Arizona 2024 2024 Regular Session

Arizona Senate Bill SB1182 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 02/05/2024

                    Assigned to ED 	FOR COMMITTEE 
 
 
 
 
ARIZONA STATE SENATE 
Fifty-Sixth Legislature, Second Regular Session 
 
FACT SHEET FOR S.B. 1182 
 
public schools; showers; reasonable accommodations 
Purpose 
Requires a public school to provide access to a single-occupancy or employee shower room 
to a person who is unwilling or unable to use a multioccupancy shower room designated for the 
person's sex and submits satisfactory evidence to the school. Grants a private cause of action, 
against the public school, to a person who encounters a person of the opposite sex in a public 
school shower room. Designates this legislation as the Arizona Accommodations for All Children 
Act (Act). 
Background 
A school district governing board, charter school governing body, the Arizona State 
Schools for the Deaf and the Blind and, for an accommodation school, the county school 
superintendent must ensure, if a school provides a shower room, that the shower room is clean and 
meets certain sanitation requirements (A.A.C. R9-8-703). 
A public school is any public institution established to offer instruction to pupils in 
preschool programs for children with disabilities, kindergarten programs, elementary grades or 
secondary grades (A.R.S. ยง 15-101). 
There is no anticipated fiscal impact to the state General Fund associated with this 
legislation. 
Provisions 
Reasonable Accommodation 
1. Requires a public school to provide a reasonable accommodation to a person, if the person:  
a) for any reason, is unwilling or unable to use a multioccupancy shower room designated for 
the person's sex that is located in a public school building or provided in connection with 
a public school-sponsored activity; 
b) requests an accommodation from the school in writing; and 
c) submits satisfactory evidence of the person's sex to the school. 
2. Includes, in reasonable accommodation: 
a) access to a single-occupancy shower room; or 
b) use of an employee shower room. 
3. Excludes, from reasonable accommodation, access to a shower room that is designated for use 
by persons of the opposite sex while persons of the opposite sex are, or could be, present. 
4. Defines sex as a person's immutable biological sex as determined by anatomy, physiology, 
genetics and hormones existing at the time of the person's birth.  FACT SHEET 
S.B. XXXX 
Page 2 
 
 
5. Defines satisfactory evidence as: 
a) a person's original birth certificate; or 
b) a person's amended, corrected or otherwise modified birth certificate with a written 
statement by a physician attesting that the biological sex registered in the birth certificate 
is consistent with the person's chromosomal count.  
6. Specifies that the Act does not prohibit public schools from adopting policies necessary to 
accommodate: 
a) persons protected under the federal Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990; or 
b) young children who are in need of physical assistance when using public school shower rooms. 
Legal Remedies 
7. Grants a private cause of action, against the public school, to a person whose reasonable 
accommodation request is denied by the public school, unless the public school can 
demonstrate that the accommodation would cause an undue hardship. 
8. Grants a private cause of action, against the public school, if the public school gave a person 
of the opposite sex permission to use the shower room, to a person who encounters a person 
of the opposite sex in a multioccupancy shower room designated for the person's sex and 
located in a public school building or provided in connection with a public school-sponsored 
event, unless the persons are of the same family. 
9. Requires claims arising pursuant to the Act to be brought in superior court in the county where 
the person resides or the public school is located at the time of filing. 
10. Requires civil actions brought pursuant to the Act to be initiated within two years after the 
alleged violation occurred. 
11. Allows persons who are aggrieved under the Act and prevail in court to recover monetary 
damages for all psychological, emotional and physical harm suffered. 
12. Entitles, to recovery of reasonable attorney fees and costs, persons who prevail on a claim 
brough pursuant to the Act. 
13. Specifies that the Act does not limit other remedies at law or equity that are available to the 
aggrieved person against the public school. 
Miscellaneous 
14. Defines family as a person's spouse, parent or guardian, child, sibling or grandparent. 
15. Contains a severability clause. 
16. Designates this legislation as the Arizona Accommodations for All Children Act. 
17. Becomes effective on the general effective date. 
Prepared by Senate Research 
February 2, 2024 
MH/slp