The sound system outside Minneapolis Public Schools headquarters blared Lady Gaga, Beyoncé and Lizzo. Arriving families were greeted by a crowd of dozens cheering them on , several waving colorful flags and signs.
The state's fourth-largest school district hosted its first-ever gender resource fair Thursday, the latest in a series of events officials regularly put on to help families from various communities connect with each other and learn about community resources.
"This is a celebration of identity and how that's connected to joy," said Ian McGriff, a specialist with the district's Out4Good program.
The fair, which included a presentation on gender affirming care for young children and a story hour, was originally slated for Loring Elementary on the city's North Side. Late last month, a social media account known for publicizing similar events to a broadly disapproving audience spread word about the gender resource fair on Twitter.
District officials and some board members received negative emails as a result, prompting Minneapolis Public Schools to move the fair to the district's headquarters.
"We weren't going to take a chance with these kids," McGriff said.
While a small group of protesters showed up at Loring in the early afternoon, district officials said, none materialized during the gender resource fair and accompanying dance party. Instead, passersby waved and honked their horns in support of fairgoers as the playlist cycled through an array of pop tunes.
Inside the building, parents learned how to support a child who may want to adopt a new name or feels they don't identify with the gender they were assigned at birth. Joyner Emerick, the district's first transgender school board member, said the negative emails in the run up to the fair were largely from people who don't understand the issues trans and nonbinary students face.