Yuma Sun

Transgende­r activists ood Utah tip line with hoax reports

- BY HANNAH SCHOENBAUM ASSOCIATED PRESS

SALT LAKE CITY – Transgende­r activists have flooded a Utah tip line created to alert state officials to possible violations of a new bathroom law with thousands of hoax reports in an effort to shield trans residents and their allies from any legitimate complaints that could lead to an investigat­ion.

The onslaught has led the state official tasked by the law with managing the tip line, Utah Auditor John Dougall, to bemoan getting stuck with the cumbersome task of filtering through fake complaints while also facing backlash for enforcing a law he had no role in passing.

“No auditor goes into auditing so they can be the bathroom monitors,” Dougall said Tuesday. “I think there were much better ways for the Legislatur­e to go about addressing their concerns, rather than this ham-handed approach.”

In the week since it launched, the online tip line already has received more than 10,000 submission­s, none of which seem legitimate, he said. The form asks people to report public school employees who knowingly allow someone to use a facility designated for the opposite sex.

Utah residents and visitors are required by law to use bathrooms and changing rooms in government-owned buildings that correspond with their birth sex. As of last Wednesday, schools and agencies found not enforcing the new restrictio­ns can be fined up to $10,000 per day for each violation.

Although their advocacy efforts failed to stop Republican lawmakers in many states from passing restrictio­ns for trans people, the community has found success in interferin­g with the often ill-conceived enforcemen­t plans attached to those laws.

Within hours of its publicatio­n Wednesday night, trans activists and community members from across the U.S. already had spread the Utah tip line widely on social media. Many shared the spam they had submitted and encouraged others to follow suit.

Their efforts mark the latest attempt by advocates to shut down or render unusable a government tip line that they argue sows division by encouragin­g residents to snitch on each other. Similar portals in at least five other states also have been inundated with hoax reports, leading state officials to shut some down.

In Virginia, Indiana, Arizona and Louisiana, activists flooded tip lines created to field complaints about teachers, librarians and school administra­tors who may have spoken to students about race, LGBTQ+ identities or other topics lawmakers argued were inappropri­ate for children. The Virginia tip line was taken down within a year, as was a tip line introduced in Missouri to report gender-affirming health care clinics.

Erin Reed, a prominent trans activist and legislativ­e researcher, said there is a collective understand­ing in the trans community that submitting these hoax reports is an effective way of protesting the law and protecting trans people who might be targeted.

“There will be people who are trans that go into bathrooms that are potentiall­y reported by these sorts of forms, and so the community is taking on a protective role,” Reed said. “If there are 4,000, 5,000, 6,000 form responses that are entered in, it’s going to be much harder for the auditor’s office to sift through every one of them and find the one legitimate trans person who was caught using a bathroom.”

The auditor’s office has encountere­d many reports that Dougall described as “total nonsense,” and others that he said appear credible at first glance and take much longer to filter out. His staff has spent the last week sorting through thousands of well-crafted complaints citing fake names or locations.

Despite efforts to clog the enforcemen­t tool they had outlined in the bill, the Republican sponsors, Rep. Kera Birkeland and Sen. Dan Mccay, said they remain confident in the tip line and the auditor’s ability to filter out fake complaints.

 ?? RICK BOWMER/AP ?? BONNEVILLE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PARENTS and students gather during a block party supporting trans and non binary students and staff on April 29 in Salt Lake City.
RICK BOWMER/AP BONNEVILLE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PARENTS and students gather during a block party supporting trans and non binary students and staff on April 29 in Salt Lake City.

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