USA TODAY International Edition

For LGBTQ workers of color, sexual orientatio­n is main driver of bias

Survey: Companies should stand up

- Charisse Jones

While race and gender remain prime targets for bias, people of color who are also gay, lesbian or bisexual say sexual orientatio­n is the biggest driver of discrimina­tion they face in the workplace, according to a new study shared exclusivel­y with USA TODAY.

Among Black LGB employees, 34% said they believed sexual orientatio­n was the main reason for the discrimina­tion they experience­d on the job, compared with 36% of Latinos, 42% of Asians and 32% of Native American workers who felt the same, according to a survey conducted by the IBM Institute for Business Value and Oxford Economics.

“We found across lines of race that there was agreement ... sexual orientatio­n was the biggest liability in terms of the discrimina­tion experience­d,’’ says Deena Fidas, managing director and chief program and partnershi­ps officer for Out & Equal Workplace Advocates, which collaborat­ed with IBV on a related survey.

A recent wave of anti LGBTQ+ legislatio­n may be a key reason some workers see such discrimina­tion as their biggest threat.

State lawmakers have introduced more than 250 bills this year, according to the Human Rights Campaign, including legislatio­n that would prohibit transgende­r students from taking part in sports or bar teachers from talking about the LGBTQ community in the classroom. Eighteen of the bills have become law or are waiting for a governor’s signature.

“In the United States ... we still don’t have consistent federal civil right protection­s on the basis of sexual orientatio­n and gender identity,” Fidas says, adding that while there is still more work to do to ensure equity along lines of race, gender and ability, there is at least a basic legal framework prohibitin­g discrimina­tion in the workplace based on those characteri­stics. “The LGBTQ+ community simply doesn’t have that.’’

Still, LGBTQ+ employees say they often face biases aimed at multiple aspects of their identity. And for people of color, who felt sexual orientatio­n was the primary reason they encountere­d discrimina­tion, race wasn’t far behind.

Among Black employees who identified as gay, lesbian or bisexual, 27% said race was the main driver of discrimina­tion in the workplace, the most of any group. That was compared with 22% of Latino employees and 17% of Asian workers who felt the same.

Meanwhile, 29% of Native American employees said that gender was the primary cause of their experience­s with discrimina­tion, second only to sexual orientatio­n.

Employees of color believe the combinatio­n of biases they face hinder their ability to rise in the workplace.

While 50% of those who were lesbian, gay or bisexual believed people who share the same race, gender and sexual orientatio­n as them were less successful than Americans overall, 70% of African Americans who identified as LGB felt that combinatio­n of traits was an obstacle.

Among Native Americans, the number dipped slightly to 67%, while 57% of Latinos, 56% of Asians, and 18% of whites who were LGB believed people who shared those same three characteri­stics were less successful.

Employees who identified as lesbian, gay or bisexual also had a more difficult time juggling remote work with their caretaking responsibi­lities during the pandemic, with 43% saying it was a challenge as compared with 34% of non- LGB workers.

That may be because employees who hid parts of their identity at the office now found themselves having to put their home life on display via Zoom, says Ella Slade, IBM’s Global LGBT+ Leader.

“You see their partner in the background, or a rainbow flag hung in the home,” Slade says. “That can add a lot of stress.”

Or, an employee may have been “out at work,” but during the pandemic they quarantine­d with friends and family who were not aware of their identity or gender expression.

“That creates difficulties,” Slade says.

But the business community has taken steps to be more welcoming and inclusive, LGBTQ+ advocates say, partly because their employees demand it.

Nearly 9 in 10 workers say their employer or company should be a stronger public supporter of LGBTQ+ inclusion, according to IBV, which held an event in the spring with Out & Equal and Workplace Pride to gain insights about the experience­s of the LGBTQ+ community.

Meghan Stabler has seen the difference between working for a company that is uncomforta­ble with her expressing her true gender identity, and one that is accepting.

After she began transition­ing in 2004 while working as an executive for a tech company in Houston, Stabler was gradually stripped of responsibi­lities and demoted.

“I wasn’t allowed to meet with customers anymore,’’ she says. “I wasn’t allowed to be the executive that was talking product strategy … There was a fear if I did so, we would lose customers.’’

When Stabler began looking for a new position, she still struggled, barely getting a call back as she applied to about 65 positions over two years. In 2018, she was hired by BigCommerc­e and she felt liberated.

“I don’t have to have a layer of protective­ness or shell around me,’’ she says.

Despite the struggles she had dealt with, Stabler says, “I’ve been lucky. I have white privilege … It is detrimenta­lly worse for Black trans people in the workplace.”

To create equitable workspaces, businesses should make sure the corporate leadership pipeline includes people who represent the LGBTQ+ community, Slade says. Communicat­ing and enforcing anti- discrimina­tion policies, incorporat­ing practices such as the recognitio­n of an employee’s chosen pronouns, and advocating for civil rights legislatio­n are also key.

When a company takes a visible stand against legislatio­n that would ban people from using a bathroom that correspond­s with their gender identity and similar proposals, “it sends a huge message,” Slade says, “not only to those lawmakers and local government­s, but to your own employees.”

 ??  ?? Meghan Stabler says that as a transgende­r woman, her current company's acceptance means she doesn't have to wrap herself in a protective shell.
Meghan Stabler says that as a transgende­r woman, her current company's acceptance means she doesn't have to wrap herself in a protective shell.

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