Official Summary Text
This bill creates the "Women's Safety and Protection Act," which clarifies and reconciles the meaning of sex, female, male, and
related terms in state law to provide protections for women and girls against sexual assault, harassment, and violence in correctional facilities, juvenile detention facilities, domestic violence shelters, dormitories, and restrooms, or where women have b
een traditionally afforded safety and protection from acts of abuse committed by biological men.
DEFINITIONS
This bill defines "female," "male," and related terms, and requires that any law enacted by the legislature, or any rule adopted by a state agency or other entity subject to the Uniform Administrative Procedures Act, when applicable to an individual's se
x, must be interpreted using the definitions provided in this bill.
In particular, this bill defines "female," "male," and "sex" as follows:
"Female" means an individual whose biological reproductive system is developed to produce ova; who has, had, will have, or would have, but for a developmental or genetic anomaly or historical accident, the reproductive system that at some point produces, transports, and utilizes eggs for fertilization.
"Male" means an individual whose biological reproductive system is developed to fertilize the ova of a female who has, had, will have, or would have, but for a developmental or genetic anomaly or historical accident, the reproductive system that at some point produces, transports, and utilizes sperm for fertilization.
"Sex" means an individual's biological sex, either male or female, as observed or clinically verified at birth and does not include gender identity and other subjective terms, which do not apply to this bill, and must not be used as synonyms or substitutes for sex.
FACILITIES DESIGNATED FOR BIOLOGICAL FEMALES
This bill prohibits a governmental agency from prohibiting distinctions between the sexes with respect to athletics, correctional facilities, juvenile detention facilities, domestic violence shelters, or other accommodations where biology, safety, or pri
vacy is implied and result in separate accommodations that are substantially related to the important government interest of protecting the health, safety, and privacy of individuals in such circumstances.
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE SHELTERS AND CORRECTIONAL OR JUVENILE DETENTION FACILITIES
This bill requires domestic violence shelters, correctional facilities, and juvenile detention facilities to designate each multi-occupancy restroom, changing room, and sleeping quarters to be for the exclusive use of either females, males, or members of
the same family. Such areas must be used only by members of that sex. Domestic violence shelters, correctional facilities, and juvenile detention facilities must take reasonable steps to provide individuals with privacy in these designated areas from me
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ers of the opposite sex.
PUBLIC SCHOOLS
This bill requires a public school to designate each multi-occupancy restroom or changing room for the exclusive use of either females, males, or members of the same family. A restroom or changing room within a public school that is designated for males
or females must be used only by members of that sex. The public school must take reasonable steps to provide individuals with privacy in restrooms and changing rooms from members of the opposite sex.
Overnight Events
This bill provides that during a public-school-authorized activity or event where students share sleeping quarters, a student must not share sleeping quarters with a member of the opposite sex, unless they are members of the same family and the student h
as received approval from the parent or legal guardian to do so.
Changing Rooms
This bill provides that in any public-school facility or setting where a person may be in a state of undress in the presence of others, school personnel must provide separate, private areas designated for use by persons based on the person's sex, and onl
y a member of the designated sex may enter these private areas.
EXCEPTIONS
This bill does not prohibit a domestic violence shelter, public school, correctional facility, or juvenile detention facility from (i) establishing single-occupancy restrooms, changing rooms, or sleeping quarters that are not designated by sex or (ii) re
designating a multi-occupancy restroom or sleeping quarters for the exclusive use of another group as needed.
This bill does not apply to an individual who enters an area designated for the opposite sex in any of the following circumstances:
To perform custodial services or maintenance of a restroom, changing room, or sleeping quarters that is normally used by the opposite sex.
To render medical assistance.
To render assistance by law enforcement.
To provide services or render aid during a natural disaster, a declared emergency, or when necessary to prevent a serious threat to good order or safety.
This bill does not prohibit a domestic violence shelter, public school, correctional facility, or juvenile detention facility from adopting policies necessary to accommodate persons protected under the federal Americans with
Disabilities Act or young children in need of physical assistance when using restrooms, changing facilities, or sleeping quarters.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This bill provides that a law that distinguishes between the sexes is subject to intermediate scrutiny, which forbids discrimination against similarly situated individuals, but allows the law to distinguish between the sexes when there is an important go
vernmental interest.
CAUSE OF ACTION
This bill authorizes an individual who suffers, or is likely to suffer, from direct or indirect harm resulting from a violation of this bill to assert a cause of action for appropriate relief. A person who is subjected to retaliation or other adverse ac
tion by asserting rights that are affirmed by this bill has a cause of action for appropriate remedies.
This bill provides that a person who contracts with a government agency to provide services for biological females at a domestic violence shelter, juvenile detention facility, correctional facility, or public school that is operated at the direction of,
and receives funding from, the state, a local government, or a political subdivision, has a cause of action against the agency of the public servant who directed the contractor to violate this bill.
This bill provides it is a rebuttable presumption that requiring an individual to be housed with members of the opposite sex at a domestic violence shelter, correctional facility, juvenile detention facility, or public school is inherently discriminatory
and is a cognizable harm to biological women under this bill.
This bill authorizes a court to waive the requirement that the petitioner post bond for good cause shown. A civil action under this bill must be initiated within two years from the date that the harm occurred.
ON MARCH 27, 2025, THE SENATE ADOPTED AMENDMENT #1 AND PASSED SENATE BILL 468, AS AMENDED.
AMENDMENT #1 makes the following revisions:
Excludes state residential training facilities from the provision prohibiting a governmental agency from prohibiting distinctions between the sexes with respect to athletics, correctional facilities, juvenile detention facilities, domestic violence shelters, or other accommodations where biology, safety, or privacy is implied and that result in separate accommodations that are substantially related to the important government interest of protecting the health, safety, and privacy of individuals in such circumstances.
Clarifies that provisions relative to safety and privacy in correctional facilities and juvenile detention facilities do not apply to the following:
Employees of the correctional facility, employees of the department of correction, or employees contracted to work at a correctional facility who enter a restroom, changing room, or sleeping room designated for the opposite sex when the employee is carrying out responsibilities related to the employee's job.
Employees of the juvenile detention facility or employees contracted to work at a juvenile detention facility who enter a restroom, changing room, or sleeping room designated for the opposite sex when the employee is carrying out responsibilities related to the employee's job.
ON APRIL 15, 2025, THE HOUSE SUBSTITUTED SENATE BILL 468 FOR HOUSE BILL 571, ADOPTED AMENDMENT #1, AND PASSED
SENATE BILL 468, AS AMENDED.
AMENDMENT #1 makes the following revisions:
APPLICATION
Changes the applicability of the bill from public schools to, instead, public institutions of higher education.
PURPOSE
Revises one of the purposes regarding the protection of women and girls to, instead, be to provide protections for women and girls against sexual assault, harassment, and violence in correctional facilities, juvenile detention facilities, public higher educational institutions, and domestic violence shelters or where women have been traditionally afforded safety and protection from acts of abuse committed by men.
DEFINITIONS
Revises, for purposes of the bill, the definition of "sex" as an individual's immutable biological sex, either male or female, as determined by anatomy and genetics existing at the time of birth.
Revises, for purposes of the bill, the definition of "sleeping quarters" as a room with a bed, instead of more than one bed, and in which more than one individual is housed overnight.
PROHIBITIONS
Prohibits a governmental agency, excluding state residential training facilities, from prohibiting distinctions between the sexes with respect to public institutions of higher education.
Prohibits an individual from staying overnight in sleeping quarters that are designated for females or males unless the individual is a member of that sex.
CLARIFICATIONS
Clarifies that the bill does not prohibit a domestic violence shelter, public institution of higher education, correctional facility, or juvenile detention facility from redesignating a multi-occupancy restroom or sleeping quarters for the exclusive use of another sex, instead of for the exclusive use of another group.
Clarifies that the bill does not prohibit a domestic violence shelter from adopting policies necessary to accommodate elderly individuals in need of physical assistance when using restrooms, changing facilities, or sleeping quarters.
Clarifies that, during a public institution of higher education-authorized activity or event where students share sleeping quarters, a student must not be required to share, instead of must not share, sleeping quarters with a member of the opposite sex, unless such persons are members of the same family, such as a parent, legal guardian, sibling, or grandparent, and, if the student is a minor, the student has received approval from the student's parent or legal guardian to do so.
Clarifies that the provisions of the bill relative to safety and privacy in correctional facilities and juvenile detention facilities do not apply to an individual who enters a restroom, changing room, or sleeping quarters designated for the opposite sex in order to maintain good order and safety by correctional facility or juvenile detention facility employees.
REQUIREMENTS
Requires a public institution of higher education that offers housing for student residents to provide students the option to share a room only with persons of the same sex. A student must not be required to share a room with a person of the opposite sex.
REMEDIES
Rewrites the remedies provisions in the bill to, instead, provide the following:
An individual who, while accessing a restroom or changing room designated for use by that individual's sex, encounters a person of the opposite sex in that restroom or changing room in violation of the bill has a private cause of action for declaratory and injunctive relief against the domestic violence shelter, correctional facility, juvenile detention facility, or public institution of higher education that (i) intentionally allowed a member of the opposite sex to enter the restroom or changing facility while other persons were present; or (ii) failed to take reasonable steps to prohibit the person of the opposite sex from using the restroom or changing room of the opposite sex.
An individual who is required by the domestic violence shelter, correctional facility, juvenile detention facility, or public institution of higher education to share sleeping quarters with a person of the opposite sex who is not a member of the individual's family in violation of the bill has a private cause of action for declaratory and injunctive relief against the offending domestic violence shelter, correctional facility, juvenile detention facility, or public institution of higher education.
A civil action brought pursuant to the bill must be initiated within two years after the violation occurred. An individual aggrieved under this chapter who prevails in court may recover reasonable attorney fees and costs from the offending domestic violence shelter, correctional facility, juvenile detention facility, or public institution of higher education.
ON MARCH 12, 2026, THE SENATE NON-CONCURRED IN HOUSE AMENDMENT #1.
ON MARCH 19, 2026,THE REFUSED TO RECEDE FROM ITS ACTIONS IN ADOPTING HOUSE AMENDMENT #1.
ON MARCH 26, 2026, THE SENATE REFUSED TO RECEDE FROM ITS ACTIONS AND APPOINTED A CONFERENCE COMMITTEE.
ON APRIL 2, 2026, THE HOUSE APPOINTED A CONFERENCE COMMITTEE.
Current Bill Text
Read the full stored bill text
SENATE BILL 468
By Bowling
HOUSE BILL 571
By Bulso
HB0571
001005
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AN ACT to amend Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 4;
Title 37; Title 41; Title 49 and Title 68, relative to
public safety.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF TENNESSEE:
SECTION 1. Tennessee Code Annotated, Title 68, is amended by adding the following
as a new chapter:
68-107-101. Short title.
This act is known and may be cited as the "Women's Safety and Protection Act."
68-107-102. Purpose.
The purpose of this chapter is:
(1) To clarify and reconcile the meaning of sex, male, female, and related
terms in state law; and
(2) To provide protections for women and girls against sexual assault,
harassment, and violence in correctional facilities, juvenile detention facilities,
domestic violence shelters, dormitories, and restrooms, or where women have
been traditionally afforded safety and protection from acts of abuse committed by
biological men.
68-107-103. Findings.
The legislature finds and declares that:
(1) "Physical differences between men and women, however, are
enduring: '[T]he two sexes are not fungible; a community made up exclusively of
one [sex] is different from a community composed of both.'" United States v.
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Virginia, 518 U.S. 515, 533 (1996), citing Ballard v. United States, 329 U.S. 187,
193 (1946);
(2) The United States Supreme Court has recognized that there are
"'[i]nherent differences' between men and women", and that these differences
"remain cause for celebration, but not for denigration of the members of either
sex or for artificial constraints on an individual's opportunity" in United States v.
Virginia, 518 U.S. 515, 533 (1996);
(3) The equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the
Constitution of the United States of America allows for legislatures to enact
facially neutral laws of general applicability, such as biologically based definitions
of sex;
(4) Biologically based definitions of sex have been consistently applied
since our nation's founding; and
(5) Decades of opinions from the supreme court of the United States
have upheld the argument that biological distinctions between male and female
are a matter of scientific fact, and biological sex is an objectively defined
category that has obvious, immutable, and distinguishable characteristics.
68-107-104. Chapter definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1) "Boy" means a human male who is a minor;
(2) "Changing room" means a room or area in which a person may be in
a state of undress in the presence of others, including a locker room or shower
room;
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(3) "Correctional facility" means a correctional facility owned and
operated by the state or the housing of prisoners committed to the custody of the
department of correction;
(4) "Domestic violence shelter" means a community-based shelter for
victims of domestic violence;
(5) "Father" means a parent who is of the male sex;
(6) "Female" means an individual whose biological reproductive system
is developed to produce ova; who has, had, will have, or would have, but for a
developmental or genetic anomaly or historical accident, the reproductive system
that at some point produces, transports, and utilizes eggs for fertilization;
(7) "Girl" means a human female who is a minor;
(8) "Juvenile detention facility" means a facility that is formally recognized
as a juvenile detention facility by the state agency responsible for monitoring,
review, or certification of juvenile detention facilities that house juvenile
offenders;
(9) "Male" means an individual whose biological reproductive system is
developed to fertilize the ova of a female who has, had, will have, or would have,
but for a developmental or genetic anomaly or historical accident, the
reproductive system that at some point produces, transports, and utilizes sperm
for fertilization;
(10) "Man" means a human male who has reached the age of majority;
(11) "Mother" means a parent who is a member of the female sex;
(12) "Public school" means a school that is created pursuant to § 49-1-
101;
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(13) "Restroom" means a room that includes one (1) or more toilets or
urinals;
(14) "Sex":
(A) Means an individual's biological sex, either male or female, as
observed or clinically verified at birth; and
(B) Does not include gender identity and other subjective terms,
which do not apply to this chapter and must not be used as synonyms or
substitutes for sex;
(15) "Sleeping quarters" means a room with more than one (1) bed and
in which more than one (1) individual is housed overnight; and
(16) "Woman" means a human female who has reached the age of
majority.
68-107-105. Application of definitions — Distinctions between the sexes.
Notwithstanding another law to the contrary, any law enacted by the legislature,
or any rule adopted by a state agency or other entity subject to the Uniform
Administrative Procedures Act, compiled in title 4, chapter 5, when applicable to an
individual's sex must be interpreted using the definitions provided in this chapter.
68-107-106. Safety and privacy of women and girls in facilities designated for
biological females.
Notwithstanding another law to the contrary, a governmental agency shall not
prohibit distinctions between the sexes with respect to athletics, correctional facilities,
juvenile detention facilities, domestic violence shelters, or other accommodations where
biology, safety, or privacy is implied and that result in separate accommodations that are
substantially related to the important government interest of protecting the health, safety,
and privacy of individuals in such circumstances. This chapter does not prohibit a
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domestic violence shelter, public school, correctional facility, or juvenile detention facility
from:
(1) Establishing single-occupancy restrooms, changing rooms, or
sleeping quarters that are not designated by sex; or
(2) Redesignating a multi-occupancy restroom or sleeping quarters for
the exclusive use of another group authorized under this chapter as needed.
68-107-107. Safety and privacy in domestic violence shelters.
(a) A domestic violence shelter shall designate each multi-occupancy restroom,
changing room, and sleeping quarters for the exclusive use of any one (1) of the
following:
(1) Females;
(2) Males; or
(3) Members of the same family.
(b) A restroom, changing room, or sleeping quarters within a domestic violence
shelter that is designated for females or males must be used only by members of that
sex. An individual shall not enter a restroom, changing room, or sleeping quarters that is
designated for females or males unless the individual is a member of that sex.
(c) The domestic violence shelter shall take reasonable steps to provide
individuals with privacy in restrooms, changing rooms, and sleeping quarters from
members of the opposite sex.
(d) This section does not apply to an individual who enters a restroom, changing
room, or sleeping quarters designated for the opposite sex in the following
circumstances:
(1) To perform custodial services or maintenance of a restroom,
changing room, or sleeping quarters that is normally used by the opposite sex;
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(2) To render medical assistance;
(3) To render assistance by law enforcement; or
(4) To provide services or render aid during a natural disaster, a declared
emergency, or when necessary to prevent a serious threat to good order or
safety.
(e) This section does not prohibit a domestic violence shelter from adopting
policies necessary to accommodate persons protected under the federal Americans with
Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.) or young children in need of physical
assistance when using restrooms, changing facilities, or sleeping quarters.
68-107-108. Safety and privacy in restrooms of public schools.
(a) A public school shall designate each multi-occupancy restroom or changing
room for the exclusive use of either females, males, or members of the same family.
(b)
(1) A restroom or changing room within a public school that is designated
for males or females must be used only by members of that same sex. An
individual shall not enter a restroom or changing room that is designated for one
(1) sex unless the individual is a member of that sex.
(2) The public school shall take reasonable steps to provide individuals
with privacy in restrooms and changing rooms from members of the opposite
sex.
(c) During a public school-authorized activity or event where students share
sleeping quarters, a student shall not share sleeping quarters with a member of the
opposite sex, unless such persons are members of the same family, such as a parent,
legal guardian, sibling, or grandparent, and the student has received approval from the
parent or legal guardian to do so.
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(d) In any other public school facility or setting where a person may be in a state
of undress in the presence of others, school personnel shall provide separate, private
areas designated for use by persons based on the person's sex, and a person shall not
enter these private areas unless the person is a member of the designated sex.
(e) This section does not apply to an individual who enters a restroom, changing
room, or sleeping quarters designated for the opposite sex in the following
circumstances:
(1) To perform custodial services or maintenance of a restroom,
changing room, or sleeping quarters that is normally used by the opposite sex;
(2) To render medical assistance;
(3) To render assistance by law enforcement; or
(4) To provide services or render aid during a natural disaster, a declared
emergency, or when necessary to prevent a serious threat to good order or
safety.
(f) This section does not prohibit a public school from adopting policies
necessary to accommodate persons protected under the federal Americans with
Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.); title 49, chapter 2, part 8; or adoption of
policies necessary to accommodate young children in need of physical assistance when
using restrooms, changing facilities, or sleeping quarters.
68-107-109. Safety and privacy in correctional facilities and juvenile detention
facilities.
(a) A correctional facility or juvenile detention facility shall designate each multi-
occupancy restroom, changing room, and sleeping quarters for the exclusive use of
either females, males, or members of the same family.
(b)
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(1) A restroom, changing room, or sleeping quarters within a correctional
facility or juvenile detention facility that is designated for females or males must
be used only by members of that sex. An individual shall not enter a restroom,
changing room, or sleeping quarters that is designated for females or males
unless the individual is a member of that sex.
(2) A correctional facility or juvenile detention facility shall take
reasonable steps to provide individuals with privacy in restrooms, changing
rooms, and sleeping quarters from members of the opposite sex.
(c) This section does not apply to an individual who enters a restroom, changing
room, or sleeping quarters designated for the opposite sex in the following
circumstances:
(1) To perform custodial services or maintenance of a restroom,
changing room, or sleeping quarters that is normally used by the opposite sex;
(2) To render medical assistance;
(3) To render assistance by law enforcement; or
(4) To provide services or render aid during a natural disaster, a declared
emergency, or when necessary to prevent a serious threat to good order or
safety.
(d) This section does not prohibit a correctional facility or juvenile detention
facility from adopting policies necessary to accommodate persons protected under the
federal Americans with Disabilities Act (42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq.) or young children in
need of physical assistance when using restrooms, changing facilities, or sleeping
quarters.
68-107-110. Standard of review.
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A law that distinguishes between the sexes in furtherance of this chapter is
subject to intermediate scrutiny, which forbids discrimination against similarly situated
individuals, but allows the law to distinguish between the sexes when there is an
important governmental interest.
68-107-111. Remedies, rebuttable presumption, cause of action.
(a) An individual who suffers, or is likely to suffer, from direct or indirect harm as
a result of a violation of this chapter may assert that violation as a cause of action for
remedies provided for in subsection (e).
(b) A person who contracts with an agency of government to provide services for
biological females at a domestic violence shelter, juvenile detention facility, correctional
facility, or public school that is operated at the direction of, and receives funding from,
the state, a local government, or a political subdivision has a cause of action against the
agency of the public servant who directed the contractor to violate this chapter.
(c) A person who is subjected to retaliation or other adverse action by asserting
rights that are affirmed by this chapter has a cause of action for remedies provided for in
subsection (e).
(d) It is a rebuttable presumption that requiring an individual to be housed with
members of the opposite sex at a domestic violence shelter, juvenile detention facility,
correctional facility, or public school that is subject to this chapter is inherently
discriminatory and is a cognizable harm to biological women under this chapter.
(e) A person who brings a cause of action pursuant to this chapter may obtain
appropriate relief, including, but not limited to:
(1) Injunctive relief, a protective order, a writ of mandamus or a
prohibition, or declaratory relief to prevent a violation of this chapter; or
(2) Actual damages, reasonable attorney fees, and costs.
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(f) The court may waive the requirement that the petitioner post bond for good
cause shown.
(g) A civil action under this chapter must be initiated within two (2) years from
the date that the harm occurred.
SECTION 2. If any provision of this act, or its application to any person or circumstance
is held invalid, then the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of this act that
can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to that end, the provisions of
this act are severable.
SECTION 3. The headings in this act are for reference purposes only and do not
constitute a part of the law enacted by this act. However, the Tennessee Code Commission is
requested to include the headings in any compilation or publication containing this act.
SECTION 4. This act takes effect July 1, 2025, the public welfare requiring it.