USA TODAY US Edition

LGBTQ inclusivit­y is up in cities amid pushback

- Cady Stanton

Cities and municipali­ties are adopting more LGBTQ-inclusive laws, policies and services even as more LGBTQ-legislatio­n is considered at the state level, according to a report from the Human Rights Campaign.

Municipali­ties consistent­ly becoming more LGBTQ-inclusive in laws, policies

The index rated more than 500 cities in its report, including the 50 state capitals, the 200 largest cities in the U.S., the five largest cities or municipali­ties in each state, and the cities home to the state’s two largest public universiti­es. Its 2022 scorecard rates municipali­ties based on nondiscrim­ination laws, how LGBTQ-inclusive the city is as an employer and the city leadership’s record on LGBTQ equality, among other criteria.

A record number of 120 cities earned the highest score of 100 in 2022, up from 11 in the 2012 inaugural index, according to HRC. The national city score average rose to an all-time high of 68 points: the fifth consecutiv­e year of national average increases, all while the organizati­on has tightened standards for credit in key areas, , according to Kate Oakley, state legislativ­e director and senior counsel at HRC.

Almost all cities with scores of 100 reported hate crime statistics to the FBI, have an LGBTQ liaison to the city executive and had contractor nondiscrim­ination policies including gender identity.

Receiving high points on the index doesn’t happen overnight. City leaders have often spent years building up LGBTQ equality in city policies to earn high scores on the index’s criteria, Oakley said.

“These are cities that are really doing the most on their own,” she said. “These cities have really gone out there and year after year and demonstrat­ed a commitment . ... These cities have invested over time.”

Data compiled by the American Civil Liberties Union shows that more than 200 anti-LGBTQ bills have been introduced in state legislatur­es in 2022. The legislatio­n most significan­tly affects young people, who identify as LGBTQ at the highest rates generation­ally.

Despite that rise, 80 cities in 20 U.S. states that lack nondiscrim­ination statutes explicitly protecting sexuality and gender identity earned over 85 points on the index, up from 74 municipali­ties in 2021 and just five in 2012, according to the report.

Those cities are filling in gaps in state protection­s with municipal legislatio­n around nondiscrim­ination, trans-inclusive health benefits for city employees and LGBTQ-inclusive services for residents, Oakley said.

“I do think it’s important at a national level to shed light on truly how absurd the claims are that are being made in these really gerrymande­red state legislatur­es, because the people who are responsibl­e for responding to their communitie­s have gone a completely different direction,” she said.

Many of the cities who received high scores on this year’s index found progress in blocking out divisive rhetoric at the state level by listening to the personal needs of their community members, Oakley said.

“I think we’re able to see cities be able to kind of sidestep the nastiness, because of those personal connection­s ... these local politician­s have a sense of place, have a sense of community, have a sense of what makes us special,” she said. “I think that when cities are focused on what makes us special, it takes them away from this idea of dividing people apart.”

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A person is silhouette­d through a Pride flag in Colorado Springs, Colo.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A person is silhouette­d through a Pride flag in Colorado Springs, Colo.

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