EEOC Says You Can’t Prevent Trans People From Using Their Preferred Bathroom
Care2 Causes
In a groundbreaking ruling, the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission has said that the U.S. Army committed sex discrimination by refusing to let a trans employee use facilities that accord with her consistent gender presentation.
The case revolves around Tamara Lusardi, a software quality assurance specialist who worked at the U.S. Army Aviation & Missile Research, Development & Engineering Center (AMRDEC) in Alabama. Lusardi transitioned in 2010, and thats when the discrimination began.
Her employers refused to use female pronouns and would routinely use Lusardis previous name in front of her and to co-workers and other people. In her official complaint Lusardi also notes that on several occasions her employers outed her to people who werent aware that she was trans. When confronted about this, the supervisor responsible for this behavior said that it was a slip of the tongue.
Lusardi was also told that as a result of transitioning, she would now have to use the single-user restroom while at work. When that toilet was out of service and Lusardi used the female facilities, she faced formal reprimands from her supervisor who told her that she was making other people feel uncomfortable and that, until she could provide proof of her final surgery, by which it was clearly indicated her supervisor meant genital change surgery, she must continue using the executive single-use facilities.
Feeling this amounted to unfair discrimination and a pattern of harassment, Ms. Lusardi filed a complaint in 2012.
In a 3-2 decision dated April 1, the EEOC agreed that Lusardis Army employers had abridged Ms. Lusardi of her constitutional right to equal status, respect, and dignity in the workplace, by not allowing her to access the same facilities as other women. In addition, the EEOC found that there was evidence of a pattern of verbal harassment centered around misgendering Lusardi that was not accidental, but instead was intended to humiliate and ridicule. The ruling also challenges the notion that these were inadvertent and isolated slips of the tongue because they had happened so frequently.
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marym625
(17,997 posts)Congratulations To Ms. Lusardi!
That is courage! Unbridled courage!
nightscanner59
(802 posts)That upon discovering I reported anonymously. This was about 9 years ago. It took some time, but it did get investigated and everyone in our department got a wage review. It was very revealing the favoritism the boss I reported had that had made tremendous pay hikes and starting wages to her drinking-buddy staff members, many of whom had less than one years experience (!) being paid well above 10 and 20 year experienced staff.
A few years later, the boss was replaced by someone even worse. The new boss did actually manage to sweep all LGBT out the door drumming up false bullshit about all of us, then threatening to fire us if we didn't quit. It was so obviously cut and dried discrimination she would have had the EEOC right down her throat about it.
Except that this all occurred in drop-dead red Arizona, where the new supermajority conservatives had cut the EEOC staff so drastically there are now several years of cases backed up.
Both my other colleagues, one lesbian and one transgender just let it go and have moved on to better working conditions anyway. But it's a really sore bruise left, and the second job in my lifetime I've been unfairly bullied out of because I'm openly gay.
I dropped my Arizona licensure and will never work in that state again unless drastic shift of the draconian conservative politics occurs.