CLEMSON, S.C. — The Atlantic Coast Conference has followed the NCAA’s lead and is removing all its athletic championships from North Carolina over a state law limiting protections for LGBT people.

The ACC Council of Presidents voted Wednesday to relocate the league’s championships until North Carolina repeals the law. The decision includes 10 neutral-site championships this academic year, which means relocating the ACC football title game that was scheduled to be played in Charlotte in December.

No announcement was made on where the championship events will be held.

“The decision to move the neutral site championships out of North Carolina while HB2 remains the law was not an easy one,” said the Clemson president, James P. Clements, chairman of the league’s council. “But it is consistent with the shared values of inclusion and non-discrimination at all our institutions.”

On Monday, the NCAA said it was relocating seven championships scheduled to be played in the state, including the men’s basketball first- and second-round matchups scheduled for next March in Greensboro, North Carolina.

ACC Commissioner John Swofford said after the NCAA’s decision that his league would review its next steps.

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The law requires transgender people to use restrooms at schools and government buildings corresponding to the sex on their birth certificates. It also excludes gender identity and sexual orientation from local and statewide antidiscrimination protections. HB2 was signed into law earlier this year by Republican Gov. Pat McCrory, who has defended it as a commonsense safety and security measure.

Clements said the leaders had an open, honest dialogue.

“There are a lot of parts to the discussion, how the community is affected,” the Clemson president said.

“I’m really happy with how everybody came together.”

Swofford said the presidents’ choice was made on principle.

“I think it was the right decision. A difficult one in ways, but an easy one in ways considering the principles involved,” he said. “That’s where our president’s laid their bed so to speak, and I think we landed in the right place.”

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Swofford said identifying replacement venues is in the early stages, but hopes to get locations lined up quickly.

Finding a football stadium as ACC-friendly as Charlotte might be difficult. The championship game’s been played at Bank of America Stadium for six seasons with an average attendance of 69,641. In the previous two seasons (2008-09) the game was held at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida and averaged 49,412 spectators.

“We’ll do what we need to do,” Swofford said. “It’s a challenge, our next challenge.”

Football’s not the only sport affected. The ACC planned to hold 14 of its 21 championship events in North Carolina this academic year, with most of those at neutral off-campus sites, and the others on the campuses or home venues of Wake Forest (field hockey), Duke (fencing), North Carolina (softball) and N.C. State (wrestling, cross country).

The decision came the same day the NCAA reopened the bidding process for those championships it pulled. The NCAA said bids for those events are due Sept. 27 and hopes to decide the new sites by Oct. 7.

Swofford said the ACC would consider the issue again in the spring if nothing changed in North Carolina’s law. Such prohibitions can last for quite some time: The NCAA’s ban on South Carolina hosting neutral-site championships for flying the Confederate flag on Statehouse grounds lasted from 2001 until it came down last summer.

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This is the latest in a steady stream of public and business backlash against the law.

The NBA moved its 2017 All-Star Game to New Orleans instead of hosting it in Charlotte as scheduled because of the law. The Duke’s men’s basketball schedule had to be reconfigured when Albany backed out due to that state’s travel ban, and the Vermont women’s basketball team canceled a December trip to play North Carolina.

Entertainers like Bruce Springsteen, Pearl Jam and Ringo Starr canceled plans to play. And PayPal reversed plans to open a 400-employee operation center in Charlotte.

The decisions have been a blow to North Carolina’s tourism and business communities.

Scott Dupree, executive director of the Greater Raleigh Sports Alliance, said the recent announcements were “unprecedented and historically bad” for the state’s sports event industry.


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