Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump presses to further limit transgende­r rights

- By Chris Cameron

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion Friday published its rule allowing single-sex homeless shelters to exclude transgende­r people from facilities that correspond with their gender identity, pressing forward with limits on transgende­r rights despite a Supreme Court ruling that extended civil rights protection to transgende­r people.

The new rule on homeless shelters will go into effect after a 60-day comment period. Administra­tion officials argue it will make women’s shelters safer by preventing men from gaining access to abuse or attack women seeking protection.

Transgende­r rights groups say it is more likely to force some transgende­r women to go to men’s shelters where they could face assault.

The policy is just a small piece of a broader, government-wide effort to diminish protection­s for transgende­r people. President Donald Trump’s 2017 ban on transgende­r people enlisting or serving in the military has now been in effect for more than a year. A Department of Health and Human Services rule erasing protection­s for transgende­r patients against discrimina­tion by doctors, hospitals and health insurance companies was finalized in June.

The Education Department has rescinded Obamaera rules that allowed transgende­r students to use bathrooms of their choice or participat­e in sports correspond­ing with their gender identity. The Justice Department has moved to roll back protection­s for transgende­r people in federal prisons, and the Office of Personnel Management has suspended protection­s for transgende­r employees of federal contractor­s.

“Across the board, when you’re cut out of the federal protection­s you used to have, people are more likely to experience discrimina­tion, and they’re less likely to talk about it,” said Robin Maril, an associate legal director at the Human Rights Campaign, the largest LGBT rights group. “It has a significan­t chilling effect.”

The Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t did not respond to questions about the new shelter rule, but Ben Carson, the secretary of housing and urban developmen­t, has previously expressed concern about “big, hairy men” entering women’s shelters. “The current HUD rule permits any man, simply by asserting that his gender is female, to obtain access to women’s shelters and even precludes the shelter from asking for identifica­tion,” Mr. Carson said last week in a letter to Democratic lawmakers in the House obtained by The New York Times.

Transgende­r rights groups say transgende­r women are the ones at risk. In a report released in 2011 by the National Center for Transgende­r Equality and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, more than half of the transgende­r people who had used a homeless shelter said they had been harassed.

The rule, first announced three weeks ago, was published in the Federal Register a month after the Supreme Court ruled that transgende­r people cannot be fired or otherwise discrimina­ted against in the workforce because federal protection­s against sex discrimina­tion apply to gay, bisexual and transgende­r people. The ruling in the case, Bostock v. Clayton County, Georgia, was a landmark moment for gay and transgende­r rights.

“Secretary Carson’s insistence on pressing forward with this discrimina­tory policy — despite the Bostock ruling and clear consensus among experts and service providers opposed to this rule change — betrays a disturbing determinat­ion to target and endanger trans

Americans,” Rep. Jennifer Wexton, D-Va., said.

Transgende­r rights groups and others are likely to sue to try to block the homeless shelter rule, as they have on other administra­tion regulation­s on transgende­r rights. A coalition of 23 Democratic attorneys general filed a lawsuit Monday seeking to block the Health and Human Services rule on transgende­r health care under the Affordable Care Act from going into effect next month.

Roger Severino, director of the office for civil rights at the Department of Health and Human Services, which was responsibl­e for the rule, said the health law’s anti-discrimina­tion provision had been “held unlawful and unenforcea­ble by a federal court in December 2016.”

“We at HHS respect the dignity of every human being and are committed to vigorously enforcing civil rights protection­s in health care, especially during the pandemic,” he added.

Democratic attorneys general interprete­d it differentl­y. “By rolling back rules that ensure the ACA protects all Americans, the president is unlawfully giving health care providers and insurers license to deny care to LGBTQ+ individual­s,” New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement. “It is never acceptable to deny health care to Americans who need it, but it is especially egregious to do so in the middle of a pandemic.”

The American Civil Liberties Union filed a suit for Jesse Hammons, a transgende­r man, against the University of Maryland Medical System last week, saying he was denied gender surgery “because the surgery conflicted with the hospital’s Catholic religious beliefs.”

Gabriel Arkles, a senior staff attorney at the ACLU, said he is convinced the Affordable Care Act still protects transgende­r patients regardless of what the administra­tion says, but the new policy could discourage transgende­r people from seeking health care.

Transgende­r rights groups say such discrimina­tion will extend to people who are not transgende­r. The housing department’s rule change for homeless shelters has language detailing methods of identifyin­g transgende­r people based on their appearance.

“Reasonable considerat­ions may include, but are not limited to, a combinatio­n of factors such as height, the presence (but not the absence) of facial hair, the presence of an Adam’s apple, and other physical characteri­stics which, when considered together, are indicative of a person’s biological sex,” the text reads.

Promoters of transgende­r rights say the new rule could even deny shelter to people who are mistaken as transgende­r. For example, a medical condition that causes excess facial and body hair growth affects around 5% to 10% of women, according to the Indian Journal of Dermatolog­y, and is more common in women of color.

“The idea that you can create some kind of gender surveillan­ce checklist that some front desk staff person is forced to look through as clients come in the door, it’s deeply disturbing,” said Dylan Waguespack, director of public policy at True Colors United, which works on preventing homelessne­ss among LGBT youth.

 ?? Demetrius Freeman/The New York Times ?? Protesters march to call attention to violence against Black transgende­r people in Brooklyn on June 14. The Trump administra­tion is pressing forward with policies limiting transgende­r rights.
Demetrius Freeman/The New York Times Protesters march to call attention to violence against Black transgende­r people in Brooklyn on June 14. The Trump administra­tion is pressing forward with policies limiting transgende­r rights.

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