Imperial Valley Press

Moratorium over: N. Carolina towns advance LGBT protection­s

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — The first North Carolina municipali­ties are acting to expand LGBT rights again a month since the expiration of a moratorium on nondiscrim­ination ordinances agreed to years ago as a compromise to do away with the state’s “bathroom bill.”

The governing board of Hillsborou­gh, a town of 7,000 about 40 miles (64 kilometers) northwest of Raleigh, voted unanimousl­y this week to approve new protection­s for people on the basis of sexual orientatio­n, gender identity and other di erences.

Those rules make it unlawful — punishable by a misdemeano­r and $500 fines — for businesses of other entities within the town limits to discrimina­te on these and other characteri­stics in employment and in o ering goods and services to the public, including lodging and dining. Hillsborou­gh’s ordinance marks the first by a North Carolina town or city since the 3 1/2-year ban expired Dec. 1.

“This is a step in the right direction,” Hillsborou­gh board member Matt Hughes, who is openly gay, said during Monday’s board meeting. In “so many places across the country, just not in the Southeast but really everywhere, people can marry the love of their life on a Saturday and get fired Monday when they show up at work.”

Two other towns in Orange County planned discussion­s on largely similar ordinances starting Tuesday in Carrboro and Wednesday in Chapel Hill, which is home of the University of North Carolina’s flagship campus. The city of Durham, with 275,000 people, will consider such protection­s next week, according groups.

“It’s a new day for LGBTQ North Carolinian­s, who for too long have lived under the legacy of discrimina­tion in this state,” Equality North Carolina executive director Kendra Johnson said in a news release. Her group and others started a campaign in the fall to urge cities and towns to act.

Johnson cited the painful legacy of House Bill 2, which the Republican-dominated legislatur­e approved and then-GOP Gov. Pat McCrory signed into law in March 2016. The measure, which was a response to action by the Charlotte City Council, barred additional non-discrimina­tion ordinances by towns and cities.

A key disputed section of HB2 required transgende­r people to use restrooms in many public buildings that correspond­ed to their sex at birth. It drew national condemnati­on and prompted several large corporatio­ns and sports teams to relocate events to other states or reconsider expanding in North Carolina.

In early 2017, the newly elected Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and GOP legislativ­e leaders approved a replacemen­t law that prohibited local government­s from enacting new nondiscrim­ination ordinances for workplaces, hotels and restaurant­s until December 2020.

State lawmakers still control rules involving public bathrooms. GOP lawmakers have shown little interest in approving statewide LGBT protection­s, which Cooper and other Democrats seek. Hughes said the lack of comprehens­ive anti-bias laws from the legislatur­e or Congress makes it incumbent upon

to gay- rights local government­s to act.

Some social conservati­ves said broad LGBT non- discrimina­tion ordinances will violate the constituti­onally protected free speech and religious liberties of non-profit and business owners who hold sincerely held beliefs in opposition to gay marriage. Court cases elsewhere have involved bakers or florists cited for refusing to provide goods for a same-sex wedding.

While all citizens should be treated with dignity and respect, Hillsborou­gh leaders are “attempting to punish people and businesses that don’t hold to their government view of sexuality,” said Tami Fitzgerald with the North Carolina Values Coalition. Fitzgerald urged the board Monday not to approve the ordinance.

One board member, Kathleen Ferguson, said she respects di erences on these issues but that she’ll always side with policies that favor inclusivit­y. Mayor Pro Tempore Mark Bell, who said he has a transgende­r child, was more direct.

“The thought of my kid in the future losing employment or health care or being discrimina­ted against, especially on the grounds of someone’s religion — it’s o ensive,” Bell said.

Fitzgerald said her group would consider legal challenges and ask the General Assembly to intervene. Republican­s lack veto-proof majorities and have limited options to cancel local ordinances. The o ces of House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate leader Phil Berger did not immediatel­y respond Tuesday to email requests for comment on the approved ordinance. The North Carolina General Assembly convenes its two-year session Wednesday.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME ?? In this 2016 file photo, gender free sign hangs outside a restroom at 21c Museum Hotel in Durham, N.C.
AP PHOTO/GERRY BROOME In this 2016 file photo, gender free sign hangs outside a restroom at 21c Museum Hotel in Durham, N.C.

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