The Star Malaysia

Settlement proposed in US transgende­r bathroom lawsuit

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WINSTON- SALEM: Transgende­r people will be allowed to use public restrooms in North Carolina that match their gender identity under a settlement agreement that aims to resolve the federal lawsuit over the state’s widely criticised bathroom law.

The consent decree proposed on Wednesday by Governor Roy Cooper, the American Civil Liberties Union and transgende­r people who sued the state would remove some of the law’s harmful effects, civil rights groups said.

The judge in the case must sign off on the proposal before it takes effect.

North Carolina has been mired in litigation about transgende­r rights since Republican lawmakers enacted a law last year that restricted bathroom choice in state-run buildings to the sex on people’s birth certificat­es rather than their gender identity.

A measure passed in March rescinded the so-called bathroom Bill known as HB 2 and helped bring back some business and sports events that had been pulled from the state in protest.

But activists said transgende­r people still faced discrimina­tion under the new law, which left state lawmakers in control of bathroom policies.

The consent decree says that under current state law, transgende­r people are not prevented from using their preferred public facilities.

“For too many reasons, it is not in our state’s best interest to remain in drawn-out court battles that still linger because of HB 2,” Cooper, a Democrat, said in a statement.

Republican legislativ­e leaders, who intervened in the court dispute, were not part of the agreement.

Cooper on Wednesday also signed an executive order that bars state agencies and those who have contracts with the state from discrimina­ting on the basis of gender identity or expression.

Activists were pleased by both actions, but said they would continue to fight for full non-discrimina­tion protection­s for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r people in the state.

“Nothing can make up for the cruel and senseless attacks transgende­r people have faced in North Carolina, but I am hopeful that the court will agree to clarify the law so we can live our lives in less fear,” said Joaquan Carcano, a transgende­r man and the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit.

Tami Fitzgerald, executive director of NC Values Coalition, which supported HB 2’s bathroom restrictio­ns, criticised the consent decree and executive order.

The “actions today constitute a massive power grab, with sweeping changes that only the legislativ­e branch has the authority to enact”, she said.

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