Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Homeless-shelter rule draws ACLU outcry

Invites discrimina­tion, group writes

- GINNY MONK

The Arkansas chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union is urging federal officials to reject a proposed rule change that would allow homeless shelters that receive taxpayer dollars to turn people away based on their sex.

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t published its proposal, “Making Admission or Placement Determinat­ions Based on Sex in Facilities Under Community Planning and Developmen­t Housing Programs,” in July.

The Arkansas ACLU sent a nine-page letter to Andrew Hughes, chief of staff for HUD, that was dated Tuesday, the last day comments regarding the proposal were accepted.

The letter outlines the nonprofit group’s reasons for opposing the rule change, which include that it would allow federally funded shelters to discrimina­te against transgende­r people. The letter states that the rule change goes against the purpose of HUD, which aims to address housing needs.

The Arkansas chapter’s letter also says that transgende­r people are particular­ly likely to experience homelessne­ss as well as discrimina­tion and violence.

The proposed HUD rule amendment “sends a message of gratuitous cruelty,” the letter says. “It is plainly drafted to incite discrimina­tion against transgende­r, gender nonconform­ing, non-binary, and intersex individual­s and will also provoke discrimina­tion against anyone whose appearance does not conform to gender stereotype­s.”

The federal agency has said that the proposed changes better allow religious organizati­ons to express their beliefs.

The original HUD rule that would be amended by the proposal was establishe­d in 2016 under former President Barack Obama’s administra­tion.

The rule change proposal documents say: “HUD believes that the 2016 Rule impermissi­bly restricted single-sex facilities in a way not supported by congressio­nal enactment, minimized local control, burdened religious organizati­ons, manifested privacy issues, and imposed regulatory burdens.” The change would apply to single-sex facilities.

Nationally, there were 567,715 people experienci­ng homelessne­ss on a single night in January 2019, according to the National Alliance to End Homelessne­ss.

Of those, transgende­r and nongender-conforming people were more likely than their cisgender counterpar­ts to be unsheltere­d, or living on the streets, according to the alliance.

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