Mass. advocates debate transgender bathrooms

The Associated Press

BOSTON (AP) — For Ethan St. Pierre, allowing someone who is biologically female — but self-identifies as male — to use the men’s bathroom is a no-brainer.

“Look at me,” said St. Pierre, who was born a woman but is now a transgender man with a beard and short hair.

“I don’t want to get hurt by some woman who thinks I’m in the ladies room for the wrong reasons. I mean, clearly I don’t belong there.”

St. Pierre, of Haverhill, was one of hundreds of advocates at a Tuesday lobby, supporting a bill that would add “gender identity and expression” to Massachusetts’s discrimination and hate crimes laws. Having this legislation would have protected St. Pierre from being fired in 2003 from his job as a security supervisor because he became a man, he said.

But opponents of the measure have deemed it “a bathroom bill,” saying it would lead to a breakdown in privacy and public safety in rest rooms, locker rooms, showers and other single-sex facilities.

They contend the law would open women’s bathrooms to sexual predators.

Kris Mineau, president of the Massachusetts Family Institute, said women and children in Colorado, where a similar measure has passed, have begun to fear for their safety in bathrooms.

Massachusetts is the latest state to consider banning discrimination because of transgender status. New Hampshire recently killed legislation because of the fear that transgender individuals could use any bathroom, but is reconsidering its bill Wednesday.

Thirteen other states prohibit discrimination against people who identify themselves as a different gender. Laws also exist in the District of Columbia and 93 cities and counties, according to the Transgender Law Policy Institute.

State Rep. Carl Sciortino, D-Medford, filed the Massachusetts legislation.

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