BREAKING: The
US Supreme Court has ruled LGBT+ workers have protection under federal law.
The justices
decisions came in three cases and will impact millions of LGBT+ workers.
Two of the
cases related to whether employers can discriminate on the basis of sexual
orientation. The third case was about whether bosses can discriminate against a
worker because of their gender identity.
But the court
said the language of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits sex
discrimination, also applies to discrimination on the basis of sexual
orientation and gender identity.
The justices
voted six to three in favor of LGBT+ workers. Justice M Gorush wrote the
majority opinion. And Chief Justice John G Roberts Jr as well as Justices Ruth
Bader Ginsburg, Stephen G Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan agreed with
him.
Victory in all
three cases marks a watershed moment for LGBT+ workers rights in the US.
The three
historic cases
The decision
relates to three cases the US Supreme Court heard in October last year.
All three were
about Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. The justices had to decide whether it
prevented discrimination on the basis of sexuality or gender identity in the
workplace.
Bostock v
Clayton County was about Gerald Bostock, a welfare services coordinator for
Clayton County, Georgia. He suddenly lost his job after decades of experience
and numerous accolades.
The problem?
Bostock joined an extra-curricular gay softball league.
Bostock’s work colleagues made disparaging remarks about his sexual orientation in front of his supervisor, which led to an internal audit of his work and ultimate termination.
Bostock’s work colleagues made disparaging remarks about his sexual orientation in front of his supervisor, which led to an internal audit of his work and ultimate termination.
Meanwhile
Altitude Express v Zarda was about Don Zarda. He worked for a skydiving
business on Long Island, New York.
But bosses
fired Zarda immediately after he revealed he was LGBTQ.
Zarda sued the
business because of clear anti-LGBTQ discrimination. Zarda has passed away, but
the case his sister, Melissa Zarda, and former partner, Bill Moore fought on.
While both of
those are about sexual orientation discrimination, the final case was RG &
GR Harris Funeral Homes v EEOC relates to gender identity.
Aimee Stephens
worked at a funeral home in Detroit, Michigan. Her bosses terminated her after
she came out as transgender to her supervisor. Aimee took her case to the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) where the agency sued the company on
behalf of her.
The arguments
Lawyers for
the employers and for Donald Trump’s administration argued that sex
discrimination only applied to men and women. They said that was the meaning of
the term in 1964, when the law came into force.
Therefore, it
did not cover LGBT+ people, they said. Moreover, if Congress wanted to protect
LGBT+ workers, it should pass a new law, they argued.
However the
lawyers for the workers said that it was only logical that people were biased
against LGBT+ people in part because of their gender.
The verdict
Writing for
the majority, Justice Gorsuch argued that discrimination on the basis of being
LGBT+ is fundamentally no different from other sex discrimination.
Indeed, he
said: ‘An individual’s homosexuality or transgender status is not relevant to
employment decisions.
‘That’s
because it is impossible to discriminate against a person for being homosexual
or transgender without discriminating against that individual based on sex.
‘We agree that
homosexuality and transgender status are distinct concepts from sex. But as
we’ve seen, discrimination based on homosexuality or transgender status
necessarily entails discrimination based on sex; the first cannot happen
without the second.’
The
significance
This will give
LGBT+ workers discrimination protection from the employees in all US states.
But it is particularly important in the 26 states that don’t already have their
own non-discrimination protections.
Moreover, the
ruling is vitally important because discrimination against LGBT+ employees is
so widespread.
The Williams
Institute found 60% of LGB people say an employer fired them or denied them a
job. That compares to 40% of heterosexuals.
Meanwhile, 48%
of gay, lesbian and bi workers have had a negative evaluation or not secured a
promotion they expected. But just 32% of heterosexuals have had a similar
experience.
And the new
federal protections may be widely used.
One study
found that people have filed 9,127 charges with the US Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission alleging sexual orientation or gender identity
discrimination between 2012 and 2016.
Moreover,
states which don’t have anti-discrimination laws saw more serious cases of
LGBT+ discrimination.
However the
rulings don’t give all the protections that the stalled Equality Act would
offer.
For example, federal
law still allows stores and restaurants to discriminate against LGBT+ people.
However, state laws may ban such discrimination in some states.
It is still
legal to harass transgender people in restrooms and gyms. Moreover, it is still
legal for federally funded programs to discriminate against LGBT+ people. These
include programs funding hospitals, colleges and adoption agencies.
America
actually supports protections
Meanwhile the
American public overwhelmingly supports LGBT+ employment protections.
Indeed, in May
2019, a Quinnipiac University Poll found that 92% of American voters believe
employers should not fire someone for being LGBTQ.
Interestingly,
Americans also believe that LGBT+ people have more protection than they did –
until today.
In June 2019,
Reuters/Ipsos carried out a poll about this. The researchers found that less
than a quarter of Americans realize there are not federal employment
protections for LGBT+ people already.
Moreover,
businesses also want these protections to exist.
Over 200 major
businesses, including American Airlines, Bank of America and Marriot filed an
amicus brief to the court. It supported protecting LGBTQ Americans from
discrimination at the workplace.
SOURCE: GAY STAR NEWS
No comments:
Post a Comment