The number of out LGBTQ candidates for school board has more than doubled since 2018 amid a growing number of anti-LGBTQ bills targeting education in the U.S., according to a report released Thursday.

What’s new: The data, provided exclusively to USA TODAY by the LGBTQ Victory Fund – a political action committee dedicated to electing LGBTQ candidates – found the number of out school board candidates has more than doubled, from 34 to 82, in four years. Only 0.1% of the 90,000 current school board members are known to be LGBTQ, according to LGBTQ Victory Institute data.

Further context: The report comes amid a pitched debate over LGBTQ rights and education in schools, marked by legislation such as Florida’s so-called “don’t say gay” bill. The debate has focused on parental control of the content and environment of a child’s schooling, and there have been pushes for bans on LGBTQ-related content and loosening of protections for queer youths.

Why it matters: With low LGBTQ representation on school boards, councils often don’t reflect the identities of the students at their schools. A separate survey by School Board Partners, a nonprofit group that trains new school board members, found 6% of surveyed members identify as LGBTQIA+, compared with 16% of students.

How to bridge the gap: About 6,300 more LGBTQ school board members are needed to close the representation gap, according to the LGBTQ Victory Fund report. Reaching that number requires addressing misinformation and greater work toward recruitment and fundraising, organizers and candidates told USA TODAY.

More LGBTQ candidates stepping up for 2022 election

States across the country are considering more anti-LGBTQ legislation impacting schools. Parents and activists have pushed for the removal of LGBTQ books from school libraries for being “sexually explicit.” They’ve sued over Pride flags in classrooms and pushed for bans on transgender students participating in school sports. 

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