, instead
    assembling a variety of post-hoc administrative justifications for its noncompliance—
    justifications that were ultimately meritless. See Maj. Op. at 30-31.
    II.
    The above problems notwithstanding, the Board audaciously invites us to ignore the
    policy’s poorly formulated, arbitrary character, claiming that “[e]very student can use a
    restroom associated with their physiology, whether they are boys or girls. If students
    choose not to use the restroom associated with their physiology, they can use a private,
    single-stall restroom.” Opening Br. at 44. But that choice is no choice at all because, its
    above-described physiological misunderstandings and omissions aside, the Board
    completely misses the reality of what it means to be a transgender boy.
    As Judge Floyd thoroughly notes, historical experience and decades of scientific
    inquiry have established that transgender individuals have an innate conception of
    themselves as belonging to one gender. Maj. Op. at 7-14. A transgender person’s awareness
    of themselves as male or female is no less foundational to their essential personhood and
    sense of self than it is for those born with female genitals to identify as female, or for those
    68
    born with male genitals to identify as male. History demonstrates that this self-conception
    is unshakeable indeed. Transgender individuals have persisted despite the significant
    harms that arose from living in societies that did not recognize them: cultural
    marginalization and disregard at best, and horrific oppression and lethal violence at worst.
    So, despite the Board’s contention that there is no problem because Grimm could
    have used the girls’ bathrooms or the single-stall bathrooms, we must take a careful and
    practical look at the options he realistically faced. Grimm was of course barred from the
    boys’ restrooms because of his Board-defined “biological gender.” And despite the Board’s
    assurances, he effectively could not use the girls’ restrooms. His gender identity has always
    been male. He could no more easily use the girls’ restrooms than a cisgender boy. 2 The
    Board pointedly ignores this basic fact.
    So, Grimm was effectively left with one option: the single-stall restrooms. But he
    did not use those restrooms at all because doing so “made [him] feel even more stigmatized
    and isolated than using the nurse’s office” to which he had been previously relegated.
    Gavin Grimm Decl. ¶ 47. Specifically, “everyone knew that they were installed for [him]
    in particular, so that other boys would not have to share the same restroom as [him].” 
    Id.
    Indeed, the Board does not controvert Grimm’s assertion that no other students used the
    single-stall restrooms.
    2
    Grimm had, of course, used girls’ restrooms before his transition. But that fact says
    nothing about the harm he suffered from doing so. Grimm suffered from gender dysphoria
    as a result of living as a girl (including use of girls’ bathrooms) despite identifying as a
    boy.
    69
    This problem is all too familiar. Forced segregation of restrooms and schools along
    racial lines—a blight on this country’s history—occurred well within living memory. See
    Br. of Amicus Curiae NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc. in Supp. of Pl.-Appellee 7-
    8 (hereinafter “Br. of NAACP”) (describing various laws passed to segregate restroom
    facilities and schools on the basis of race). Such segregation was infamously justified on
    the ground that no harm could inhere if separate but equal facilities were provided to
    African American schoolchildren. We now know that to be untrue: it is axiomatic that
    discriminating against students on the basis of race “generates a feeling of inferiority as to
    their status in the community that may affect their hearts and minds in a way unlikely ever
    to be undone.” Brown v. Bd. of Ed. of Topeka, 
    347 U.S. 483
    , 494 (1954).
    I see little distinction between the message sent to Black children denied equal
    treatment in education under the doctrine of “separate but equal” and transgender children
    relegated to the “alternative appropriate private facilit[ies]” provided for by the Board’s
    policy. The import is the same: “the affirmation that the very being of a people is inferior.”
    Martin Luther King, Jr., “The Other America,” Remarks Given at Stanford University
    (Apr. 14, 1967) (transcript available at https://www.rev.com/blog/transcripts/the-other-
    america-speech-transcript-martin-luther-king-jr); see also Doe by & through Doe v.
    Boyertown Area Sch. Dist., 
    897 F.3d 518
    , 530 (3rd Cir. 2018), cert. denied, 
    139 S. Ct. 2636
    (2019) (holding that a policy forcing transgender students to use separate single-user
    facilities “would very publicly brand all transgender students with a scarlet ‘T,’ and they
    should not have to endure that as the price of attending their public school”).
    70
    Judge Niemeyer in dissent notes that Title IX and equal protection permit separate
    but equal accommodations in schools on a male/female basis. Niemeyer Dis. Op. at 93-94.
    But that observation says nothing about what happened in this case: separation of
    transgender students from their cisgender counterparts through a policy that ensures that
    transgender students may use neither male nor female bathrooms due to the incongruence
    between their gender identity and their sex-assigned-at-birth. That segregation generates
    harmful stigma, which was exacerbated in this case by the fact that the facilities were
    separate, but not even equal—there were no single-stall restrooms at football games, and
    the single-stall restrooms in the school building were located much farther from Grimm’s
    classes than the boys’ and girls’ restrooms.
    Moreover, it is important to note that the harm arising from the policy’s message—
    that transgender students like Grimm should exist only at the margins of society, even when
    it comes to basic necessities like bathrooms—although foreign to the experiences of many,
    is not hypothetical. Nor does the policy merely engender discomfort or embarrassment for
    transgender students. Instead, the pain is overwhelming, unceasing, and existential. In an
    experience all too common for transgender individuals (particularly children), early in his
    junior year at Gloucester High, Grimm was hospitalized for suicidal thoughts resulting
    from being in an environment of “unbearable” stress where “every single day, five days a
    week” he felt “unsafe, anxious, and disrespected.” Gavin Grimm Decl. ¶ 54.
    Furthermore, putting aside the specific harm to Grimm, the Board’s policy
    perpetuates a harmful and false stereotype about transgender individuals; namely, the
    “transgender predator” myth, which claims that students (usually male) will pretend to be
    71
    transgender in order to gain access to the bathrooms of the opposite sex—thus jeopardizing
    student safety. Indeed, the policy expresses concern that the presence of transgender
    students in school bathrooms endangers students. Although not relied upon by the Board
    on appeal, one of the policy’s stated purposes is to “provide a safe learning environment
    for all students.” J.A. 775.
    The “transgender predator” myth echoes similar arguments used to justify
    segregation along racial lines. In the 1950s, segregationists spread false rumors that Black
    women would spread venereal diseases to toilet seats, and that Black men would sexually
    prey upon white women if public swimming pools were integrated. See Br. of NAACP 13-
    14, 16-17. Although history eventually proved the lie of such claims, the injustice was
    severe.
    Even more recently, privacy concerns similar to those championed by the Board
    were invoked by opponents of gay and lesbian equality. These opponents argued that such
    individuals, especially gay men, must not be allowed to come into contact with young
    children or adolescents. They justified such claims by pointing either to a supposed
    uncontrollable, predatory sexual attraction among gay men toward children, or to an
    insidious desire to convert young people to an immoral (which is to say, non-heterosexual)
    lifestyle. See 
    id.
     at 21-22 (citing Lawrence v. Texas, 
    539 U.S. 558
    , 602 (2003) (Scalia, J.,
    dissenting) (“Many Americans do not want persons who openly engage in homosexual
    conduct as . . . scoutmasters for their children [or] as teachers in their children’s
    schools[.]”)).
    72
    The “transgender predator” myth—although often couched in the language of
    ensuring student privacy and safety—is no less odious, no less unfounded, and no less
    harmful than these race-based or sexual-orientation-based scare tactics. As one of our sister
    Circuits noted during the era of racial segregation: “[t]he law can never afford to bend in
    this direction again. The Constitution of the United States recognizes that every individual
    . . . is considered equal before the law. As long as this principle is viable, full equality of
    educational opportunity must prevail over theoretical sociological and genetical arguments
    which attempt to persuade to the contrary.” Haney v. Cnty. Bd. of Educ. of Sevier Cnty.,
    
    410 F.2d 920
    , 926 (8th Cir. 1969).
    III.
    In sum, the picture that emerges from this case is damning.
    The Board drafted a policy so arbitrary that it cannot provide consistent treatment
    among the very individuals it discriminates against. In so doing, the Board pursued shifting
    and ends-driven definitions of “biological gender” that guaranteed a particular outcome:
    that one student would be unable to use the boys’ restroom. The policy bears an eerie
    similarity to stigmatic discrimination in the separate-but-equal context—which produces
    deeply corrosive, irreversible harm across a human life. Against that injury to Grimm, the
    Board offers a set of purported privacy injuries that have not occurred, while ignoring
    concomitant greater harms that would have resulted were Grimm to have followed the
    policy and used female school restrooms. And most tellingly, when Grimm attempted to
    comply with the policy by submitting an updated birth certificate, the Board resorted to
    procedural roadblocks.
    73
    In light of this history, I have little difficulty concluding that the Board’s policy is
    orthogonal to its stated justifications. Far from ensuring student privacy, it has been applied
    to marginalize and demean Grimm for the mere fact that he, like other transgender
    individuals, is different from most. Even worse, it did so to a child at school.
    Common experience teaches that high school is a challenging environment, in
    which every child perceives significant pressure to belong within their peer group while
    also defining their own personal identity and sense of self. Even the most trivial differences
    from others may take on outsized significance to an adolescent. How harrowing it must be
    for transgender individuals like Grimm to navigate that fraught setting while facing an
    unceasing daily reminder that they are not wanted, and that circumstances for which they
    are blameless render them members of a second class.
    Of course, deriding those who are different—whether due to discomfort or dislike—
    is not new. But the Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection prohibits the law from
    countenancing such discrimination. “The Constitution cannot control such [private]
    prejudices but neither can it tolerate them. Private biases may be outside the reach of the
    law, but the law cannot, directly or indirectly, give them effect.” Palmore v. Sidoti, 
    466 U.S. 429
    , 433 (1984); see also City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 
    473 U.S. 432
    , 447
    (1985) (holding that policies enacted with “a bare . . . desire to harm a politically unpopular
    group” cannot be upheld under equal protection (quoting U.S. Dep’t of Agric. v. Moreno,
    
    413 U.S. 528
    , 534 (1973))).
    For that reason, I disagree with Judge Niemeyer’s assertion that the panel majority
    attempts to “effect policy rather than simply apply law.” Niemeyer Dis. Op. at 95. That
    74
    argument is meritless because “[t]he Nation’s courts are open to injured individuals who
    come to them to vindicate their own direct, personal stake in our basic charter. An
    individual can invoke a right to constitutional protection when he or she is harmed, even if
    the broader public disagrees and even if the legislature refuses to act.” Obergefell v.
    Hodges, 
    135 S. Ct. 2584
    , 2605 (2015). Ensuring the Constitution’s mandate of equal
    protection is satisfied for marginalized and minority groups, separate from the “vicissitudes
    of political controversy,” is one of our most vital and solemn duties. 
    Id. at 2606
     (quoting
    W. Va. Bd. of Ed. v. Barnette, 
    319 U.S. 624
    , 638 (1943)).
    Discrimination like that faced by Grimm has reared its ugly head throughout
    American history. Yet, for most Americans, time has rendered it an embarrassment to the
    legacies of the individuals inflicting it. With that observation, I join in the thorough and
    well-reasoned opinion of my colleague, Judge Floyd.
    75
    NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    Gavin Grimm, a transgender male, commenced this action in 2015 while a student
    attending Gloucester High School in Gloucester, Virginia, to require the school to permit
    him to use the male restrooms. The High School provided male restrooms and female
    restrooms and, under school policy, “limited [those restrooms] to the corresponding
    biological genders.” It also provided unisex restrooms and made them available to
    everyone, with the particular goal of accommodating transgender students.              In his
    complaint, Grimm contended that the High School’s policy discriminated against him
    “based on his gender,” in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment, and “on the basis of sex,” in violation of Title IX. He sought among other
    things injunctive relief requiring the High School “to allow [him] to use the boys’
    restrooms at school.” After graduating from the High School, Grimm filed a second
    amended complaint, seeking only declaratory relief and nominal damages.
    Contrary to Grimm’s claim, Title IX and its regulations explicitly authorize the
    policy followed by the High School. While the law prohibits discrimination on the basis
    of sex in the provision of educational benefits, it allows schools to provide “separate living
    facilities for the different sexes,” 
    20 U.S.C. § 1686
    , including “toilet, locker room, and
    shower facilities,” 
    34 C.F.R. § 106.33
    . Gloucester High School followed these provisions
    precisely, going yet further by providing unisex restrooms for those not wishing to use the
    restrooms designated on the basis of sex. Moreover, in complying with Title IX, which
    Grimm has not challenged as unconstitutional, the High School did not deliberately
    discriminate against him in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
    76
    Amendment. To the contrary, the High School’s classifications for restroom usage —
    which accord with longstanding and widespread practice — were appropriately justified
    by the needs of individual privacy, as has been recognized by law. At bottom, Gloucester
    High School reasonably provided separate restrooms for its male and female students and
    accommodated transgender students by also providing unisex restrooms that any student
    could use. The law requires no more of it.
    The majority opinion, pursuing the public policy that it deems best, rules that
    separating restrooms on the basis of biological sex is discriminatory. In doing so, it
    overlooks altogether and therefore does not address the reasons for such separation.
    Rather, it blithely orders that the High School allow both transgender males and biological
    males to use the same restrooms, thus abolishing any separation of restrooms on the basis
    of biological sex. Indeed, its ruling that male includes transgender males and likewise that
    female includes transgender females renders on a larger scale any separation on the basis
    of sex nonsensical. In effect, the majority opinion does no more than express disagreement
    with Title IX and its underlying policies, which is not, of course, the role of courts tasked
    with deciding cases and controversies.
    I cast no doubt on the genuineness of Gavin Grimm’s circumstances, and I
    empathize with his adverse experiences. But judicial reasoning must not become an
    outcome-driven enterprise prompted by feelings of sympathy and personal views of the
    best policy. The judiciary’s role is simply to construe the law. And the law, both statutory
    and constitutional, prohibits discrimination only with respect to those who are similarly
    situated. Here, Grimm was born a biological female and identifies as a male, and therefore
    77
    his circumstances are different from the circumstances of students who were born as
    biological males. For purposes of restroom usage, he was not similarly situated to students
    who were born as biological males.
    Accordingly, I would conclude that Grimm’s complaint failed to state a claim on
    which relief can be granted.
    I
    At birth, Grimm was identified as female, and there was concededly no ambiguity
    about his sex. Thus, when it came time to enroll him in the Gloucester County School
    System, Grimm’s parents indicated that he was female.
    Beginning at an early age, however, Grimm “saw [himself] as a boy” and “did not
    want to be perceived as feminine in any way.” At around the age of 12, he started
    presenting himself as a boy. He got a traditional male haircut, wore clothing exclusively
    from the boys’ section of stores, and eventually began using a compression garment to
    flatten his developing breasts. Around the time of his 15th birthday, in the spring of 2014,
    Grimm came out to his parents as a transgender boy and, at his request, began therapy with
    a psychologist. His psychologist diagnosed him with “gender dysphoria,” a condition of
    clinically significant distress experienced by some transgender people resulting from the
    incongruence between the gender with which they identify and their sex as identified at
    birth. Soon thereafter, Grimm obtained a court order legally changing his name from the
    female name he was given at birth to Gavin Elliot Grimm.
    78
    In advance of his 10th grade year, Grimm and his mother met with a guidance
    counselor at the High School to explain that Grimm was transgender and intended, as part
    of his treatment for gender dysphoria, to socially transition at school. Both Grimm and his
    mother found the school counselor to be supportive. The High School changed its records
    to reflect Grimm’s new name, and Grimm and the school counselor agreed that Grimm
    would send an email to his teachers explaining that he was to be addressed by his new male
    name and referred to by male pronouns. Grimm chose to continue completing his physical
    education classes through an online program so he did not need to use the school’s locker
    rooms. And with respect to restrooms, he and the school counselor agreed that he could
    use a private restroom in the nurse’s office.
    As the school year began, however, Grimm found that using the separate restroom
    was stigmatizing as well as inconvenient, causing him at times to be late for classes. After
    a few weeks, he expressed his concerns to the Principal and asked for permission to use
    the male restrooms instead. The Principal gave Grimm permission to do so. But within a
    few days, school officials began receiving complaints from parents, and a student met with
    the Principal to express his concerns. These members of the school community felt
    strongly that allowing a student with female anatomical features to use the male restrooms
    would infringe on the privacy interests of the male students.
    In response to this input from the community, the Gloucester County School Board
    conducted public meetings, after which it adopted the following policy:
    Whereas the [Gloucester County Public Schools (“GCPS”)] recognizes that
    some students question their gender identities, and
    79
    Whereas the GCPS encourages such students to seek support, advice, and
    guidance from parents, professionals and other trusted adults, and
    Whereas the GCPS seeks to provide a safe learning environment for all
    students and to protect the privacy of all students, therefore
    It shall be the practice of the GCPS to provide male and female restroom and
    locker room facilities in its schools, and the use of said facilities shall be
    limited to the corresponding biological genders, and students with gender
    identity issues shall be provided an alternative appropriate private facility.
    Following adoption of the policy, the Principal advised Grimm that he was no longer
    permitted to use the High School’s male restrooms. And about a week later, the school
    completed construction of three single-stall, unisex restrooms that were made available to
    all students.
    Grimm felt stigmatized by the new policy and chose not to use the new unisex
    restrooms. He also felt uncomfortable using the female restrooms. As a result, he tried to
    avoid the use of restrooms at school, and when he could not avoid doing so, he used the
    restroom in the nurse’s office. Nonetheless, he felt that by doing so, he called attention to
    his transgender status, making him uncomfortable.
    At the end of Grimm’s 11th grade year, when he was 17 years old, Grimm
    underwent a chest reconstruction surgery as part of his treatment for gender dysphoria. He
    also continued hormone therapy, which he had begun more than a year earlier and which
    deepened his voice, caused him to grow facial hair, and gave him a more masculine
    appearance overall.
    Near the start of his 12th grade year in 2016, the Gloucester County Circuit Court
    granted Grimm’s petition for an order directing the State Registrar to amend his birth
    80
    certificate. Pursuant to that order, the Registrar issued a birth certificate to Grimm that
    listed his sex as male. Thereafter, Grimm requested that the High School change the gender
    listed on his school records to conform to his new birth certificate. Pursuant to the advice
    of counsel, the School Board advised Grimm that it had decided not to change the official
    school records. Grimm graduated from the High School in June 2017.
    *      *      *
    In June 2015, at the end of his 10th grade year, Grimm commenced this action
    against the Gloucester County School Board, alleging that the School Board’s policy of
    assigning students to male and female restrooms based on their biological sex rather than
    their gender identity violated his rights under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 
    20 U.S.C. § 1681
     et seq.
    Among other things, he sought a preliminary and permanent injunction requiring the
    School Board to allow him to use the male restrooms at the school.
    The district court granted the School Board’s motion to dismiss Grimm’s Title IX
    claim for failure to state a claim, relying primarily on a regulation implementing the statute
    that expressly permits schools to provide “separate toilet, locker room, and shower
    facilities on the basis of sex.” 
    34 C.F.R. § 106.33
    . The court also denied Grimm’s motion
    for a preliminary injunction.
    On appeal from the denial of the injunction, we reversed the district court’s order
    and remanded the case. See G.G. ex rel. Grimm v. Gloucester Cty. Sch. Bd., 
    822 F.3d 709
    (4th Cir. 2016). We reasoned that the Title IX regulation permitting schools to provide
    separate restrooms and other similar facilities for male and female students was ambiguous
    81
    with respect to “how a school should determine whether a transgender individual is a male
    or female for the purpose of access to [these] sex-segregated” facilities. 
    Id. at 720
    . We
    then relied on a guidance document issued by the U.S. Department of Education stating
    that schools were generally required to “treat transgender students consistent with their
    gender identity,” 
    id. at 718
    , and concluded that the interpretation was “entitled to Auer
    deference and . . . controlling weight,” 
    id. at 723
    . In addition, we vacated the district court’s
    order denying a preliminary injunction, concluding that the court had used the wrong
    evidentiary standard in evaluating Grimm’s motion. 
    Id.
     at 724–26.
    The School Board filed a petition for a writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court, as
    well as a motion for a stay of our judgment. During the same period, the district court,
    based on our analysis, granted Grimm’s motion for a preliminary injunction. The Supreme
    Court, however, stayed the district court’s preliminary injunction, see 
    136 S. Ct. 2442
    (Aug. 3, 2016), and it subsequently granted the School Board’s certiorari petition, see 
    137 S. Ct. 369
     (Oct. 28, 2016).
    While the case was pending before the Supreme Court, a new Administration
    rescinded the previously issued guidance document regarding transgender students, which
    prompted the Supreme Court to vacate our April 2016 decision and to remand the case to
    us for further consideration. See 
    137 S. Ct. 1239
     (Mar. 6, 2017). We, in turn, granted an
    unopposed motion to vacate the district court’s preliminary injunction. See 
    853 F.3d 729
    (4th Cir. 2017).
    After Grimm graduated from high school, he withdrew his request for a preliminary
    injunction and filed an amended complaint that continued to challenge the legality of the
    82
    School Board’s restroom policy as applied to transgender students, seeking a permanent
    injunction, declaratory relief, and nominal damages. But after the district court requested
    supplemental briefing regarding mootness in light of Grimm’s graduation, Grimm agreed
    to dismiss his requests for prospective relief. He argued, however, that his graduation did
    not moot his challenge to the legality of the School Board’s restroom policy because he
    was seeking only a retrospective remedy in the form of nominal damages and declaratory
    relief. The district court agreed.
    Thereafter, in a memorandum opinion and order dated May 22, 2018, the district
    court denied the School Board’s motion to dismiss Grimm’s amended complaint for failure
    to state a claim, concluding that Grimm had plausibly alleged that, by excluding him from
    the set of restrooms that corresponded to his gender identity, the School Board had
    subjected him to discrimination on the basis of sex, in violation of Title IX, and had also
    discriminated against him in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. Grimm v. Gloucester
    Cty. Sch. Bd., 
    302 F. Supp. 3d 730
     (E.D. Va. 2018).
    Roughly nine months later, the district court granted Grimm’s motion to file a
    second amended complaint, which, for the first time, alleged that the School Board’s
    decision not to change the gender listed on Grimm’s school records from female to male
    also constituted a violation of Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause.
    After completing discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
    By order dated August 9, 2019, the district court granted Grimm’s motion and denied the
    School Board’s motion. See Grimm v. Gloucester Cty. Sch. Bd., 
    400 F. Supp. 3d 444
     (E.D.
    Va. 2019). For relief, the court (1) entered a declaratory judgment “that the Board’s policy
    83
    violated Mr. Grimm’s rights under the Fourteenth Amendment . . . and Title IX . . . on the
    day the policy was first issued and throughout the remainder of his time as a student at
    Gloucester High School;” (2) entered a declaratory judgment “that the Board’s refusal to
    update Mr. Grimm’s official school transcript to conform to the ‘male’ designation on his
    birth certificate violated and continues to violate his rights under the Fourteenth
    Amendment . . . and Title IX”; (3) awarded Grimm nominal damages “in the amount of
    one dollar”; (4) entered a permanent injunction “requiring the Board to update Mr.
    Grimm’s official school records to conform to the male designation on his updated birth
    certificate”; and (5) awarded Grimm “reasonable costs and attorneys’ fees pursuant to 
    42 U.S.C. § 1988
    .”
    From the district court’s order, the School Board filed this appeal.
    II
    At the heart of his claim, Grimm contends that in denying him, as a transgender
    male, permission to use the male restrooms because those restrooms were designated for
    biologically male students, Gloucester High School discriminated against him “on the basis
    of sex,” in violation of Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause. This claim does not
    challenge the High School’s provision of separate restrooms but rather asserts that treating
    transgender males differently than biological males in permitting access to those restrooms
    constitutes illegal discrimination.   This argument thus rests on the proposition that
    transgender males and biological males are similarly situated with respect to using male
    restrooms.
    84
    The School Board, however, determined that the physical differences between
    transgender males and biological males were material with respect to the use of restrooms
    and locker rooms, and accordingly it provided unisex restrooms in addition to its male and
    female restrooms to accommodate transgender persons such as Grimm. In having done so,
    the School Board maintains that it complied fully with Title IX and its implementing
    regulations, which, while prohibiting discrimination on the basis of sex in any education
    program or activity, nonetheless expressly allow educational institutions receiving federal
    assistance to provide separate restrooms for the different sexes.
    I agree with the School Board’s position. Any requirement that schools treat male,
    female, and transgender students differently from the way the High School treated them
    would be a matter for Congress to address. But, until then, the High School comported
    with what both Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause require. I begin with Title IX.
    III
    Title IX provides that “[n]o person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be
    excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination
    under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” 
    20 U.S.C. § 1681
    (a). But the statute contains several exceptions to its nondiscrimination provision,
    one of which specifies that “[n]otwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this
    chapter, nothing contained herein shall be construed to prohibit any educational institution
    receiving funds under this Act, from maintaining separate living facilities for the different
    sexes.” 
    Id.
     § 1686 (emphasis added). And the applicable regulations give further detail,
    85
    permitting schools to provide “separate housing on the basis of sex,” as long as the housing
    is “[p]roportionate” and “[c]omparable,” 
    34 C.F.R. § 106.32
    (b), and “separate toilet, locker
    room, and shower facilities on the basis of sex,” so long as the facilities “provided for
    students of one sex shall be comparable to such facilities provided for students of the other
    sex,” 
    id.
     § 106.33. We must therefore determine what it means to provide separate toilet,
    locker room, and shower facilities on the basis of sex in a situation where a student’s gender
    identity diverges from the sex manifested by the student’s biological characteristics.
    As several sources make clear, the term “sex” in this context must be understood as
    referring to the traditional biological indicators that distinguish a male from a female, not
    the person’s internal sense of being male or female, or their outward presentation of that
    internally felt sense.
    Title IX was enacted in 1972, and its implementing regulations were promulgated
    shortly thereafter. And during that period of time, virtually every dictionary definition of
    “sex” referred to the physiological distinctions between males and females — particularly
    with respect to their reproductive functions. See, e.g., The Random House College
    Dictionary 1206 (rev. ed. 1980) (“either the male or female division of a species, esp. as
    differentiated with reference to the reproductive functions”); Webster’s New Collegiate
    Dictionary 1054 (1979) (“the sum of the structural, functional, and behavioral
    characteristics of living beings that subserve reproduction by two interacting parents and
    that distinguish males and females”); American Heritage Dictionary 1187 (1976) (“The
    property or quality by which organisms are classified according to their reproductive
    functions”); Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2081 (1971) (“the sum of the
    86
    morphological, physiological, and behavioral peculiarities of living beings that subserves
    biparental reproduction with its concomitant genetic segregation and recombination which
    underlie most evolutionary change . . .”); The American College Dictionary 1109 (1970)
    (“the sum of the anatomical and physiological differences with reference to which the male
    and the female are distinguished . . .”). Indeed, even today, the word “sex” continues to be
    defined based on the physiological distinctions between males and females. See, e.g.,
    Webster’s New World College Dictionary 1331 (5th ed. 2014) (“either of the two divisions,
    male or female, into which persons, animals, or plants are divided, with reference to their
    reproductive functions”); The American Heritage Dictionary 1605 (5th ed. 2011) (“Either
    of the two divisions, designated female and male, by which most organisms are classified
    on the basis of their reproductive organs and functions”); Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate
    Dictionary 1140 (11th ed. 2011) (“either of the two major forms of individuals that occur
    in many species and that are distinguished respectively as female or male esp. on the basis
    of their reproductive organs and structures”).
    Given this uniformity in dictionary definitions, it is no surprise that, in the context
    of interpreting Title VII’s nondiscrimination provision enacted in 1964, the Supreme
    Court’s recent decision in Bostock v. Clayton County relied on this same understanding of
    the word “sex.” To be sure, the Bostock Court determined that its resolution of the parties’
    dispute did not require it to determine definitely the meaning of the term. See Bostock, 
    140 S. Ct. 1731
    , 1739 (2020). But its analysis proceeded on the assumption that, in 1964, the
    term sex “referr[ed] only to biological distinctions between male and female” and did not
    include “norms concerning gender identity.” 
    Id.
    87
    Moreover, that the word “sex” in Title IX refers to biological characteristics, not
    gender identity, becomes all the more plain when one considers the privacy concerns that
    explain why, in the first place, Title IX and its regulations allow schools to provide separate
    living facilities, restrooms, locker rooms, and shower facilities “on the basis of sex.” See
    
    20 U.S.C. § 1686
    ; 
    34 C.F.R. §§ 106.32
    (b), 106.33. To state the obvious, what bathroom,
    locker room, shower, and living facilities all have in common is that they are places where
    people are, at some point, in a state of partial or complete undress to engage in matters of
    highly personal hygiene. An individual has a legitimate and important interest in bodily
    privacy that is implicated when his or her nude or partially nude body is exposed to others.
    And this privacy interest is significantly heightened when persons of the opposite
    biological sex are present, as courts have long recognized. See, e.g., Doe v. Luzerne Cty.,
    
    660 F.3d 169
    , 176–77 (3d Cir. 2011) (recognizing that an individual has “a constitutionally
    protected privacy interest in his or her partially clothed body” and that this “reasonable
    expectation of privacy” exists “particularly while in the presence of members of the
    opposite sex”); Brannum v. Overton Cty. Sch. Bd., 
    516 F.3d 489
    , 494 (6th Cir. 2008)
    (explaining that “the constitutional right to privacy . . . includes the right to shield one’s
    body from exposure to viewing by the opposite sex”); Sepulveda v. Ramirez, 
    967 F.2d 1413
    , 1416 (9th Cir. 1992) (explaining that “[t]he right to bodily privacy is fundamental”
    and that “common sense, decency, and [state] regulations” require recognizing it in a
    parolee’s right not to be observed by an officer of the opposite sex while producing a urine
    sample); Lee v. Downs, 
    641 F.2d 1117
    , 1119 (4th Cir. 1981) (recognizing that, even though
    inmates in prison “surrender many rights of privacy,” their “special sense of privacy in
    88
    their genitals” should not be violated through exposure unless “reasonably necessary” and
    explaining that the “involuntary exposure of [genitals] in the presence of people of the
    other sex may be especially demeaning and humiliating”). Moreover, these privacy
    interests are broader than the risks of actual bodily exposure. They include the intrusion
    created by mere presence. In short, we want to be alone — to have our privacy — when
    we “shit, shower, shave, shampoo, and shine.”
    In light of the privacy interests that arise from the physical differences between the
    sexes, it has been commonplace and universally accepted — across societies and
    throughout history — to separate on the basis of sex those public restrooms, locker rooms,
    and shower facilities that are designed to be used by multiple people at a time. Indeed,
    both the Supreme Court and our court have previously indicated that it is this type of
    physiological privacy concern that has led to the establishment of such sex-separated
    facilities. See United States v. Virginia, 
    518 U.S. 515
    , 533, 550 n.19 (1996) (recognizing
    that “[p]hysical differences between men and women” are “enduring” and render “the two
    sexes . . . not fungible” and acknowledging, when ordering an all-male Virginia college to
    admit female students, that such a remedy “would undoubtedly require alterations
    necessary to afford members of each sex privacy from the other sex” (cleaned up));
    Faulkner v. Jones, 
    10 F.3d 226
    , 232 (4th Cir. 1993) (noting “society’s undisputed approval
    of separate public rest rooms for men and women based on privacy concerns”).
    In short, the physical differences between males and females and the resulting need
    for privacy is what the exceptions in Title IX are all about.
    89
    The issue in this case arises from the fact that Grimm is a transgender male who was
    born a biological female. Thus, we must determine in this context what it means to provide
    him separate toilet, locker room, and shower facilities on the basis of sex. Grimm does not
    challenge the constitutionality of Title IX or the legitimacy of its regulations, nor does he
    challenge the statute’s underlying policy interests. He argues simply that because he
    identifies as male, he must be allowed to use the male restrooms and that denying him that
    permission discriminates against him on the basis of his sex.
    Grimm’s argument, however, is facially untenable. While he accepts the fact that
    Title IX authorizes the separation of restrooms — indeed, he seeks to use the male
    restrooms so separated from female restrooms — the implementation of his position would
    allow him to use restrooms contrary to the basis for separation. Gloucester High School
    maintains male restrooms, female restrooms, unisex restrooms, and under its policy,
    Grimm would be entitled to use either the female or the unisex restrooms. But requiring
    the school to allow him, a biological female who identifies as male, to use the male
    restroom compromises the separation as explicitly authorized by Title IX.
    Seeking to overcome this logical barrier, the majority maintains that the School
    Board applied “its own discriminatory notions of what ‘sex’ means.” Ante at 56. But the
    School Board did no such thing. In implementing its policy, it relied on the commonly
    accepted definition of the word “sex” as referring to the anatomical and physiological
    differences between males and females and concluded that, for purposes of access to its
    sex-separated facilities, Grimm’s sex remained female during the time he was a student at
    Gloucester High School.
    90
    Not to be persuaded, the majority further states that the regulation permitting
    schools to provide separate toilets on the basis of sex “cannot override the statutory
    prohibition against discrimination on the basis of sex.” Ante at 56. But strikingly, this
    overlooks the fact that Congress expressly provided in the statute that nothing in its
    prohibition against discrimination “shall be construed to prohibit” schools “from
    maintaining separate living facilities for the different sexes.” 
    20 U.S.C. § 1686
    . The
    majority’s oversight can only be taken as a way to reach conclusions on how schools should
    treat transgender students, rather than a determination of what the statute requires of them.
    In short, Gloucester High School did not deny Grimm suitable restrooms. It created
    three new unisex restrooms that allowed him, as well as the other students, the privacy
    protected by separating bathrooms on the basis of sex.
    IV
    Grimm also contends that, even if the School Board did not discriminate against
    him on the basis of sex in violation of Title IX, it discriminated against him in violation of
    the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. He does so without arguing
    that Title IX violates the Equal Protection Clause in allowing educational institutions to
    separate restrooms on the basis of sex.
    The Equal Protection Clause provides that no State shall “deny to any person within
    its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const. amend. XIV, § 1. As long
    recognized by the Supreme Court, the Clause is “essentially a direction that all persons
    similarly situated should be treated alike.” City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
    91
    
    473 U.S. 432
    , 439 (1985) (emphasis added). In this manner, the provision “simply keeps
    governmental decisionmakers from treating differently persons who are in all relevant
    respects alike.” Nordlinger v. Hahn, 
    505 U.S. 1
    , 10 (1992) (emphasis added). As such, a
    plaintiff asserting a violation of the Equal Protection Clause must “demonstrate that he has
    been treated differently from others with whom he is similarly situated and that the unequal
    treatment was the result of intentional or purposeful discrimination.”          Morrison v.
    Garraghty, 
    239 F.3d 648
    , 654 (4th Cir. 2001); see also Vill. of Willowbrook v. Olech, 
    528 U.S. 562
    , 564 (2000) (per curiam) (noting that the Equal Protection Clause “secure[s] every
    person within the State’s jurisdiction against intentional and arbitrary discrimination”
    (cleaned up)).
    In general, a state-created classification will be “presumed to be valid and will be
    sustained if [it] is rationally related to a legitimate state interest.” City of Cleburne, 
    473 U.S. at 440
    . The Supreme Court has recognized, however, that legislative classifications
    based on sex “call for a heightened standard of review.” 
    Id.
     Thus, when state actors treat
    people differently on the basis of sex, they must show “that the challenged classification
    serves important governmental objectives and that the discriminatory means employed are
    substantially related to the achievement of those objectives.” Virginia, 
    518 U.S. at 533
    (cleaned up). “The justification must be genuine,” and it may not “rely on overbroad
    generalizations about the different talents, capacities, or preferences of males and females.”
    
    Id.
     Nonetheless, “[t]o fail to acknowledge even our most basic biological differences . . .
    risks making the guarantee of equal protection superficial, and so disserving it.” Tuan Anh
    Nguyen v. INS, 
    533 U.S. 53
    , 73 (2001).
    92
    Here, Grimm appears to acknowledge that a public school may, consistent with the
    Equal Protection Clause, establish one set of restrooms for its male students and another
    set for its female students, as long as the two sets of facilities are comparable — a “separate
    but equal” arrangement that would obviously be unconstitutional if the factor used to assign
    students to restrooms was instead race. And the reason it is constitutional for a school to
    provide separate restrooms for its male and female students — but not, for example, to its
    Black and White students — is because there are biological differences between the two
    sexes that are relevant with respect to restroom use in a way that a person’s skin color is
    demonstrably not. As noted above, all individuals possess a privacy interest when using
    restrooms or other spaces in which they remove clothes and engage in personal hygiene,
    and this privacy interest is heightened when persons of the opposite sex are present.
    Indeed, this privacy interest is heightened yet further when children use communal
    restrooms and similar spaces, because children, as the School Board notes, “are still
    developing, both emotionally and physically.”
    It is thus plain that a public school may lawfully establish, consistent with the
    Constitution, separate restrooms for its male and female students in order to protect bodily
    privacy concerns that arise from the anatomical differences between the two sexes. In light
    of this rationale, Grimm cannot claim that he was discriminated against when he was
    denied access to the male restrooms because he was not, in fact, similarly situated to the
    biologically male students who used those restrooms. While he no doubt identifies as male
    and also has taken the first steps to transition his body, at all times relevant to the events in
    this case, he remained anatomically different from males. Because such anatomical
    93
    differences are at the root of why communal restrooms are generally separated on the basis
    of sex, I conclude that by adopting a policy pursuant to which Grimm was not permitted to
    use male student restrooms, the School Board did not “treat[] differently persons who are
    in all relevant respects alike,” Nordlinger, 
    505 U.S. at 10
     (emphasis added), and therefore
    did not violate the Equal Protection Clause. And there is no claim or evidence in the record
    that Grimm was treated differently from any other transgender student.
    In reaching the opposite conclusion, the majority imputes to the School Board an
    illegal bias based solely on the decision it made to separate restrooms. It reasons that “[t]he
    overwhelming thrust of everything in the record . . . is that Grimm was similarly situated
    to other boys” with respect to the use of restroom facilities, and it further asserts that, by
    “privileg[ing] sex-assigned-at-birth over Grimm’s medically confirmed, persistent and
    consistent gender identify,” the School Board revealed “its own bias.” Ante at 38–39. But
    in employing such an analysis, the majority fails to address why it is permissible for schools
    to provide separate restrooms to their male and female students to begin with. Such
    consideration would have demonstrated that it was not “bias” for a school to have
    concluded that, in assigning a student to either the male or female restrooms, the student’s
    biological sex was relevant.
    At bottom, I conclude that the School Board, in denying Grimm the use of male
    restrooms, did not violate the Equal Protection Clause.
    *      *       *
    94
    The majority opinion devotes over 20 pages to its discussion of Grimm’s
    transgender status, both at a physical and psychological level. Yet, the mere fact that it felt
    necessary to do so reveals its effort to effect policy rather than simply apply law.
    I readily accept the facts of Grimm’s sex status and gender identity and his felt need
    to be treated with dignity. Affording all persons the respect owed to them by virtue of their
    humanity is a core value underlying our civil society. At the same time, our role as a court
    is limited. We are commissioned to apply the law and must leave it to Congress to
    determine policy. In this instance, the School Board offered its students male and female
    restrooms, legitimately separating them on the basis of sex. It also provided safe and
    private unisex restrooms that Grimm, along with all other students, could use. These
    offerings fully complied with both Title IX and the Equal Protection Clause.
    Accordingly, I would reverse and remand with instructions to dismiss Grimm’s
    complaint.
    95