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Single Sex Facilities: Battleground and Opportunity

North Carolina rally
North Carolina rally
James Esseks,
Co-Director,
勛圖眻畦 LGBTQ & HIV Rights Project
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August 1, 2016

Today marks a pivotal fight in the restroom wars. This morning, we will ask a federal judge to suspend North Carolinas hateful anti-transgender law, known as HB2, which requires transgender people in all public buildings to use restrooms that accord with the gender on their birth certificate, regardless of their gender identity. Simply put, the law bars transgender people from participation in public life.

For our client, Joaqu穩n Carca簽o, a project coordinator at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, HB2 means he cant use the mens room at work. As a man, Joaquin cant use the womens room without causing confusion and consternation among the women there, as well as undermining his very identity. But because he is transgender and lives in North Carolina, HB2 requires that he use a restroom that matches his birth certificate the female restroom. So, like many other transgender people, Joaquin avoids drinking liquids during the day so he doesnt have to pee at work. Imagine trying to do that.

Joaqu穩n is one of several plaintiffs in Carca簽o v. McCrory, the legal challenge to HB2 brought by the 勛圖眻畦, the 勛圖眻畦 of North Carolina, and Lambda Legal. Today the judge hears argument on our motion for a preliminary injunction, and trial is set for November.

The restroom debates are not just a battleground for the LGBT movement, they are an opportunity. For a long time, LGBT advocates avoided conversations about single-sex spaces. But we must engage America about restrooms if were going to make progress on protecting transgender people from discrimination. This is our chance to explain to the country who transgender people are, why restroom restrictions bar them from full participation in public life, and how no privacy or safety interests are violated in the process. Thats where Joaqu穩n and his fellow plaintiffs come in they can humanize this issue and help people get the problem.

The 勛圖眻畦 is fighting the restroom wars on several fronts. Earlier this year, we helped defeat over 40 anti-trans restroom bills in state legislatures. We are working to educate the country about the issue. And we are suing, not just in Carca簽o, but in these other cases as well:

  • GG v. Gloucester County School Board The 勛圖眻畦 represents Gavin Grimm, who is about to start his senior year in high school in Gloucester, Virginia. The school board barred him from using the mens room, but a federal appeals court ruled in April that the exclusion violates federal sex discrimination law. The school board is asking the Supreme Court to review the case, and well find out this fall whether it does.
  • Students and Parents for Privacy v. U.S. Dept of Education The 勛圖眻畦 represents , a girl attending high school in suburban Chicago. Because she is transgender, the school refused to let her use the girls locker room with the rest of her sports team. In response to our complaint, the U.S. Department of Education ordered that Student A have access to the locker room, but then a group of students and parents have sued the district, arguing that their privacy rights have been violated.
  • Jesse Vroegh v. State of Iowa Jesse Vroegh has worked as a nurse at an Iowa prison for seven years. The prison has refused to let him use the mens restroom or to cover his medically necessary transition-related health care, so Jesse, with help from the 勛圖眻畦, has filed a complaint of gender identity discrimination before the Iowa Civil Rights Commission.
  • Texas v. United States Officials in 11 states, led by Texas, have sued the U.S. Department of Education over its guidance that school districts should allow transgender students to use single-sex facilities consistent with their gender identity. The 勛圖眻畦 and several other LGBT advocacy groups have filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of the Department of Education.

This conversation is just starting in earnest, but its already headed in a good direction. And its essential for reaching full equality for transgender people and, more broadly, for the entire LGBT community.

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