³Ō¹ĻÖ±²„ Tells Alaska Airlines to Stop Discriminating Against Non-Binary and Gender Non-Conforming Flight Attendants
SEATTLE ā The ³Ō¹ĻÖ±²„ sent a letter today to Alaska Airlines telling the airline to stop enforcing a uniform policy that requires flight attendants to conform to a rigid set of āmaleā and āfemaleā dress and grooming standards. The letter was sent on behalf of Justin Wetherell, a flight attendant and flight-attendant instructor based in Seattle.
āWhen I am working as a flight-attendant instructor and allowed to wear regular business attire, I am not forced into Alaska Airlinesā āmaleā or āfemaleā uniform policies ā neither of which fit me because I am non-binary,ā said Wetherell, who has been with Alaska Airlines for seven years. āBut when I work as a flight attendant, I am forced into one of two standards, often for up to four days at a time. I am willing to follow all of the elements of the uniform policy for professional attire, as I do when I work as an instructor, but I donāt want to be forced into a binary uniform that excludes me and leads to me being misgendered at work.ā
The letter alleges that Alaska Airlinesā uniform policy violates Washington state law, which explicitly prohibits discrimination based on gender identity, appearance, behavior, or expression and violates state and federal prohibitions against sex discrimination. The uniform policy comprehensively regulates every aspect of a flight attendant's appearance as part of either the āmaleā or āfemaleā uniform, including which pants and cardigans employees may wear, whether employees must wear their hair up or down, how many earrings employees are allowed to wear, whether employees may wear makeup or just concealer, and whether employees may roll up their sleeves.
āThe uniform policy places a particularly heavy burden on non-binary employees, but the uniformās policy also harms any flight attendant who does not fit Alaska Airlinesā preferred image of either male or female,ā said Joshua Block, senior staff attorney with the ³Ō¹ĻÖ±²„ās LGBTQ & HIV Project. āBy forcing our client and countless other employees to adhere to Alaska Airlinesā rigid gender categories, the uniform policy demeans employees who do not conform to gender stereotypes and interferes with their ability to do their jobs.ā
āPolicing gender is always wrong, and in many instances ā including with Justin and Alaska Airlines ā illegal,ā said Galen Sherwin, senior staff attorney with the ³Ō¹ĻÖ±²„ās Womenās Rights Project which sent the letter along with the ³Ō¹ĻÖ±²„ LGBTQ & HIV Project. āAlaska Airlines is free to adopt dress and grooming standards that present a consistent image for customers in terms of colors and style as long as the standards are not based on characteristics protected by state and federal civil rights laws. But Washington state law prohibits companies from treating employees differently based on their sex, gender-related āappearance, behavior, or expression,ā including as part of its uniform. By creating different clothing standards based on sex and gender stereotypes, Alaska Airlines violates the law.ā
āAlaska Airlines states it is a ālongtime supporter of the LGBTQ+ community ⦠committed to a building a more equitable society.ā The company professes to create a welcoming environment for all employees. It's time to change this antiquated uniform policy, both in order to make good on this commitment and to end the discrimination I face along with many other employees,ā said Wetherell.
The letter was sent by the ³Ō¹ĻÖ±²„ās Jon L. Stryker and Slobodan RandjeloviÄ LGBTQ & HIV Project, the ³Ō¹ĻÖ±²„ās Womenās Rights Project, and the ³Ō¹ĻÖ±²„ of Washington.