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NOW Urges House to Maintain
Broad Protections Against Employment Discrimination
October 1, 2007
Last week, just before it was slated to go to the House floor for a vote,
the civil rights bill known as the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA)
was stripped of protections for the transgender community.
"NOW opposes this weakened version and encourages sponsors of the original
ENDA to ask House leaders to withdraw the weaker bill and support the more
inclusive bill, H.R. 2015," said Kim Gandy, President of NOW.
"Our members, through resolutions at our national conferences, have
determined that any civil rights bill must include protections against
discrimination based on gender identity. We cannot support a bill that does
not include a group of people who need the protection addressed by the more
inclusive bill," added Olga Vives, NOW's Executive Vice President.
On Tuesday, October 2, the House Education and Labor committee will be
discussing ENDA, which was originally introduced to prohibit employers from
using a person's real or perceived sexual orientation or gender identity as
a factor in employment decisions, such as hiring, firing or promotion.
Due to an unfortunate turn of events, the committee will be discussing a
version of the bill that limits its protections solely to discrimination
based on sexual orientation. Democratic leaders have decided that the
original (transgender-inclusive) version, H.R. 2015, is unlikely to pass, so
they have proposed a watered down version, H.R. 3685, which removes the
language about gender identity.
"NOW joins with hundreds of civil, women's, and human rights organizations
in calling on Speaker Pelosi to bring the original ENDA, H.R. 2015, to the
House floor for a vote, and present a bill that recognizes all the various
forms of potential workplace discrimination. The recently passed hate
crimes bill supported by a bipartisan group of House and Senate members -
includes gender identity, and ENDA should too," stated Vives as she summed
up NOW's opposition to the gutted bill.
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