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Transgender bathroom bill fails in State Senate

by Laura GuidoColumbia Basin Herald
| February 19, 2016 5:00 AM

OLYMPIA — The bill to repeal the transgender bathroom rule failed to pass in the Senate Wednesday. Senate Bill 6443 would have repealed WAC 162-32-060, a rule made by the Human Rights Commission (HRC) in 2015. The rule allows transgender people to enter the bathroom, or other gender-segregated facility, that corresponds to their gender identity.

The bill would also prohibit the HRC from making another rule regarding gender-segregated facilities.

Those who supported the bill cited fear of allowing men access to women’s bathrooms and locker rooms.

Sen. Marko Liias, D-Lynnwood, argued there has been no evidence of danger since the Legislature passed a law banning discrimination against transgender individuals.

The Anderson-Murray Antidiscrimination Law, passed in 2006, protects members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community from discrimination. The 2015 HRC rule is meant to clarify that law in regards to gender-segregated facilities and transgender people.

“No one need be afraid,” Liias said about the HRC rule. “The only thing that’s happened is protection, and dignity, and respect for our fellow Washingtonians.”

Sen. Jeannie Darneille, D-Tacoma, expressed concern that passing this bill would take away rights from the LGBT community.

“I will forever oppose a kind of bill that takes away the civil liberties that I’ve been working towards as an individual in my community since 1981,” Darneille said.

Majority caucus vice chair, Jan Angel, R-Port Orchard, said the bill is focused more on the privacy of children.

“We’re not trying to take people’s rights; we’re trying to address this as a privacy issue for small children,” Angel said.

Angel said the rule should be repealed and revisited in the Legislature. Sen. Doug Ericksen, R-Ferndale, primary sponsor of the bill, also said the issue should be taken up in the Legislature.