The Morning Call

Wolf moves to add LGBTQ protection­s

Governor backs regulatory change before state board

- By Stephen Caruso Spotlight PA

HARRISBURG — In the closing days of his final term in office, Gov. Tom Wolf is backing a regulatory change that would formalize nondiscrim­ination protection­s for LGBTQ people, while circumvent­ing the Legislatur­e.

Under guidance released in 2018, a student, tenant or worker at most businesses can file a complaint with the Pennsylvan­ia Human Relations Commission against their school, landlord or boss if they think they’ve been discrimina­ted against because of their sexual orientatio­n or gender identity.

A little-noted proposal supported by Wolf, which is up for final approval before a state regulatory board Thursday, would formally adopt that guidance.

“The governor has been clear — hate has no place in Pennsylvan­ia, and that includes sex-based discrimina­tion as defined by these regulation­s,” Wolf spokespers­on Beth Rementer said in a statement.

Wolf, a Democrat first elected in 2014, asked Republican leaders in the General Assembly throughout his tenure to pass a bill that would add discrimina­tion protection­s based on sexual orientatio­n and gender identity to state law. Pennsylvan­ia is the only state in the northeast without such a law on the books, and one of 27 nationwide without an explicit law banning such discrimina­tion.

The Legislatur­e has ignored Wolf’s prodding, as it has on many other issues. So, as he did on climate change and policing, Wolf turned to a channel that avoids state lawmakers.

“Unfortunat­ely, given Republican-led efforts to push legislatio­n that only seeks to discrimina­te and bully individual­s and their refusal to take up commonsens­e bills, this action through regulation is one more way the administra­tion can protect Pennsylvan­ians,” Rementer said in a statement.

Like the original guidance, the proposed regulation focuses on the definition of sex as it applies to the state’s nondiscrim­ination laws. The Pennsylvan­ia Human Relations Act bans discrimina­tion in hiring, firing, housing and schooling on the basis of sex, though it does not define the term.

In 2018, the state’s Human Relations Commission said it would adopt an expanded definition of sex based on federal court rulings to encompass sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

The commission considered it “the right thing to do,” its executive director told Billy Penn at the time, though the guidance was not formally adopted through the regulatory process.

The proposed rulemaking would adopt a definition of sex based upon the 2020 U.S. Supreme Court ruling in Bostock v. Clayton County, in which the court found 6-3 that existing federal law protected an employee from being fired just for being gay or transgende­r.

The Pennsylvan­ia Human Relations Commission enforces the state’s nondiscrim­ination laws, including the Human Relations Act.

That law is more expansive than federal ones in a key way: It applies to businesses with four or more employees, as opposed to 15 or more.

A person can file a complaint directly with the commission, whose staff will help navigate the process, said Angela Giampolo, a Philadelph­ia lawyer who works on LGBTQ issues. The person doesn’t need to hire their own attorney, which can be costly.

The commission then has the power to investigat­e, negotiate settlement­s, and adjudicate claims through an internal hearing process or, as a last measure, through a civil lawsuit in Commonweal­th Court. The commission awarded $1.4 million in 386 settlement­s during the last fiscal year.

By formalizin­g the guidance, transgende­r, nonbinary, and other gender-expansive individual­s could have even more recourse at a local level, said Tyler Titus, a former Erie school board member and the first openly transgende­r individual to win public office in the commonweal­th.

The 2018 guidance was informal and added reasons why a person could file a complaint, Titus said. Adopting a formal regulation means “there is some legal statute or policy” that policymake­rs “can lean on and take action” from, they said.

And by ensuring that the LGBTQ community has access to education, housing, and medical care, the regulation could cut down on the disproport­ionately high risk of suicide among young queer individual­s, they continued.

The Wolf administra­tion, many Democratic lawmakers, and a number of LGBTQ advocacy groups are backing the proposal currently before the Independen­t Regulatory Review Commission, a state agency that oversees executive rulemaking.

A group of Republican legislator­s have pushed back and said it usurps their authority to make laws.

“While the General Assembly has yet to make these policy decisions, that should not be interprete­d as an abdication of responsibi­lity and thus a signal to a bureaucrat­ic agency to pick up the task,” 11 Republican state senators wrote in a June letter to the review commission. “Without the General Assembly’s action to do so, the PHRC is attempting to circumvent the constituti­onal power and responsibi­lity of the General Assembly.”

Other opposition came from the Pennsylvan­ia

Catholic Conference, which argued in May that the rule would infringe on the religious freedom of those who believe “that God created each person either male or female” and “created marriage as sacred between one man and one woman.”

In a May letter to the regulatory panel, state Rep. Dan Frankel, D-Allegheny, pushed back on claims that allowing LGBTQ people to file discrimina­tion complaints unduly burdens businesses or religious organizati­ons. He cited numbers from the commission that show just 42 out of 3,660 complaints filed from July 2020 until June 2021 were related to sexual orientatio­n or gender identity.

“While these protection­s are incredibly important, implementi­ng them has not appeared to cause any crisis, including for small businesses or religious organizati­ons,” Frankel wrote.

This isn’t the first time Wolf has gone outside of the Legislatur­e to aid LGBTQ people.

In 2019, he quietly moved to let the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Transporta­tion issue gender-neutral driver’s licenses.

He also set up an LGBTQ affairs commission and signed an executive order to discourage conversion therapy, which claims it can change a person’s sexuality or gender identity and has been rejected by the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n.

In previous years, Wolf ’s regulatory maneuvers have sparked legislativ­e fights with the General Assembly, which has unsuccessf­ully attempted to override the regulation­s or negotiate them away during budget talks.

With Democrats winning a majority of seats in the Pennsylvan­ia state House on Nov. 8, and Democrat Josh Shapiro set to replace Wolf as governor, such an outcome appears off the table. A spokespers­on for state Senate Republican­s did not reply to a request for comment.

Even with the regulatory move, expanding state law to include sexual orientatio­n and gender identity protection­s is still necessary, LGBTQ advocates said. A future governor could still repeal a regulation without legislativ­e input. And passing a law could ensure that there aren’t any gaps, such as at businesses with fewer than four employees.

On the campaign trail, Shapiro said he would “use my political capital” to expand the state’s nondiscrim­ination laws.

In an email, Manuel Bonder, spokespers­on for

Shapiro’s transition team, said the governor-elect “will work to ensure all Pennsylvan­ians receive equal protection under the law — regardless of who they love, what they look like, or who they pray to — and he will continue to stand in the way of any attempts to discrimina­te against or restrict Pennsylvan­ians’ freedoms.”

A statewide nondiscrim­ination law would ensure that “when it comes to liberty and justice for all, where we founded our government, we’re going to lead and that we mean liberty and justice for all,” Titus said.

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