Advocates Praise House for Advancing Transgender Equal Rights Bill
BOSTON, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 – In an historic move, the state House of Representatives passed the Transgender Equal Rights Bill today by a vote of 95-58.
“This bill includes essential protections for transgender residents, who are not currently protected in any areas of the Commonwealth’s civil rights laws,” said Gunner Scott, executive director of the Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition. “We strongly urge the Senate to quickly pass this bill.”
“We are deeply grateful to our champions in the House, State Representatives Carl Sciortino and Byron Rushing, to Speaker Robert DeLeo and Chairman Eugene O’Flaherty for their leadership, and to all of the representatives who spoke out passionately and forcefully on behalf of their transgender constituents,” said Kara Suffredini, executive director of MassEquality. “
“Today the House formally recognized that transgender people suffer from unfair and unjust discrimination in employment and housing,” said Arline Isaacson, co-chair of the Massachusetts Gay and Lesbian Political Caucus. “The bill they have passed addresses those concerns clearly and directly.”
The bill would provide vital protections for the Commonwealth’s approximately 33,000 transgender residents.
The bill advanced by the House does not include protections within public accommodations. But the bill will extend much-needed civil rights and hate crimes protections to the state’s transgender residents, who experience high rates of employment discrimination and hate crimes violence.
“We support this bill,” said Jennifer Levi, director of Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders’ Transgender Rights Project. “We want complete protections for transgender people – including in public accommodations – but also know that in order to get there, we cannot walk away from the legislature’s first step toward achieving those full protections.”
“This bill is about giving transgender people an equal shot at obtaining everyday basics we all need — a job, a place to live, an education. It’s a major step forward for fairness, and we urge the Senate to pass it right away,” said Gavi Wolfe, legislative counsel, for the ACLU of Massachusetts.
“This bill will give basic civil rights protections to transgender people, who suffer disproportionately from discrimination and violence,” said Rebekah Gewirtz, director of Government Relations and Political Action for the National Association of Social Workers, MA. “No one should be denied a job or have to live in fear for their safety simply because of who they are.”
