U.S. judge to weigh halt to North
Carolina transgender bathroom law
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[August 01, 2016]
By Colleen Jenkins
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (Reuters) - A U.S.
judge will hear arguments on Monday to stop North Carolina from
enforcing a state law barring transgender people from using bathrooms in
government buildings and public schools that correspond with their
gender identity.
The state in March became the first in the country to restrict access to
publicly-operated, single-sex restrooms and changing facilities to the
gender on a birth certificate rather than the gender with which someone
identifies.
The move fueled a national debate about bathrooms and transgender rights
and made North Carolina a target for boycotts by companies, musicians
and the National Basketball Association, which pulled its 2017 All-Star
Game from Charlotte.
Critics of the measure, known as House Bill 2 or HB 2, will argue to
U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Schroeder in Winston-Salem that it is
stigmatizing and leaves transgender people vulnerable to harassment and
violence.
“We hope that this discriminatory law's days are numbered," advocacy
groups including the American Civil Liberties Union and Lambda Legal
said in a statement ahead of the hearing, where they will seek a
preliminary injunction.
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Lawyers for Republican Governor Pat McCrory, who signed the law and now
is a defendant in the ACLU's lawsuit, said HB 2 should stay in effect
while the case proceeds. A trial is set to begin on Nov. 14.
"Any harm to plaintiffs due to lack of access to restrooms designated
for the opposite sex certainly cannot outweigh the privacy and safety
risks presented to the public," McCrory's lawyers said in a court filing
opposing an injunction.
The governor's office did not comment ahead of the hearing.
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A bathroom sign welcomes both genders at the Cacao Cinnamon coffee
shop in Durham, North Carolina, United States on May 3, 2016.
REUTERS/Jonathan Drake/File Photo
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North Carolina's Republican-led legislature passed HB 2 during a
one-day special session called after Charlotte, the state's largest
city, adopted a nondiscrimination ordinance allowing transgender
people to use bathrooms consistent with their gender identity.
The state law blocks such access in government-owned bathrooms but
permits private businesses to set their own policies.
Bathrooms on the University of North Carolina's 17 campuses are
affected by the law. UNC President Margaret Spellings said she was
eager for a resolution to the suit, which also named the university
system as a defendant.
"As I have said all along, the University is caught in the middle of
an apparent conflict between state law (HB2) and federal guidance
that the University did not create," she said in a statement.
(Reporting by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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