Chicago Sun-Times

Man sues former employer, union for denying gender-affirming care

- BY VIOLET MILLER, STAFF REPORTER vmiller@suntimes.com | @_ViMiller

A transgende­r Chicago man has filed a federal lawsuit against his former employer and union, alleging they denied him genderaffi­rming care.

Morgan Mesi, a 34-year-old lifelong Chicago resident, said his former employer, Breakthru Beverage Illinois — a liquor distributi­on company formerly co-chaired by Rocky Wirtz, the late Chicago Blackhawks co-chairman — denied coverage of a bilateral mastectomy, commonly known as “top surgery,” and hormone therapy, according to the complaint filed in federal court Thursday.

Local 3 Liquor and Allied Workers Union and its trustees were also named in the suit for their role in the alleged discrimina­tion.

“This lawsuit is about my right to control my body free from discrimina­tion,” Mesi said at a news conference. “A board of trustees who has never met me should not be the ones deciding if my gender-affirming health care is medically necessary. That decision should be between me and my doctors.”

Mesi started seeking gender-affirming mental health care in November 2016, about a year after he started at the company, according to the complaint. By the end of 2017, Mesi had started seeking hormone therapy and booked a consultati­on for the mastectomy.

In 2018, he received a “Plan Exclusion Notice,” and a representa­tive for the insurance company later clarified that the company had received a document from the union directing them to deny Mesi’s request because the surgery was deemed “cosmetic.”

His appeal later that year was denied, with a letter from the union’s trustees stating the plan covered mastectomi­es only when people had cancer, a family history of cancer or similar disease, the complaint states. His attempts to get hormone therapy were also denied, with the union saying the care wasn’t covered by the union plan.

“Reading the letter, I wanted to die,” Mesi said. “I was shattered. I thought my union would protect me, I felt betrayed. Why did they go against the direction of my doctors?”

The complaint also said Mesi’s doctor visits had been covered by insurance until he requested the surgery, after which they were denied. He left the company in 2019.

Despite letters from Mesi’s doctors outlining the care as “medically necessary” and an Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission investigat­ion finding the company had “likely” acted illegally, Breakthru didn’t change its stance, the complaint states.

The suit claims the company violated Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act and the Illinois Human Rights Act in denying his care, in addition to forcing him to pay thousands out of pocket and his experienci­ng suicidal ideation.

Breakthru Beverage Illinois and Local 3 Liquor and Allied Workers Union didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Breakthru Beverage paid nearly $1 million in settlement­s to employees in 2019 after the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission found “reasonable cause to believe” it offered Illinois sales employees accounts and territory assignment­s that “resulted in national origin or race discrimina­tion.”

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2020 that discrimina­tion against transgende­r people falls under sex-based discrimina­tion, and a later federal case out of Georgia ruled that denying transgende­r people health care was also discrimina­tory.

 ?? VIOLET MILLER/SUN-TIMES ?? Morgan Mesi (right) a 34-year-old transgende­r Chicago man, says Thursday, “I thought my union would protect me, I felt betrayed.”
VIOLET MILLER/SUN-TIMES Morgan Mesi (right) a 34-year-old transgende­r Chicago man, says Thursday, “I thought my union would protect me, I felt betrayed.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States