On June 26, 2023, the United States Supreme Court declined to consider a North Carolina charter school's challenge of an appeals court's ruling striking down the charter school's dress code requiring its female students to wear skirts while attending school.
"The 4th U.S. District Court of Appeals threw out the dress code, ruling that North Carolina charter schools are "state actors" working on the government's behalf, so they can't impose rules that won't fly in traditional public schools. The ACLU and several parents of female students had sued Charger Day School, which emphasizes "traditional values" and gets 95% of its funding from the state, arguing that its dress code violated the Constitution's equal protection clause and federal anti-discrimination law, Title IX."