The Denver Post

Lawmakers want to add gender identity protection­s

- By Nick Coltrain ncoltrain@denverpost.com

Transgende­r and nonbinary people would receive more explicit protection­s in Colorado’s anti-bias and harassment law if a newly introduced bill becomes law.

Advocates characteri­ze the bill as a simple legislativ­e fix to ensure gender identity and expression are protected across state law, while also sending a message about Colorado’s values.

“(The bill) ensures nonbinary and trans people are seen and represente­d in every part of Colorado law, which is especially important now with the wave of anti-trans rhetoric and legislatio­n across the country,” said Garrett Royer, political director for LGBTQ advocacy organizati­on One Colorado. “It helps the state remain a leader on LGBTQ rights with a very simple legislativ­e fix.”

State nondiscrim­ination statutes already specifical­ly protect people based on their gender identity and gender expression when it comes to areas such as public accommodat­ion, housing and employment, Royer said.

This change would add gender identity and expression to Colorado’s bias-motivated crimes statute, which is aimed more at person-to-person harassment and intimidati­on.

Royer said gender identity was generally covered under sexual orientatio­n protection­s previously, but this change would add clarity. These protection­s also would include harassment based on other people’s perception­s of the victim’s identity.

Senate Bill 189 is sponsored by Democratic Sens. Rhonda Fields of Aurora and Chris Hansen of Denver. Its first committee hearing is set for Monday.

“The No. 1 reason for hate crimes is based on gender identity and expression,” Fields said.

“These folks are attacked and bullied more than any other demographi­c, and it’s not in our statute as it relates to having special protection. So it’s just that simple.”

This proposal comes as the legislatur­e has debated other bills aimed at protecting gender identity. Two bills concerning individual­s’ preferred names were the subject of lengthy, contentiou­s debates and testimony rife with anti-transgende­r arguments as they moved through the House.

Hansen, who joined a voice vote in support of a bill to allow nonlegal name changes in schools on Thursday morning, said these are separate debates.

Those bills propose more significan­t changes, he said, while this one would fill “a gap” in state statutes and definition­s.

“We want to make sure we’re covering transgende­r issues in (the anti-bias) statute and this is a very simple bill to do that,” Hansen said.

 ?? HELEN H. RICHARDSON — DENVER POST FILE ?? Merchandis­e for sale at Get Your Gay On at The Center on Colfax, one of several Pride festival hubs in Denver in 2021. A bill in the legislatur­e would make sure state law protects gender identity and expression.
HELEN H. RICHARDSON — DENVER POST FILE Merchandis­e for sale at Get Your Gay On at The Center on Colfax, one of several Pride festival hubs in Denver in 2021. A bill in the legislatur­e would make sure state law protects gender identity and expression.

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