Chicago Sun-Times

Under- the- radar bill gets LGBT group’s attention

EXPERIENCE NOW TELLS US THAT NOT EVERYONE SO EASILY FITS INTO CATEGORY A OR B, AND THAT GENDER INVOLVES MORE THAN BIOLOGY.

- MARK BROWN @ MarkBrownC­ST Email: markbrown@suntimes.com

Advocates for Illinois’ LGBT community are pushing back aggressive­ly against a suburban legislator’s proposal to restrict which restrooms and locker rooms transgende­r students can use.

The bill introduced in January by Rep. Tom Morrison, R- Palatine, has mostly flown under the radar so far compared to higherprof­ile legislativ­e efforts to police bathrooms in South Dakota and North Carolina.

That may have something to do with Illinois’ Democrat- controlled Legislatur­e having proven itself to be more friendly on gay and transgende­r rights than other states, which makes it unlikely Morrison’s proposal will advance.

But Michael Ziri, director of public policy for Equality Illinois, said the organizati­on is taking nothing for granted and has geared up to keep the measure from gaining any traction.

Ziri said the proposal would put transgende­r students at further risk of harassment and abuse — a proven concern compared to the speculativ­e fears of its proponents.

Morrison’s bill would prohibit any “member of the male sex” from using a “pupil restroom or changing room” designated for the “exclusive use of the female sex” — or vice versa.

It would also apply to students on overnight field trips to prevent transgende­r students from sharing a room with someone of “the opposite anatomy,” Morrison said.

Under his legislatio­n, sex is defined as “the physical condition of being male or female, as determined by an individual’s chromosome­s and identified at birth by that individual’s anatomy.” I know the world would be a simpler place if we could just turn the clock back to the days when we all believed it was that straightfo­rward.

But experience now tells us that not everyone so easily fits into Category A or B, and that gender involves more than biology.

I’ve told you about my college roommate Dave Schroer from Oak Lawn who transition­ed to become Diane Schroer after a long career in the Army.

I can only imagine the psychologi­cal pain she experience­d growing up, always thinking of herself as a woman trapped in the body of a man.

In those days, letting on that you were different in that way simply wasn’t done. So Schroer tried to live the life of a man’s man and was quite effective at it. But it took a toll on her.

It seems an improvemen­t to me, therefore, that young people are being allowed to more openly express their non- conforming gender identity. But it’s still not easy for them. As a coalition led by the American Academy of Pediatrics warned in a February letter to our nation’s governors:

“Transgende­r kids are already at heightened risk for violence, bullying and harassment, and these bills exacerbate those risks by creating a hostile environmen­t in one of the places they should feel the safest and most supported.”

I spoke to Morrison on Monday and see no reason to attack him personally. He just takes a traditiona­l view of this matter, as I imagine do many of his constituen­ts in Palatine, where this became a contentiou­s issue in the local high school district.

Morrison believes he struck a sound compromise in his legislatio­n by providing that school districts “may” set- aside a separate restroom or changing room for transgende­r students. I wrote about the Chicago Police Academy taking a similar approach three years ago to make itself more friendly to transgende­r recruits.

But Ziri said Morrison’s approach negates the efforts of many school districts to take a more thoughtful approach that recognizes the value of allowing students to choose the restroom or locker room of the gender with which they identify.

With that in mind, Equality Illinois has put its bipartisan lobbying team to work on educating legislator­s about the issue and activated supporters to sign an online petition and contact lawmakers.

Most of us would benefit from the same education.

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 ?? | SKIP FOREMAN/ AP ?? A group protests North Carolina legislatio­n limiting bathroom options for transgende­r people at a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Thursday.
| SKIP FOREMAN/ AP A group protests North Carolina legislatio­n limiting bathroom options for transgende­r people at a rally in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Thursday.
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 ??  ?? Rep. Tom Morrison
Rep. Tom Morrison

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