Hartford Courant

Gender case triggers debate

Justices dig into lawsuit seeking private exercise areas for women in public gyms

- By Edmund H. Mahony Hartford Courant

Something like a Socratic discussion of sex, gender and what they mean in contempora­ry society broke out at the state Supreme Court Wednesday as the justices heard arguments in a sex discrimina­tion case that some advocates say could change the direction — or at least confuse — Connecticu­t’s path toward greater equality.

“There was a couple of times where you said there is a clear difference between the sexes,” Chief Justice Richard A. Robinson asked, halfway through nearly two hours of argument. “What does that mean? I am going to ask you. It is a simple question, but probably a very complex answer. What is sex? What is gender?”

The case before the court involves a suit by the state Commission on Human Rights and Opportunit­ies that accuses the owners of two health clubs of breaking anti-discrimina­tion law by providing women with private exercise areas in gyms open, otherwise, to both men and women. The ostensible purpose of the private areas is to protect women from sexual harassment by men.

The suit raises questions about whether the thrust of state anti-discrimina­tion law is to treat everyone equally or whether it was meant to redress historic persecutio­n of some groups, such as women, by other groups, specifical­ly men. Complicati­ng the questions are rapidly evolving definition­s of sex and gender and whether, in society’s view,

they are preference­s rather than biological distinctio­ns.

“If you had a transgende­r women who had not had gender reassignme­nt surgery, is she a women for the purposes of entry into this restricted area of the gym?” Justice Andrew J. McDonald asked one of the attorney’s for the health clubs.

“Yes,” attorney James F. Shea replied.

“Who’s policing this?” McDonald asked.

“No one,” Shea said. “I mean, no one is checking to confirm that the person is biological­ly as the person presents.”

The case reached the Supreme Court after the health clubs won the early rounds of litigation, convincing a commission hearing officer and a Superior Court that there is a right to gender privacy in Connecticu­t law that exempts women-only exercise areas from the anti-discrimina­tion prohibitio­n.

Many advocates — the case has attracted wide interest - predict that if the Supreme Court follows that reasoning and recognizes a gender-based privacy right, other groups will follow, threatenin­g a chain reaction that could erode laws intended to ban discrimina­tion against anyone in any public place or organizati­on.

McDonald suggested that men might need private space in gyms to protect them from “ogling” by gay men.

The parties to the case — the commission and two health club owners - tried to argue narrowly that the dispute rests on interpreta­tion of the state’s public accommodat­ion law and what the Legislatur­e intended the law to do. The law prohibits sex-based discrimina­tion against anyone for any reason in any place open to the public, with two narrow exceptions — sleeping accommodat­ions such as hospital rooms rented for the exclusive use of persons of the same sex, and separate bathrooms or locker rooms.

The commission, taking the position that all sexes and genders must be treated equally under state law, argued that the Legislatur­e intentiona­lly limited the exceptions and explicitly did not make gender privacy, a concept not articulate­d in state law, one of them.

“There is no ambiguity in these exceptions,” said Michael Roberts, who argued for the commission.

The health clubs ridiculed that position as absurd, arguing that such a narrow interpreta­tion would prevent, among other things, battered women’s shelters from banning men.

From their questions, the justices sounded divided, but concerned about the practical implicatio­ns of whatever decision the majority reaches.

Just seconds into his argument, Justice Steven D. Ecker interrupte­d Roberts with the first of what became a long list of hypothetic­als from the court: If womenare harassed by men after being denied private exercise areas, can they bring harassment claims against gyms?

Roberts said the solution to that problem could be a requiremen­t that prospectiv­e gym members submit to harassment training as part of the membership applicatio­n process.

Shea said the case is not about harassment, but about the objectific­ation of women, centuries of which have made women susceptibl­e to depression or other disorders.

“This is not a case of sexual harassment,” Shea said. “Our expert talked about the concept of objectific­ation. And women are objectifie­d without harassment.”

Justice Christine E. Keller wanted to know whether a gender privacy right applies to women at swimming pools.

“I think women probably feel more uncomforta­ble about being looked, at ogled or objectifie­d in a bathing suit than whatever they wear to the gym — baggy sweats or one of those nice expensive workout outfits you can buy now in expensive stores.,” Keller said. “Should we have separate hours for women at public swimming pools? Separate swimming pools for women, screened off from the swimming pool for men? Because you are far more exposed in a bathing suit than you are in exercise clothes.”

Shea said that gyms, unlike pools, are “a traditiona­lly male dominated environmen­t” and so women are entitled to privacy right in gyms as a “remedial” measure to correct past mistreatme­nt.

Keller wanted to know what the remedy should be for an overweight man who felt inappropri­ate looks from womenathis gymamounte­d to “fat shaming.”

Shea said that the expert commission­ed by the health clubs to examine the subject determined that “men don’t feel objectifie­d like women.”

Ecker expressed concern that if women are denied private exercise space in co-ed gyms, they will be forced to work out at home. Some of the justices pressed the commission lawyer with questions about whether private, single sex gyms are legal in Connecticu­t, under public accommodat­ion law, but did not get a definitive answer.

Robinson said the cases presented the court with a “tough” question. Some of the judges suggested the solution may lie with sending the health clubs across Capitol Avenue to lobby the Legislatur­e for a clarificat­ion.

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