Alberta’s trans sports ban and pronoun policy are now officially in effect

As of Sept. 1, two of Alberta premier Danielle Smith’s three anti-trans laws passed last year are being enforced

This week, two of the three anti-trans laws passed last year in Alberta officially go into effect.

As of Sept. 1, trans women and girls are banned from women’s sports leagues and divisions, and parents will be informed if a student chooses to go by a different name or pronoun at school.

The Fairness and Safety in Sport Act requires any women’s league, class or division to consist only of participants who were assigned female at birth. Each school, post-secondary institution and provincially recognized sports organization is required to develop a process for confirming that all of their players were assigned female at birth, and trans women and girls will be barred from competing in any women’s division of collegiate, school or amateur sports in the province.  

This week, the Edmonton Public School District confirmed that schools will be sending home forms for parents guardians to confirm that the birth certificate of any girl who wants to participate in a competitive sport reads female.

The Education Amendment Act, 2024, also went into effect this week. As of Sept. 1, parental permission will be required for students who wish to go by a different name or pronoun related to their gender identity. Parents will also need to opt in for their child to receive any sex education on issues such as gender identity, sexual orientation or human sexuality.

A third anti-trans law, the Health Statutes Amendment Act, is currently being challenged in the courts. The law would ban gender-affirming care for minors under 18.

We break down what you need to know. 

Senior editor Mel Woods is an English-speaking Vancouver-based writer, editor and audio producer and a former associate editor with HuffPost Canada. A proud prairie queer and ranch dressing expert, their work has also appeared in Vice, Slate, the Tyee, the CBC, the Globe and Mail and the Walrus.

Read More About:
Video, Power, Politics, Video, Trans, Alberta, Youth, Sports

Keep Reading

Senior Director for Counterterrorism Sebastian Gorka speaks during the Semafor World Economy Summit.

U.S. counterterrorism strategy takes aim at ‘pro-transgender’ groups

The Trump administration’s updated counterterrorism strategy targets “left-wing extremists” and groups who are “radically pro-transgender”
Renée Richards at a tennis match

The complicated legacy of Renée Richards

The former tennis player broke barriers for trans athletes in 1977. Then she changed her tune
Supporters of HIV AIDS research participate in the 2025 Toronto Pride Parade

Toronto man set to be the first Canadian cured of HIV

The patient received a stem cell transplant for his cancer that acted as a “double cure” because it contained a rare genetic mutation resistant to HIV
A photo of the outside of the New York Times building in New York City

Only 1 in 5 ‘New York Times’ news stories about trans issues quote actual trans people: report

A new 'Assigned Media' report found that the 'New York Times' rarely cited trans people in coverage about trans issues
Advertisement