Texas GOP's Anti-Trans Measure Pushes Trans Students Into Separate Bathrooms

Critics compare it to segregation. Some Republicans wanted something even harsher.

The conservative and moderate wings of the Texas GOP have spent months fighting over a proposal to ban people from using public bathrooms that don’t correspond to the gender listed on their birth certificates. But on Sunday night, Republicans in the Texas House settled on a deal that moderates hope will help them avoid a repeat of the backlash to a similar GOP bill in North Carolina: They will require public and charter schools to provide separate facilities for students who don’t want to use the bathroom or locker room that corresponds to the sex they were assigned at birth.

That proposal sounds a lot like segregation of trans kids, some critics argue.

The amendment may be seen as ensuring privacy for students, but it also creates a “separate but equal” place “where the bullies of the world can point to and isolate trans people, and still create a great deal of pain for our transgender children,” Lauryn Farris, Alamo regional coordinator for the Transgender Education Network of Texas, told HuffPost on Monday.

“Bathrooms divided us then and bathrooms divide us now. Separate but equal is not equal at all,” Texas Rep. Senfronia Thompson, a Houston Democrat, said Sunday as other members on the floor applauded her, according to the Associated Press.

The intent was not to discriminate but to accommodate “all kids,” said Republican Texas Rep. Chris Paddie, who authored the language, according to the AP.

But the problem with seeking a compromise on such a bill is that “there is no moral middle ground on discrimination,” explained Texas Freedom Network President Kathy Miller in a statement. “Either you discriminate, or you don’t. This amendment, if it becomes law, would leave transgender students even more vulnerable to being stigmatized and bullied.”

With the House vote on Sunday, the measure is likely to become law. The Texas Senate already passed a harsher version of the same one. And Gov. Greg Abbott (R) has also pushed legislators to pass some kind of bathroom restriction this session.

Sunday’s deal revived a stalled effort. Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick, an outspoken conservative, made the bathroom legislation one of his priorities this year, describing it as a commonsense way to keep men out of women’s restrooms in order to prevent crime. (Contrary to Patrick’s assertions, no evidence exists to suggest that allowing people to use the bathroom of their gender identity exposes people to crime in bathrooms.) But the speaker of the Texas House, Joe Straus ― an establishment Republican more concerned about the state’s business environment than hot-button social issues that move the conservative base ― called Patrick’s bill a “contrived” answer to a “manufactured” problem, and kept the bill from coming up for debate in his chamber. With one week left to go before the Texas legislature closes down its regular session, the proposal seemed ready to die. 

But last week Patrick, who presides over the state Senate, threatened to block must-pass legislation if some version of the bathroom restrictions didn’t pass. That move would force the legislature into a special session, where Patrick would have more leverage to pass a further-reaching bill along the lines originally approved by the state Senate.

The compromise doesn’t go as far as the bill that passed the Texas Senate in March. It only applies to K-12 schools, rather than all public buildings, and it doesn’t overturn non-discrimination ordinances passed by local governments.

But it makes it so that if students don’t want to use facilities designated for the sex they were assigned at birth, they must be able to access another facility. And if that facility is multi-occupancy, the student can only use it when no one else is there. 

“The idea that it is less offensive, all those things are relative,” said Cathryn Oakley, senior legislative counsel at the Human Rights Campaign. There is still a concern that the bill could have the effect of “forcing trans students to use restrooms that are separate from their peers,” she added. 

Some 60 percent of transgender Americans say they have avoided using a public restroom out of fear of violence or confrontation, according to a survey published last year by the National Center for Transgender Equality. Some 32 percent of respondents said they’d limited food or drink in order to avoid a trip to a public bathroom.  

As in North Carolina, the business community has been a major part of the backlash to Patrick’s efforts. The state hopes to avoid the public image disaster that threatened to cost North Carolina some $3.7 billion over 12 years, according to an estimate by the Associated Press. Two prominent groups published studies estimating that Texas would likewise lose billions due to boycotts, canceled sporting events and lost tourism if the legislature passed an anti-trans measure.

“Against all actual facts, Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick is hell-bent on making transgender kids into scary villains,” Jennifer C. Pizer, senior counsel and director of law and policy at Lambda Legal, said in a statement. “That’s not just wrong and abusive: it’s also begging to be sued. Didn’t he notice what happened in North Carolina?”

But now that the bill is set to pass the House, the only thing that could stop it is if Patrick decides the compromise isn’t harsh enough, Mark Jones, a political scientist at Rice University in Houston, told HuffPost. “I don’t think there’s any question the Senate will accept it,” he said. “The only question is whether Lt. Gov. Patrick considers this to be a ‘bathroom bill.’”

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Before You Go

LGBTQ Groups React To Trump Revoking Trans Protections
The Los Angeles LGBT Center(01 of14)
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“All students deserve the dignity of being free from harassment and discrimination, including use of the bathroom that corresponds with their gender identities. Refusing to protect our most vulnerable youth is deplorable and dangerous. This is another clear signal of the Trump administration’s intent to rollback protections for LGBT people." -- Los Angeles LGBT Center Director of Public Policy And Community Building Dave Garcia (credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
GLBTQ Legal Advocates & Defenders (GLAD)(02 of14)
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“The withdrawal of this guidance is a devastating step back for transgender students, who today are receiving the message that the federal government will not vigorously defend their right to an education. This unfortunate reversal of protections reflects crass, unprincipled political pandering. The American people support fairness and equal treatment of all students and do not think vulnerable young people should be made pawns of a political drama being played out by the current administration." -- GLAD's Transgender Rights Project Director Jennifer L. Levi (credit:Boston Globe via Getty Images)
GLAAD(03 of14)
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“Transgender youth face extremely high rates of discrimination and bullying. By rescinding the Department of Education guidance recommending trans students be treated equally under Title IX, the administration is sending an alarming message that it will no longer defend their rights. While this action does not and cannot take away any rights trans students currently have, it undermines the progress we have made towards equality and acceptance.” -- GLAAD President and CEO Sarah Kate Ellis (credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
GLSEN(04 of14)
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"While the Trump administration may abandon transgender students, GLSEN won’t. And neither will the thousands of teachers, administrators and parents around the country who work with GLSEN and our local chapters to ensure that transgender students everywhere have the opportunity to simply be themselves and live better lives. Schools, leaders and teachers must do the right thing and give all students the chance in life they deserve." -- Dr. Eliza Byard, GLSEN Executive Director (credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
Physicians for Reproductive Health(05 of14)
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“As an organization that cares deeply about adolescent health, we think it’s unacceptable to reverse a guidance that is meant to protect children who already face significant challenges to their well-being. Transgender children are often rejected by their family and peers, harassed, traumatized and abused, and are at a higher risk for depression and suicide. Discouraging or punishing children for expressing their true sense of identity threatens their health and well-being, and schools have a special responsibility to protect all young people, regardless of gender identity or expression." -- Dr. Diane Horvath-Cosper, Reproductive Health Advocacy Fellow at Physicians for Reproductive Health (credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
Gay & Lesbian Victory Institute(06 of14)
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“In a shameful display of failed leadership, today President Trump succumbed to his extremist advisors and provided permission for schools to discriminate against transgender students. The move – while abhorrent – is unfortunately not surprising. Regardless of Trump claiming he would be a friend to LGBT people, the reality is personnel is policy. Trump is surrounding himself with anti-LGBT appointees who demonize our community and reject the notion of civil rights for LGBT people, making anti-LGBT policies almost inevitable." -- Gay & Lesbian Victory Institute President and CEO Aisha C. Moodie-Mills (credit:Boston Globe via Getty Images)
National LGBTQ Task Force(07 of14)
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“This is an outrageous attack on the most vulnerable in our education system, transgender children. At a time when young people need all the help they can get to reach their full potential, all Trump has to offer is more opportunities to discriminate against them. When every parent of a trans child needs hope and optimism for their families, all the president has to offer is pain and despair.” -- National LGBTQ Task Force Executive Director Rea Carey (credit:Lucy Nicholson / Reuters)
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)(08 of14)
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“Revoking the guidance shows that the president’s promise to protect LGBT rights was just empty rhetoric. But the bottom line is that this does not undo legal protections for trans students, and school districts can and must continue to protect them and all students from discrimination. School districts that recognize that should continue doing the right thing; for the rest, we’ll see them in court. We will continue to fight for the rights and dignity of transgender youth, especially now that the Trump administration has decided to turn its back on them.” -- American Civil Liberties Union LGBT Project Director James Esseks (credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
New York Civil Liberties Union(09 of14)
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“The Trump administration has made it clear that it will not protect the rights of the transgender community – one of the most vulnerable populations in the U.S. Even as the law remains on the side of transgender students, the administration’s new guidance sends them a terrible message about their right to receive an education as the people that they are, and creates national confusion around our civil rights laws that will put countless transgender children’s lives and well-being at risk.” -- New York Civil Liberties Union Executive Director Donna Lieberman (credit:Jonathan Drake / Reuters)
Lambda Legal(10 of14)
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“We all know that Donald Trump is a bully, but his attack on transgender children today is a new low. The U.S. Department of Education’s decision to withdraw guidance clarifying the rights of transgender students endangers the well-being and safety of children across the country. Trump’s actions do not change the law itself—transgender students remain protected by Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972—but abandoning the guidance intentionally creates confusion about what federal law requires. The law bars discrimination – the new administration invites it." -- Lambda Legal CEO Rachel B. Tiven (credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
Equality Pennsylvania(11 of14)
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"Every student should be treated fairly and equally under the law, and protecting transgender students helps ensure that they have the same opportunity as their classmates to fully participate in school. The Trump administration’s decision to rescind this guidance has no impact on schools that are already doing the right thing in line with this guidance – they can, should, and will continue to protect transgender students.That’s why revoking this guidance is indicative of the administration’s disregard for transgender youth and the many challenges they face. While it may not have a legal impact, it sends an alarming messaging that bullying and harassment are OK." -- Equality Pennsylvania Executive Director Ted Martin (credit:Jonathan Drake / Reuters)
Gay Men's Health Crisis (GMHC)(12 of14)
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"The unacceptable repeal of vital transgender protections in public schools by the Trump administration restricts the rights of an entire group of people. In recent years, we have made great strides in increasing social justice for the LGBT community, and this intolerant executive order diminishes that progress. We will continue to make our voices heard to ensure schools remain safe spaces for all children, regardless of the gender they identify with." -- GMHC CEO Kelsey Louie (credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR)(13 of14)
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"Since our founding, the National Center for Lesbian Rights has stood for the principle that every child deserves love, respect, and recognition for who they are. We have advanced this vision for 40 years, and we do not intend to let this administration's irresponsible and cowardly actions get in the way of fighting for our youth. We will not let Jeff Sessions and Mike Pence, two of the most openly anti-LGBT public officials in our nation’s history, erase the gains we have made." -- National Center for Lesbian Rights Executive Director Kate Kendell (credit:Boston Globe via Getty Images)
Equality Florida(14 of14)
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“This comprehensive guidance put in place by the Obama administration helped provide every student a fair chance to succeed in school and prepare for their future—including students who are transgender. Schools should be safe places for LGBTQ students who are already at a disproportionate risk for bullying and harassment. Rescinding the guidance yesterday has sent the message to transgender youth that the President of the United States doesn’t have their backs.” -- Gina Duncan, Transgender Inclusion Director for Equality Florida (credit:Andrew Kelly / Reuters)