Porterville Recorder

NBA All-star Game arrives after ‘bathroom bill’ changes

- By GARY D. ROBERTSON

RALEIGH, N.C. — The NBA All-star Game is set for North Carolina this weekend after the league delayed Charlotte hosting the event for two years because of the state’s “bathroom bill,” which singled out transgende­r people and limited local LGBT antidiscri­mination protection­s.

It took the partial repeal of the 2016 law also known as House Bill 2 to persuade the league’s Board of Governors and Commission­er Adam Silver to restore the award for 2019. At the time, Silver wasn’t fully satisfied.

The alteration did “not mean the fundamenta­l issues are resolved,” Silver said in 2017 about the replacemen­t law.

Still, that law returned other major sporting events to North Carolina and made the state attractive again to diversity-minded corporatio­ns. But North Carolina officials, judges and activists have far from settled on the rules on who can use which specific-gender public bathrooms and whether state legislator­s or cities like Charlotte can force antidiscri­mination regulation­s upon private businesses.

While both state Democrats and Republican­s aren’t fully pleased with the current law, they also don’t sound eager to open debate again despite an expiration date late next year on a portion of it. The HB 2 impasse domi-

nated state politics for close to a year, draining away the ability to act on much else.

“I quite frankly don't know if people are ready to start that battle this year,” said House Democratic leader Darren Jackson, who fought HB 2. He accepted the replacemen­t because “it's allowed us to have a reset as far as all the economic losses that we were suffering ... but there's still more work to be done.”

The Gop-controlled legislatur­e approved HB 2 in March 2016 in response to a Charlotte city council ordinance that had expanded LGBT protection­s to public accommodat­ions like hotels, restaurant­s and public bathrooms. The state law repealed the ordinance and prevented similar antidiscri­mination rules anywhere else in the state. It also directed transgende­r people to see public bathrooms and showers that match the gender on their birth certificat­es.

Voters in late 2016 elected HB 2 opponent and Democrat Roy Cooper as governor over Republican Gov. Pat Mccrory, who signed the law. By the following March, Cooper and GOP legislativ­e leaders reached a compromise that led to Charlotte's award for this year's game.

“I'm glad we were able to come together and understand a path forward,” said James Jordan, a top executive for the Charlotte Hornets, hosting Sunday's game at Spectrum Center.

The replacemen­t law repealed the requiremen­t about bathrooms and transgende­r people. But the law also makes clear that state lawmakers make the final decisions on the rules about bathrooms. And local government­s can't adopt or change ordinances regulating private employment or public accommodat­ions until December 2020.

Cooper wants a statewide LGBT anti-discrimina­tion law, and already signed an executive order essentiall­y creating one for his Cabinet agencies. While Democrats picked up additional legislativ­e seats in last November's elections to end the GOP'S veto-proof control of the state House and Senate, Republican­s still hold majorities in both chambers and don't sound interested in Cooper's statewide law proposal.

Some Republican­s acknowledg­e something must occur by the end of next year to address the local ordinance prohibitio­n but say more time is needed to evaluate whether that means local government­s' powers should be expanded.

“Reasonable minds can probably find a common sense resolution again if need be, but 22 months is an awfully long way's away so I think I'll avoid speculatin­g on that right now,” Sen. Dan Bishop, a Charlotte Republican and HB 2 co-sponsor, wrote by email. Any delay also may give time to federal courts weighing a pending lawsuit filed by transgende­r people over the replacemen­t law.

The NBA is keeping a focus on diversity during the All-star festivitie­s with events it says are designed to encourage “important conversati­ons about the need to build a more inclusive culture.” The league also required game vendors and venues to have antidiscri­mination policies that cover sexual orientatio­n, including the use of bathrooms based on a person's gender identity.

These “Equality Principles” were first mandated for last year's game in Los Angeles, said Kathy Behrens, the league's president of social responsibi­lity and player programs. The league believes this year's festivitie­s can demonstrat­e progress on LGBT issues to others.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY CHRIS SEWARD ?? In this 2017 photo, North Carolina House Democratic leader Darren Jackson holds up a copy of HB 186, which was a compromise bill to replace HB 2, in Raleigh, N.C.
AP FILE PHOTO BY CHRIS SEWARD In this 2017 photo, North Carolina House Democratic leader Darren Jackson holds up a copy of HB 186, which was a compromise bill to replace HB 2, in Raleigh, N.C.

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