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RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE LAW OF EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION: NEW PROTECTIONS FOR SEXUAL MINORITIES Tracy M. Miller Attorney CONTACT INFORMATION Tracy M. Miller Karr Tuttle Campbell 701 Fifth Ave., Suite 3300 Seattle, WA 98104 (206) 223-1313 (Main) (206) 224-8097 (Direct) [email protected] AGENDA Overview of Washington Law Recent developments regarding sexual orientation and gender identity in schools Practical suggestions Practice hypotheticals Your questions OVERVIEW OF WASHINGTON LAW Washington Law against Discrimination (WLAD) Ch. 49.60 RCW Prohibits discrimination in employment on the basis of sex, race , creed, color, national origin, honorably discharged veteran or military status, sexual orientation, the presence of any sensory, mental, or physical disability, or the use of a trained dog guide or service animal by a person with a disability, Discrimination prohibited in schools Ch. 28A.642 RCW Applies to students and employees Prohibits the same discrimination, using the same definitions as Ch. 49.60 RCW Separate right of action that “supplements” other remedies SEXUAL ORIENTATION AND GENDER IDENTIT Y NATIONAL CONTEXT Washington law in step with national trends Chief civil rights issue of our time Implications for students and employees 2013 Supreme Court decisions in Windsor and Perry Same-sex couples have the freedom to marry in 36 states and D.C. Obergefell v. Hodges, etc. NATIONAL CONTEXT 738 colleges and universities prohibit both sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination Fortune 500 companies 91% prohibit sexual orientation discrimination 61% prohibit gender identity discrimination Good for business - job satisfaction, job commitment, health outcomes, recruiting advantages Protection of LGBTQ students is consistent with heightened focus on preventing bullying of all kinds EFFECTS OF PERVASIVE DISCRIMINATION Poverty: t he transgender population is highly educated, but If white, 2x more likely to be unemployed (rate is 14%) If person of color, 4x more likely to be unemployed 4x more likely to have an annual household income of less than $10,000 Suicide: Rate of non-transgender population: 1.6% Rate of transgender population: 41% (25 times more likely to attempt suicide) NO FEDERAL LAW… BUT GETTING CLOSE No federal law 90% of transgender people and 40% of LGB individuals have experienced some form of employment discrimination in their lives Proposed legislation: ENDA, SSIA, SNDA 2014 Executive Order re: fed. contractors No Supreme Court decision, but . . . Ninth Circuit relied on Windsor to hold that excluding individuals from juries on the basis of their sexual orientation violated the constitution and that discrimination based on sexual orientation is subject to heightened scrutiny Reasoning could apply in public employment and admission to public schools EMPLOYEES: TITLE VII Title VII (federal statute that prohibits workplace discrimination based on sex) has been interpreted by 4 circuits and the EEOC as prohibiting gender identity discrimination. Several lower courts have ruled the opposite, but most (if not all) of these decisions occurred prior to the EEOC’s instructive ruling that Title VII prohibits discrimination on the basis of gender identity. STATE LAWS 18 states and Washington D.C. have enacted laws that prohibit discrimination on the basis of both sexual orientation and gender identity: This includes Washington State More than 200 local municipalities (including 9 of the country’s 10 most populous cities) have prohibited employment discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity WASHINGTON LAW AGAINST DISCRIMINATION AMENDED Anderson-Murray Civil Rights Bill (House Bill 2661) Effective June 7, 2006 Amended WLAD to prohibit discrimination on the basis of “sexual orientation” in employment, public accommodations, housing, insurance, and credit JUNE 6, 2006 “Tomorrow will be a proud day in Washington. In January, Washington took an affirmative stand to say to gay and lesbian individuals, moms and dads, sons and daughters, neighbors, co-workers and friends that, like all other people, they are free to work in an environment absent discrimination. Tomorrow our words become law.” Governor Christine Gregoire SEXUAL ORIENTATION Heterosexuality Homosexuality Bisexuality Gender expression or identity GENDER EXPRESSION OR IDENTIT Y “having or being perceived as having a gender identity, self-image, appearance, behavior, or expression, whether or not that gender identity, self-image, appearance, behavior, or expression is different from that traditionally associated with the sex assigned to that person at birth” UNLAWFUL DISCRIMINATION Advertising, interviews, pre-employment inquiries Hiring and firing Promoting and demoting Pay Terms and conditions of employment Harassment Benefits PRACTICALLY SPEAKING Benefits “Spouse” v. other types of relationships – OKAY, but Still consider domestic partner benefits Heterosexual v. homosexual – NOT OKAY Handling religious objections by co-workers and supervisors NAMES, PRONOUNS, AND RECORDS Address by and refer to individuals as their preferred name and gender pronoun Do not insist on using a “legal name,” or the name on the person’s job application, official record, etc. Do not require a court order showing name change Do not require proof of medical treatments Employee badges should reflect an individual’s preferred name Maintain a permanent record with each individual’s legal name and gender, but do not disclose unless required by law DRESS CODES Consider a gender-neutral dress code OR Apply gender-specific codes consistently as between transgendered and cisgendered students AND Permit employees to dress in accordance with their gender identity, within the constraints of the dress code adopted by the school or district RESTROOMS, CHANGING AREAS & LOCKER ROOMS Highly-publicized bathroom cases 2013 – Coy Matthis - Colorado 2014 – Supreme Court of Maine Arizona’s bathroom bill (dead for now) Extremely emotional and stressful for transgender individuals, many of whom report refraining from eating and drinking during the school or work day in order to avoid having to use the bathroom RESTROOMS, CHANGING AREAS & LOCKER ROOMS Gender-neutral, single-stall bathrooms are ideal (e.g., Grant High School, Portland, OR) Permit students and employees to use the restroom that corresponds to their gender identity Never require any person (transgender or not) to use a bathroom that he or she isn’t comfortable using; i f an individual would like increased privacy, offer an alternative that is safe, reasonable, and will not stigmatize or identify. EMPLOYER ACTION ITEMS Revise personnel policies and employee handbooks to prohibit sexual orientation discrimination Train managers about prohibited discrimination and harassment Interview techniques Equal treatment Handling co-worker harassment EMPLOYER ACTION ITEMS Include sexual orientation and gender identity issues in anti-harassment trainings for employees Develop strategies for accommodating transgendered employees before you need them Review all company benefit plans and consider maintaining domestic partner benefits Take advantage of the WHRC compliance checklist and best practices: http://www.hum.wa.gov/Publications/SelfAssessments.html JAN Legal name: John Smith (transfemale) Maintenance worker at No Frills School District Dress code for maintenance workers: requires blue overalls prohibits jewelry of any kind requires no longer than shoulder length hair No Frills School District benefit plan includes employer -paid health care premiums for “spouses” and “dependents” Jan and Louise are married They have one biological child, Kim Louise has a child, Jessie, by a different father SAMANTHA, JOE & MARY Teacher s at Libelous Elementar y School Involved in a romantic relationship that includes: Public displays of affection Use school computers to exchange love notes, off -color jokes, and nude selfies Another teacher, Mar y, who is devoutly religious, sees Samantha and Joe come out of the ladies’ room together and spreads rumors they are having an af fair. Principal Pauline directs: Samantha and Joe to stop seeing each other, or she will transfer Joe Joe to stop using the ladies’ room Mary to stop spreading rumors or she will be fired Claims All three employees file sexual harassment claims Mary files a religious discrimination claim Joe files a gender identity discrimination claim Samantha files a retaliation claim QUESTIONS ?