Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tennessee OKs transgende­r bathroom bill

- JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tennessee lawmakers have passed a bill that would put public schools and districts at risk of civil lawsuits if they let transgende­r students or employees use multiperso­n bathrooms or locker rooms that do not reflect their gender at birth.

The state Senate voted 217 Wednesday in favor of the legislatio­n, which needs at least one more vote before heading to Republican Gov. Bill Lee. The House passed a slightly different version earlier this week.

This action in Tennessee marks the furthest a “bathroom bill” has gotten in any state in years, according to the Human Rights Campaign. The topic drew national notoriety in North Carolina in 2016 when a law limiting transgende­r bathroom use sparked a wave of backlash, prompting cancellati­ons of major events and some economic expansion plans.

“The distinctiv­e nature of this bill is how far it’s gotten — it’s the furthest bathroom bill to advance so far this year and certainly the furthest any bathroom bill has advanced since 2015/2016,” said Wyatt Ronan, spokespers­on for the Human Rights Campaign.

Like other GOP-led statehouse­s focusing on culture wars this year, Tennessee lawmakers have advanced several LGBTQ-related measures that critics have slammed as discrimina­tory. Most notably, Lee signed a different proposal this year that bars transgende­r athletes from playing girls’ public high school or middle school sports.

Under the proposed bathroom measure, a student or employee could sue in an effort to claim monetary damages “for all psychologi­cal, emotional and physical harm suffered” if school officials allow a transgende­r person into the bathroom or locker room when others are in there, or if they require staying in the same sleeping quarters as a member of the opposite sex at birth, unless that person is a family member.

The proposal also says schools must try to offer a bathroom or changing facility that is single-occupancy or that is for employees if a student or employee “desires greater privacy when using a multi-occupancy restroom or changing facility” designated for their sex at birth.

Republican state Sen. Mike Bell, the bill sponsor, said a middle school in his district has run into an issue over bathroom use.

Democrats, meanwhile, said the bill targets transgende­r people’s civil rights and could open Tennessee up to lawsuits.

“Folks have been going to the bathroom in schools in Tennessee for generation­s without any help from this Legislatur­e,” Democratic Senate Minority Leader Jeff Yarbro said. “And they don’t need any help from this Legislatur­e now on this.”

The Nashville LGBT Chamber of Commerce has led a group of more than 180 businesses of various sizes, including ones as large as Amazon, in opposing the slate of Tennessee bills that target the LGBTQ community, calling them discrimina­tory.

Opponents of the bill, including business entities, point to North Carolina’s experience with the enactment of its 2016 version of a “bathroom bill,” which was signed by former Republican Gov. Pat McCrory and, in part, required transgende­r people to use public bathrooms aligned with the gender on their birth certificat­e.

Several large corporatio­ns and sports leagues relocated events to other states or reconsider­ed expanding in North Carolina due to the law, which was partially repealed in 2017.

A federal judge eventually approved a consent decree in 2019 between Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper and transgende­r plaintiffs that affirms their right to use restrooms matching their gender identity in many public buildings.

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