North Carolina transgender battle could
expand civil rights law
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[May 11, 2016]
By Daniel Trotta and Daniel Wiessner
(Reuters) - The legal battle over
transgender rights between the state of North Carolina and the U.S.
government has moved the country closer to settling one of the last
frontiers in civil rights law.
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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 |
At issue is whether transgender people deserve the same federal
protections that have been extended to groups such as blacks and
religious minorities.
Backers of the North Carolina law, which requires people to use
public bathrooms that correspond with the sex on their birth
certificate rather than their gender identity, say it will protect
women and girls from predators. Transgender advocates say that claim
is unfounded and ignores a modern understanding of people who
identify with a gender other than the one assigned at birth.
The next step is likely to be a federal judge's decision on whether
to impose an injunction, or temporary ruling, to void the North
Carolina law pending a trial. Regardless of how a judge might rule
on an injunction, the case stands to add to a growing body of legal
decisions that have tended to side in favor of transgender rights
but not enough to dissuade states like North Carolina.
A handful of U.S. states and cities have attempted to enact measures
affecting lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights, but North
Carolina is the first state to focus on transgender people's use of
public bathrooms.
"This is absolutely a critical moment in terms of the focus and the
answers that will come through these cases about the established
scope of protections for transgender people," said Jennifer Levi, a
lawyer with the Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders.
The North Carolina law is the subject of four lawsuits in federal
court, two on each side.
The U.S. Justice Department and an advocacy group, the American
Civil Liberties Union, have each sought to strike it down, saying
the law violates the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964, which jolted
a divided nation into applying full rights to African-Americans a
century after the abolition of slavery.
North Carolina's governor and legislature both sued on Monday to
protect their law, saying the Justice Department was trying to
strike down a "common sense privacy policy" meant to protect the
state's public employees. State officials also said if the Obama
administration wants protections for transgender people, it should
appeal to Congress to amend existing laws.
GENDER AND LAW
At least two provisions of federal law ban discrimination on the
basis of sex -- Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which covers and
employment, and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972.
The issue before the courts is whether "sex" also applies to gender
identity. The Obama administration has taken a firm stance that
transgender people are protected, a point that Attorney General
Loretta Lynch emphasized on Monday.
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"The entire Obama administration wants you to know that we see you;
we stand with you; and we will do everything we can to protect you
going forward," Lynch told transgender people in remarks at a news
conference.
Lynch also threatened to withhold federal funding to the North
Carolina Department of Public Safety and the University of North
Carolina while the legal case proceeds.
North Carolina stands to lose $4.8 billion in funds, mainly
educational grants, if it does not back down from the law, according
to an analysis by lawyers at the University of California, Los
Angeles Law School.
Unless North Carolina backs down, any ruling by a trial judge would
likely be challenged and end up in a Virginia-based federal appeals
court that only weeks ago issued an important ruling in favor of
transgender rights.
That court, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, said a
transgender teen from Virginia could sue his high school for being
barred from using the boy's bathroom. The court noted that federal
education officials have interpreted Title IX to apply to
transgender people but did not directly rule on the issue.
So far, only one appeals court has explicitly ruled that the Civil
Rights Act prohibits discrimination against transgender people, in a
2005 case brought by a police officer. At least five other appeals
courts have suggested that they agreed, some in cases involving
other federal discrimination laws.
The U.S. Supreme Court could help settle the matter, but experts
said it was unlikely to take up any precedent-setting case any time
soon.
(Reporting by Daniel Wiessner and Daniel Trotta; Additional
reporting by Julia Harte; Editing by Noeleen Walder and Alistair
Bell)
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