In 2007, Lambda Legal joined more than 400 organizations to draw a line in the sand to not support the any nondiscrimination bill that leaves transgender people behind. Almost a decade later, we are having the same fight.
Leaving out public accommodations in a nondiscrimination bill — particularly at this moment in history where the spotlight is on transgender people in restrooms — is, in effect, leaving transgender people out of the law.
“We will come back for you later” doesn’t work. Not then. Not today.
What good is a nondiscrimination law that leaves out protections for transgender people to be in public life? Public accommodations are everything. It is the ability to leave your house and exist in the world as who you are. To take up space — to literally be seen in public. To not be forced to go home to pee.
I believe in the effectiveness of incrementalism. Hell, I do formal legal equality work. But at this point in the movement, we cannot afford to leave transgender people behind. And to be clear, this does leave transgender people behind.