Jeydon Loredo, a transgender teenager, wants to be remembered in his high school yearbook wearing clothing that he says reflects his identity.
But the 18-year-old, who grew up female but now identifies as male, and his mother say that his Texas school district is refusing to allow a picture of Jeydon in a tuxedo to appear in the yearbook because it violates "community standards."
Now Jeydon and attorneys with the Southern Poverty Law Center are threatening legal action against the La Feria school district if it does not include the photo in the yearbook. La Feria, a town of about 7,300 residents.
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In a phone interview, Jeydon's mother, Stella Loredo, said that during a meeting with school district Superintendent Raymundo Villarreal, she was told that the photograph of her son in a tuxedo "goes against the community standards."
Raymundo told her that "they were a conservative school and that wouldn't follow the school policy as far as their dress code," she said.
Stella Loredo said she was told her son's photograph would be included only if he wore feminine attire, such as a drape or blouse.
"That's why I'm upset because, I mean, all of his family is accepting. All of his friends are accepting. So why can't they?" she said.
Villarreal said in a statement: "The district's legal representative has reached out to the student's counsel to engage in communication with the hope of a resolution. The district will follow the law, district policy and the appropriate procedures as it pertains to the request."
Alesdair Ittelson, an attorney with the Southern Poverty Law Center, said the district's action violates Jeydon's right to freedom of expression under the First Amendment, as well as the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and Title IX, the law requiring gender equity in every educational program that receives federal funding.
Jeydon, along with Ittelson and his mother appeared before the school board on Monday to appeal the district's decision.
Stella Loredo said they had tried to get the issue placed on the agenda but were unable to and had to discuss the case during the meeting's public comment section. The school board did not take any action.
In a letter to the school board, Ittelson said if a decision to allow the photograph in the yearbook isn't made by November 21, the law center would file a federal lawsuit.
"They have an opportunity to do the right thing here," Ittelson said.