New York Daily News, NY, USA
New York State considers transgender anti-discrimination bill
Gender Expression and Non-Discrimination Act has passed Assembly five
times, but not likely to come up for vote in Senate
By The Associated Press / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Monday, May 7, 2012, 3:06 PM
ALBANY, N.Y. — A year after lawmakers legalized gay marriage, the next
civil rights debate taking shape in Albany is discrimination against
transgender New Yorkers who say they face it in employment and housing
and when they’re in public all because they stray from what’s accepted
as male and female norms in dress and behavior.
Legislation approved 81-59 by the state Assembly last week would add
gender identity and expression to state laws banning discrimination
based on race, religion, sex, disability and sexual orientation. It
would become a hate crime, with increased penalties, to harass or
attack someone for being transgender.
Bec Collins was born female and said as a transsexual male it wasn’t a
big deal to dress like a man in jeans and T-shirts as an animal care
technician outside Albany. But using the women’s locker room was
uncomfortable, so Collins got a locker in the unisex bathroom. He said
his employers have been accommodating, though it’s new to them. He
felt a sense of relief since figuring out in his 30s exactly who and
what he is.
“I’m more outgoing and happier,” he said.
The Democrat-controlled Assembly has passed the Gender Expression and
Non-Discrimination Act, or GENDA, five times. In the Senate, where
four Republicans voted last June to help Democrats and Gov. Andrew
Cuomo legalize gay marriage, the bill has been sent to the Rules
Committee along with 310 other Democrat-sponsored bills that appear to
be shelved as the 2012 legislative session winds down.
“I believe the votes are there. The challenge is getting a vote in the
Senate. Folks are going to support expanded equal rights if they’re
forced to be on the record,” said Sen. Daniel Squadron, a Manhattan
Democrat and chief Senate sponsor. “It seems to be a core civil rights
issue.”
New York was the sixth state to legalize same-sex marriage but
Squadron said the state is falling behind here, where 16 states, New
York City and several upstate cities and three counties have passed
versions of GENDA.
They include Albany, Rochester, Binghamton, Buffalo and Ithaca, as
well as Westchester, Suffolk and Tompkins counties.
Asked about GENDA’s chances, Senate Republican spokesman Mark Hansen
said: “Our focus for the remainder of the session is to reduce taxes
on businesses and create private sector new jobs.”
The Senate’s Republican majority has historically backed bills to
assure civil rights, including tougher penalties for those accused of
assaulting people because they are gay. With gay and transgender
advocates a power politically, Senate passage could also remove an
election year issue for Senate Democrats trying to retake the Senate
majority.
On Tuesday, it will be a principal focus of Empire State Pride
Agenda’s annual rally. The group, which pushed for gay marriage, said
it expects hundreds of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender New
Yorkers and allies at the Capitol.
In a report last week, the New York Civil Liberties Union said
discrimination and harassment are persistent for hundreds of thousands
of people in New York who present or identify themselves different
from their anatomical gender. That includes employment, housing and
public accommodations like businesses, schools and hospitals.
“GENDA opponents often exploit ‘bathroom politics’ when they argue
that protecting transgender and gender non-conforming people will make
‘traditional’ restroom users uncomfortable and compromise their
privacy,” the report said. It noted that decades of experience
elsewhere have shown no reported incidents of sexual predators
infiltrating women’s public rest rooms.
Brooklyn College Professor Paisley Currah said it’s difficult to gauge
the actual number of transgender New Yorkers because many people are
reluctant to talk about it.
“I’m one of the lucky ones,” said Paola Gonzalez, 36, of Albany. “I’m
treated as a woman. Most people treat me as a woman.”
Growing up a boy in Puerto Rico, she said she knew by age 6 that she
was different and came out four years ago after moving to New York. “I
haven’t had many difficulties but there have been exceptions,”
including harassment from an apartment mate that led to eviction, a
human rights complaint and return of Gonzalez’s security deposit.
The legislation is written broadly to include a range of possibilities
from those who simply choose to ignore social norms to those who feel
their gender is different from how they were born, whether or not they
have had surgery or hormone treatments, Currah said.
“This legislation is kind of clarifying what the courts are already
doing, which is pointing out that sex discrimination is wrong. It’s
just making it super clear that’s how the law should be read,” Currah
said.
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