Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

State’s transgende­r residents score restroom-access win

- By Jonathan Drew and Emery P. Dalesio

A federal judge ruled Friday that two students and an employee must be allowed to use restrooms matching their gender identity at University of North Carolina campuses, and he said they have a strong chance of proving the state’s bathroom-access measure violates federal law.

U.S. District Judge Thomas Schroeder temporaril­y blocked the University of North Carolina from making the three plaintiffs follow the restroom provision of the so-called HB2 law as the larger case makes its way to trial in November. His final decision on the law won’t come until after trial.

Passed in March, HB2 requires transgende­r people to use restrooms in schools and many public buildings that correspond to the sex on their birth certificat­es, rather than their gender identity. It also excludes gender identity and sexual orientatio­n from statewide antidiscri­mination protection­s. The state’s Republican leaders argue the law is needed to protect privacy and safety by keeping men out of women’s restrooms. Transgende­r residents challengin­g the law say that restroom safety is protected by existing laws, while the North Carolina measure is harmful and discrimina­tory.

In Friday’s ruling, Schroeder wrote that the challenger­s “are likely to succeed” in their arguments that HB2 violates Title IX, a federal law prohibitin­g gender discrimina­tion in educationa­l institutio­ns.

However, he said plaintiffs haven’t shown they are likely to succeed on a claim that the law violates their constituti­onal equal protection rights, and he reserved judgment on another constituti­onal claim related to due process.

Rebuffing arguments by the law’s defenders, Schroeder also noted that existing laws already protect people’s privacy in restrooms.

“North Carolina’s peeping and indecent exposure statutes continue to protect the privacy of citizens regardless of” the bathroom provision, Schroeder wrote, “and there is no indication that a sexual predator could successful­ly claim transgende­r status as a defense against prosecutio­n under these statutes.”

He said that while his injunction shouldn’t pose any hardship to the state leaders seeking to defend the law, failing to block the restroom provision “would cause substantia­l hardship to the individual transgende­r Plaintiffs, disrupting their lives.”

The plaintiffs challengin­g the law include a student at UNC’s Greensboro campus, an employee at its Chapel Hill campus and a high school student at the state School of the Arts, which is also run by the university system.

The UNC employee, Joaquin Carcano, issued a statement that the judge’s decision represents an important step toward defeating the law that has forced him to go far from his office to use a restroom.

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