Cassidy Carlisle She said the changes were made in the same locker room as the trans students.
She said she walked in during her physical education class at Presque Isle High School in northern Maine six years ago locker room Find a biology male who will change with her and other girls. She claimed the administrator told her that she might be late for class if she tried to avoid a change with a trans student.
Carlisle told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview. Fox News Digital has been in touch with Presque Isle High School.
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Gender identity was first included in the Maine Human Rights Act as part of the definition of sexual orientation in 2005. In 2021, the law was revised to add gender identity as its own protected class and join other protected classes such as gender, sexual orientation, disability, race, race, color, and religion. The law specifically says denying an equal opportunity for a person in a sports program is educational discrimination.
Carlisle claims that trans students only stayed in the women’s locker room for about a week before mysteriously disappearing. But the memory of her experience has always troubled her.

Maine high school student Cassidy Carlisle skiing (Contributed by Cassidy Carlisle)
Memory is especially with her when she finds out she will compete with a trans athlete from the state Nordic ski team.
This is an athlete she is familiar with. She has lost to cross-country players in the past few years.
When her father told her that she had to face the athlete again on skiing, Carlisle didn’t believe it was happening.
“I was like, ‘Oh, this is just what I heard in the news. … It won’t happen to me.”

Maine high school student Cassidy Carlisle runs in track and field (Contributed by Cassidy Carlisle)
But it did happen to her.
“The failure that happened at that moment was heartbreaking,” Carlisle said. “I was just shocked to some extent. I don’t believe it. … I don’t think it’s happening to me.”
Carlisle quits coed-slack team as a kid, especially because she feels she and the boys are “can’t keep up” with her. Then, even after a girl-only exercise, she could not escape the physical disadvantage of facing biological males.
Apart from the anxiety of the situation, Carlisle felt that he could not speak out.
“I’m silent for a while,” Carlisle said. “If you don’t have a platform to do this, it’s hard to say. … The rebound is a big deal. I’m a high school student. No high school student wants to be hurt or yell or say what people mean.
All she can do is vote in the November general election. As a first-time voter, she issued a vote for trans athletes in the forefront of women’s sports.
one National export poll The U.S. regarding women commanded for the U.S. Legislative Action Committee found that 70% of moderate voters saw “Donald Trump opposes trans boys and men playing girls and women sports, trans boys and men using girls and women’s bathrooms”, which is important to them.
6% said it was the most important issue, while 44% said it was “very important.”
Be a Republican Maine Representative. Laurel Libby Carlisle spoke earlier this year with another interathlete who won the women’s pole vault earlier this year, and Carlisle suddenly gained the opportunity to affect the issue.
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Libby’s social media posts identify trans athletes that incorporate the entire country into the ongoing cultural war. It’s Zero after Trump signed an executive order to resolve the February 5 issue, the Trump administration fought a nationwide fight against issues initiated by several Democratic-controlled countries, including Maine.
Suddenly, thousands of people in Maine opposed the state’s laws that brought trans women’s sports and locker rooms into the president’s support.
So Carlisle joined.
On February 27, Carlisle went to the White House with several other current and former female athletes who were affected by transgender influence, including Payton McNabb and Selina Soule. There, they met with Attorney General Pam Bondi and several other state attorneys generals and shared their stories.
Carlisle couldn’t help but notice that the White House was absent that day.
“None of our AGs come from our state,” Carlisle said.
So when Carlisle returned to her state, she took the matter into her own hands.
Last weekend, she spoke in front of the Capitol in Maine, talking to hundreds of residents there in protest against Janet Mills’ governor to continue to enable trans athletes in the women’s sports.
This is a month after the March 1 parade took place at Mills, a second protest against Mills outside the Capitol.
The Trump administration is taking positive measures to make the country comply with the will of Carlisle and other residents who wish to be subject to trans women.
March 17, Office of Health and Public Services (OCR) Announced Discovery The Maine Department of Education, the Maine Principals Association and Greeley High School violated Title IX as they continued to include transgender into the women’s movement.
The department said in the announcement that Maine has 10 days to correct its policies by signing an agreement or risk referral to the U.S. Department of Justice.
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Trump has shown his willingness to cut federal funds to enforce these policies. He suspended $175 million in funding to the University of Pennsylvania, temporarily suspending funding from the University of Maine last week until a review found the system was Completely compliant with Trump’s orders.
The deadlines that other areas of Maine comply with will appear within one week.
“I really want Maine to comply because our schools need federal funds and we can’t risk losing that,” Carlisle said. “Losing that federal funding does really hurt our country. So, I hope our government can bring it together.”
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