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A New
Beginning for
ENDA
Political
Affairs
Magazine
By Joel
Wendland
April 9, 2007
Civil rights
and labor
activists will
be pushing the
current
Congress to
pass the
Employment
Non-Discrimination
Act (ENDA). In
line with the
opinion of the
vast majority
of Americans
(as many as 85
percent in
recent
surveys), ENDA
would outlaw
discriminatory
hiring and
firing
practices
against
lesbian, gay,
bisexual, and
transgender (LGBT)
people.
While federal
law protects
working people
from firing or
penalization
based on race,
religion,
national
origin, gender
or physical
ability, no
federal law
exists to
protect people
from
discrimination
based on
sexual
orientation or
gender
identity.
Earlier this
year, the
National Gay
and Lesbian
Task Force,
Inc. (NGLTF),
the
American Civil
Liberties
Union
(ACLU) and the
Human Rights
Campaign (HRC)
launched a
campaign to
compile the
stories of
LGBT working
people who
have faced
discrimination.
Matt Foreman,
executive
director of
the National
Gay and
Lesbian Task
Force, said,
"Putting a
human face on
this injustice
has made all
the difference
in passing
nondiscrimination
legislation at
the state and
local level
and will be
critical in
putting ENDA
over the top
this year."
In just a
little over a
month, the
project had
already
collected over
300 responses
from LGBT
people and
their families
about being
fired,
harassed, or
refused
employment
because of
their sexual
orientation or
gender
identity, says
Deborah Vagins
of the Policy
Council for
Civil Rights
and Civil
Liberties at
the ACLU.
According to
her, there is
no single
profile of the
respondents.
The stories
they have
received paint
a picture of
"pervasive
discrimination
all over the
country."
People of all
ages, all
fields of
work, and in
all regions of
the country
report
discrimination,
says Vagins.
According to a
study
published in
2001 by the
Williams
Institute at
the UCLA
School of Law,
reports of
discrimination
based on
sexual
orientation
are roughly
equal to the
number of
reported
instances of
discrimination
based on race
or gender.
Vagins talks
about a few
examples,
withholding
the names and
exact
locations of
the
individuals
involved. A
Midwestern gay
couple and the
mother of one
of the men
worked
together at
same hotel.
The men
reserved a
space at the
hotel for a
private
commitment
ceremony to
celebrate
their
relationship.
After the
employer found
out about
this, all
three were
fired.
A 22-year old
man worked at
a record store
in the South
for three
years. After
his boss
learned he was
gay, the boss
launched a
campaign of
harassment
against the
employee
accusing him
of HIV
infection,
disparaging
him in front
of other
employees and
customers, and
making
anti-gay jokes
at the
employees
expense.
Ultimately,
the employee
felt that he
had no other
choice but to
quit.
The ACLU is
also assisting
Diane Schroer,
a decorated,
retired U.S.
Army colonel
with special
forces
training, who
is suing the
Library of
Congress for
rescinding
their offer to
hire her as a
terrorism
expert after
she told them
she intended
to transition
from a man to
a woman.
"The Library
of Congress
clearly
thought
Schroer was
the most
qualified
person for the
job," said
Sharon
McGowan, a
staff attorney
with the
ACLU's Lesbian
and Gay Rights
Project. "The
notion that
our government
would reject
the best
candidate for
a job simply
because of her
gender is not
only patently
unfair, but
also blatantly
illegal."
While a recent
court ruling
allowed the
suit to go
forward,
recognizing
the legitimacy
of Schroer's
claim, "ENDA
is needed,"
says Vagins,
"because not
all courts
recognize the
validity of
transgender
discrimination."
The
struggle for
passage
ENDA has its
roots in the
Equality Act
of 1974
introduced by
the late Rep.
Bella Abzug
(D-NY) in the
U.S. House of
Representatives.
Gathering
momentum and
support from a
broad array of
civil rights
organizations,
the bill saw
its first real
chance of
passage in
1993 when
President
Clinton took
office with a
Democratic
majority in
Congress.
House and
Senate
versions of
the bill
differed, and
a compromise
bill, the
Employment
Non-Discrimination
Act of 1994
was
introduced.
This version
focused solely
on outlawing
discrimination
in the
workplace, and
set aside
provisions
against
discrimination
in housing and
public
facilities
that had been
in the Abzug
bill. But when
the
Republicans
took control
of Congress
the following
year, hopes
for passage
were
postponed.
The labor
movement got
on board with
ENDA in the
late 1990s. In
2001,
AFL-CIO
President John
J. Sweeney
publicly
described the
measure as "an
important
civil rights
bill" that is
"long
overdue."
Sweeney went
on to say:
"The AFL-CIO
strongly
believes that
discrimination
based on
sexual
orientation is
inconsistent
with the
principles of
equal
opportunity
and equal
employment our
movement has
fought for so
long. We are
proud to join
with a wide
array of civil
rights
organizations,
religious
institutions,
responsible
employers, and
bipartisan
political
leaders in
urging
Congress to
enact the
Employment
Non-Discrimination
Act."
That same
year, several
leading
organizations
within the
faith
community also
endorsed
passage of the
bill. The
American
Jewish
Congress, the
Episcopal
Church, the
Evangelical
Lutheran
Church of
America, the
National
Council of
Churches, and
the United
Methodist
Church were
among a large
number of
faith groups
to vocalize
support for
the
anti-discrimination
measure.
The Episcopal
Church's
Office of
Government
Relations
said, "As
people of
faith who
stand for the
equality and
dignity of all
people, we
oppose
discrimination
against all
individuals,
including gays
and lesbians,
for the stamp
of the Divine
is present in
each and every
one of us."
Civil rights
activists won
additions to
the bill in
2005 to
include
transgender
people and
gender
identity as a
protected
category. This
step helped
major
organizations
such as the
National
Organization
for Women that
year lend
support to
including
gender
identity as a
protected
category in
the package of
civil rights
reforms they
endorsed,
including ENDA.
With the
re-introduction
of ENDA in
2007, the
Leadership
Conference on
Civil Rights,
a national
coalition of
labor and
civil rights
organizations,
compared ENDA
to Title VII
of the Civil
Rights Act of
1964 and the
Americans with
Disabilities
Act, saying,
"It is based
on the
principle that
every worker
should be
judged solely
on his or her
merits."
A letter of
support to
Congress
written by
Parents,
Families and
Friends of
Lesbians and
Gays (PFLAG),
a support
organization
that claims
200,000
members,
stated, "One
of the core
American
values that we
embrace is the
concept of
equal
opportunity,
and the most
tangible daily
reminder that
we have of
this principle
is in the
workplace,
where people
strive to be
judged on
their ability
and
performance."
Human Rights
Campaign
President Joe
Solmonese
echoed this
sentiment in a
recent press
statement
announcing the
launch of a
nationwide
campaign in
support of the
bill:
"Employment
discrimination
strikes at the
fundamental
American value
– the right of
each
qualified,
hardworking
individual to
do his or her
job and
contribute to
society
without facing
discrimination
or being fired
simply for who
they are."
ENDA continues
to enjoy
strong support
from the labor
movement.
Rosalyn Pelles,
director of
the Civil,
Human, and
Women's Rights
department of
the AFL-CIO,
recently
stated,
"Passage of
the Employment
Non-Discrimination
Act remains an
important
priority for
the AFL-CIO.
It is a matter
of basic
fairness. Job
applicants and
employees
should be
judged based
on their
ability to do
the job, not
on their
sexual
orientation.
We look
forward to
working with
others in the
labor and
civil rights
communities to
move this
issue forward
on Capitol
Hill. "
Jeremy Bishop,
executive
director of
Pride at Work,
AFL-CIO, the
voice for LGBT
people in the
labor
movement,
said, "ENDA
would finally
give lesbian,
gay, bisexual,
and
transgender
workers,
across the
country, the
protections
that so many
LGBT workers
already
receive in
their union
contracts,
protection
from
discrimination
on the job on
the basis of
their sexual
orientation
and gender
identity and
expression. In
one fell
swoop, ENDA
would protect
all the LGBT
workers in 33
states that
have no legal
protection
from
discrimination
on the job, a
remedy against
bigotry based
on their
sexual
orientation or
gender
identity and
expression."
Countering
Ultra-right
Opposition
Right-wing and
anti-gay
opposition to
the bill have
long sought to
confuse voters
about the
bill's goals
and provisions
in order to
weaken the
broad support
it has
received from
the public.
There will be
a lot of
misleading
rhetoric about
how the bill
will hurt
small
businesses,
will overturn
military
regulations,
provoke a wave
of lawsuits,
force
companies to
create new
employee
benefits,
force states
or localities
to accept
same-sex
marriages and
the like. Some
say that
states should
be left to
create or
reject their
own
anti-discrimination
laws.
Opponents of
civil rights
in general,
and this
situation is
no exception,
often argue
that
non-discrimination
laws provide
"special
rights" for
particular
groups and
individuals.
The truth is
that ENDA
exempts small
business
employers and
the military.
It's
provisions are
aimed at
eliminating
discrimination
in hiring,
firing, and
promotion
practices, and
will not
require
companies to
create new
categories of
benefits. A
federal law is
needed,
because 33
states have no
anti-discrimination
laws on the
books. In
those states
where such
laws have been
passed, there
are regular
efforts to
have the law
enforced, but
there has been
no wave of
lawsuits
against
corporations.
Usually, the
law spurs
corporations
to make
stronger
efforts at
training
managers and
employees
about applying
fair treatment
to LGBT people
in their
workplaces.
But the law
would give
LGBT people a
legal standing
across the
country to
seek redress
from employers
when they have
been unfairly
treated.
Full equality
for LGBT
people would
include
protections
from
exclusion,
discrimination,
violence, and
other forms of
abuse in all
areas of life:
housing,
public
accommodations,
social
services,
health care,
faith
communities,
community and
civic
organizations,
and the
workplace.
With its
specific focus
on the
workplace,
ENDA is a good
first step in
the right
direction,
says Erica
Smiley, the
national
coordinator of
the
Young
Communist
League and
a long-time
LGBT activist.
"No one
deserves to be
discriminated
against on any
basis.
Allowing
something as
ridiculous as
our private
lives to be
the basis for
such nonsense
puts all
working
people, gay or
straight, at
risk of job
discrimination.
ENDA opens the
doors to
further
policy-making
that could
eventually
lead to better
living and
working
conditions for
the LGBTQ
community,"
she added.
Civil rights
activists say
the bill will
be introduced
this April or
May. A
signature-gathering
campaign has
been launched
by Pride at
Work, AFL-CIO
to bring
100,000
signature
cards to
Congress by
September,
when a vote on
the bill is
expected. Look
for ways to
get involved
on this
website and at
PrideatWork.org.
--Joel
Wendland is
managing
editor of
Political
affairs and
may be reached
at
jwendland@politicalaffairs.net
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