Chattanooga Times Free Press

Tennessee Gov. Lee signs public school ‘bathroom bill’

- BY ANDY SHER

NASHVILLE — Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee has signed into law a “bathroom bill” that allows public schools to be sued if officials allow transgende­r students, teachers and staff to use multi-person bathrooms, locker rooms or changing facilities that don’t match the gender listed on their birth certificat­es.

The governor’s action on Friday drew immediate condemnati­on from LGBTQ leaders who denounced him and lawmakers who passed the measure.

House Bill 1233 / Senate Bill 1367 requires schools to make “reasonable accommodat­ions” for transgende­r students by providing them alternativ­e facilities such as single-occupant or faculty restrooms.

The law specifies that the

accommodat­ions cannot include access to “a restroom or changing facility that is designated for use by members of the opposite sex.” And it defines sex as “a person’s immutable biological sex as determined by anatomy and genetics existing at the time of birth.”

It’s the first such bathroom law approved by any state since North Carolina approved in 2016 the Public Facilities Privacy and Security Act. That law triggered a widespread national backlash, including boycotts that eventually forced North Carolina officials to back down and revise their law.

Human Rights Campaign President Alphonso David charged that by advancing “hateful” legislatio­n like the school bathroom bill, Lee and his fellow Republican­s in the legislatur­e are flexing their power to “harm and further stigmatize trans youth in Tennessee.” He said in his statement that Tennessee is “quickly becoming a national leader for anti-LGBTQ legislatio­n.”

“Lawmakers would rather discrimina­te against LGBTQ youth than focus on real problems facing Tennessean­s,” David said. “I want to be clear: Gov. Lee’s shameful decision to sign this baseless and discrimina­tory bill into law will harm the health and well-being of trans students in Tennessee by creating daily degrading experience­s for them at school. These ‘Slate of Hate’ bills are unjustifia­ble and must stop.”

Lee had said on Tuesday in response to questions that he anticipate­d signing the Tennessee Accommodat­ions for All Children Act, sponsored by Senate Judiciary Committee Chair Mike Bell, R-Riceville, and House Calendar and Rules Committee Chairman Jason Zachary, R-Knoxville.

The bill “provides equal access to every student. It’s a reasonable accommodat­ion, it allows for accommodat­ion for every student regardless of their gender,” Lee said. “I think that’s a smart approach to the challenge. And I’ll be signing that.”

Analysts with the General Assembly’s Fiscal Review Committee this year declined to put a cost on the bill, which some charge violates federal law, saying they couldn’t peg a cost to litigation.

Asked Saturday by the Times Free Press if he and fellow GOP lawmakers had concerns Tennessee could be hurt by the law, Bell, the bill’s Senate sponsor, said, “I think at some point that the people of this state and the legislatur­e have got to decide whether we bow down to corporate people or bow down to the LGBTQ crowd. Or do what we think is best for Tennessean­s.”

The NCAA has indicated it may withdraw sports championsh­ip games from states with laws such as the bathroom measure, and other businesses have expressed similar concerns.

Bell said, “We still have all kinds of businesses and corporatio­ns coming to Tennessee because we’re such a great place to do business in, a great place to raise families in and low taxes. So we have them coming.”

He added, “They’re going to have to decide whether they want to take advantage of our great business environmen­t, beautiful state, friendly people, low taxes or if they want to go to some place that’s not all those things and not have to, I guess, disagree with what the legislatur­e thinks is doing what’s best for Tennessean­s.”

Sen. Todd Gardenhire, R-Chattanoog­a, who supported Bell’s bill, said, “People that were born a certain sex ought to respect everybody else and observe the bathrooms as we have them set up. And just because somebody thinks they’re something doesn’t mean they are something.”

He said he voted for the bill because people don’t need to make other people uncomforta­ble or put them in an awkward position “because of your desire to be something else.”

As for any repercussi­ons for Tennessee from potential boycotts and similar actions, Gardenhire said, “Well, this is America. If somebody wants to boycott something for some reason, that’s their privilege. Hopefully that’s the way we are in America, if somebody doesn’t agree with somebody and doesn’t want to come here, well, more power to them.”

Gardenhire, a retired financial consultant, said he believes for businesses “it usually comes down to the money. When it’s all said and done, most everything comes down to a financial decision.”

‘SLATE OF HATE’

The transgende­r student bathroom measure is the third youth-related transgende­r bill signed into law by Lee. The Tennessee Equality Project, the Nashville LGBT and other groups have referred to all the collective LGBTQ bills as the “slate of hate.”

Another bill signed by Lee is aimed at transgende­r student athletes competing in sporting events, requiring that students’ qualificat­ions to participat­e in girls’ athletic events be determined by the biological sex as listed on their birth certificat­e.

The third measure signed by Lee, Senate Bill 1229/ House Bill 529, requires schools to provide parents or guardians of students a heads-up prior to beginning “instructio­n of a sexual orientatio­n or gender identity curriculum.” It also gives adults an option to opt out their children from such instructio­n.

Lee last week signaled he is also likely to sign into law Senate Bill 126 / House Bill 1027. The amended bill would prohibit a health care profession­al from prescribin­g hormone treatment to address issues for “prepuberta­l minors” except in cases of growth deficienci­es or other diagnoses “unrelated to gender dysphoria or gender incongruen­cy.”

But Lee appeared hesitant about another restroom bill, House Bill 1182 / Senate Bill 1224, which applies to businesses as well as public entities — calling it “one of these bills” that “I haven’t fully made a decision about.”

It says that businesses or other entities allowing access to transgende­r people would be required to post post 8-inch-by6-inch, red-and-yellow notices at the entrance of each public restroom and entrance. The signs would say, “This facility maintains a policy of allowing the use of restrooms by either biological sex, regardless of the designatio­n on the restroom.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States