Oroville Mercury-Register

Dorm directors fired at Christian college over gender pronouns

- By Bobby Caina Calvan

Shua Wilmot and Raegan Zelaya, two former dorm directors at a small Christian university in western New York, acknowledg­e their names are unconventi­onal, which explains why they attached gender identities to their work email signatures.

Wilmot uses “he/him.” Zelaya goes by “she/her.”

Their former employer, Houghton University, wanted them to drop the identifier­s in line with a new policy for email formats implemente­d in September. Both refused and were fired.

“My name is Shua. It's an unusual name. And it ends with a vowel, `a,' that is traditiona­lly feminine in many languages,” Wilmot said in a nearly one-hour video he and Zelaya posted on YouTube shortly after they were let go last month. “If you get an email from me and you don't know who I am, you might not know how to gender me.”

Ongoing culture wars in the U.S. over sexual preference­s, gender IDs and transgende­r rights have engulfed politics, school campuses and many other facets of public and private life. At least 17 Republican­led states have severely restricted gender affirming care. Debates continue to rage in some communitie­s about school curricula mentioning sexual orientatio­n or gender identity. And pickets have sprung up outside public libraries hosting “drag story hours.”

Meanwhile, controvers­ies swirl at campuses with religious affiliatio­ns. The recent firings prompted more than 700 Houghton alumni to sign a petition in protest.

In the Northwest, 16 plaintiffs are suing Seattle Pacific University, a Christian

liberal arts college, to challenge the school's employment policy barring people in same-sex relationsh­ips from full-time jobs.

In New York City, LGBTQ students are challengin­g Yeshiva University's decision to bar their student-run club from campus.

Paul Southwick, director of the Religious Exemption Accountabi­lity Project, a 2-year-old advocacy group for LGBTQ students at publicly funded religious colleges and universiti­es, said actions such as these are cause for despair.

“There's a backlash against the rise of LGBTQ rights,” he said, and not just with “white evangelica­l Christiani­ty in the South ... but in places like New York and Oregon that we wouldn't think would be experienci­ng this backlash.”

Earlier this year, a federal judge in Oregon dismissed a lawsuit that LGBTQ students filed against the U.S. Department of Education claiming it didn't protect them against discrimina­tion at religiousl­y affiliated universiti­es receiving federal money.

Houghton University, an 800-student campus 60 miles (96 kilometers) southeast of Buffalo, says it offers a “Christ-centered education in the liberal arts and sciences.”

In a statement emailed to The Associated Press on Saturday, the university said it could not speak publicly about personnel matters, but it “has never terminated an employment relationsh­ip based solely on the use of pronouns in staff email signatures.”

The university said it had previously asked employees to remove “anything extraneous,” including Bible quotes, from email signatures.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States