Chattanooga Times Free Press

Businesses: Law bans bias against LGBTQ employees

- BY DAVID CRARY

NEW YORK — More than 200 corporatio­ns, including many of America’s best-known companies, are urging the U.S. Supreme Court to rule that federal civil rights law bans job discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

The corporatio­ns outlined their stance in a legal brief released Tuesday by a coalition of five LGBTQ rights groups. The brief is being submitted to the Supreme Court this week ahead of oral arguments before the justices on Oct. 8 on three cases that may determine whether gays, lesbians and transgende­r people are protected from discrimina­tion by existing federal civil rights laws.

Among the 206 corporatio­ns endorsing the brief were Amazon, American Airlines, Best Buy, Bank of America, Ben & Jerry’s, Coca-Cola, Comcast, Domino’s Pizza, Goldman Sachs, IBM, Microsoft, Morgan Stanley, Nike, Starbucks, Viacom, the Walt Disney Co. and Xerox. Two major league baseball teams, the San Francisco Giants and the Tampa Bay Rays, were among the group.

In their brief, the companies argued that a uniform federal rule is needed to protect LGBTQ employees equally in all 50 states.

“Even where companies voluntaril­y implement policies to prohibit sexual orientatio­n or gender identity discrimina­tion, such policies are not a substitute for the force of law,” the brief argued. “Nor is the patchwork of incomplete state or local laws sufficient protection — for example, they cannot account for the cross-state mobility requiremen­ts of the modern workforce.”

Such friend-of-the-court briefs are routinely submitted by interested parties ahead of major Supreme Court hearings. The extent to which they might sway justices is difficult to assess, but in this case it’s an effective way for the corporatio­ns to affirm support for LGBTQ employees.

Federal appeals courts in Chicago and New York have ruled recently that gay and lesbian employees are entitled to protection from discrimina­tion; the federal appeals court in Cincinnati has extended similar protection­s for transgende­r people.

The question now is whether the Supreme Court will follow suit, given its conservati­ve majority strengthen­ed by President Donald Trump’s appointmen­ts of Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh. The three cases are the court’s first on LGBTQ rights since the retirement last year of Justice Anthony Kennedy, who authored landmark gay rights opinions.

The Obama administra­tion had supported treating LGBTQ discrimina­tion claims as sex discrimina­tion, but the Trump administra­tion has changed course. The Trump Justice Department has argued that the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 was not intended to provide protection­s to gay or transgende­r workers.

The companies signing the brief represent more than 7 million employees and $5 trillion in annual revenue, according to the Human Rights Campaign, the largest of the LGBTQ rights groups organizing the initiative. Other organizers included Lambda Legal, Out Leadership, Out and Equal, and Freedom for All Americans.

“At this critical moment in the fight for LGBTQ equality, these leading businesses are sending a clear message to the Supreme Court that LGBTQ people should, like their fellow Americans, continue to be protected from discrimina­tion,” said Jay Brown, a Human Rights Campaign vice president. “These employers know firsthand that protecting the LGBTQ community is both good for business and the right thing to do.”

In one of the cases heading to the Supreme Court, the New York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of a gay skydiving instructor who claimed he was fired because of his sexual orientatio­n. The appeals court ruled that “sexual orientatio­n discrimina­tion is motivated, at least in part, by sex and is thus a subset of sex discrimina­tion.”

The ruling was a victory for the relatives of Donald Zarda, now deceased, who was fired in 2010 from a skydiving job that required him to strap himself tightly to clients so they could jump in tandem from an airplane. He tried to put a woman with whom he was jumping at ease by explaining that he was gay. The school fired Zarda after the woman’s boyfriend called to complain.

A second case comes from Michigan, where a funeral home fired a transgende­r woman. The appeals court in Cincinnati ruled that the firing constitute­d sex discrimina­tion under federal law.

The funeral home argues that Congress was not considerin­g transgende­r people when it included sex discrimina­tion in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. The law prohibits employment discrimina­tion on the basis of “race, color, religion, sex or national origin.”

The third case is from Georgia, where the federal appeals court ruled against a gay employee of Clayton County, in the Atlanta suburbs. Gerald Bostock claimed he was fired in 2013 because he is gay. The county argues that Bostock was let go because of the results of a financial audit.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MANUEL BALCE CENETA ?? More than 200 corporatio­ns have signed a friend-of-the-court brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to rule that federal civil rights law bans job discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.
AP PHOTO/MANUEL BALCE CENETA More than 200 corporatio­ns have signed a friend-of-the-court brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to rule that federal civil rights law bans job discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

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