Supreme Court analysis: Probabilities in the Title VII rulings
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Schuyler Bailar thought he lost his Harvard acceptance before he even started college.
Bailar was recruited for the Harvard women’s swim team and was terrified that he was going to lose his Harvard acceptance and team after coming out as a transgender male athlete.
Bailar’s shared his story about becoming the first transgender NCAA Division I athlete to compete in any sport at the Reitz Union Friday on National Coming Out Day.
He spoke to an audience of about 50 people at an event hosted by Pride Student Union. He was paid $2,500.
After coming out to the women’s coach before his freshman year, he was given the option to swim for the women’s or men’s team but was terrified instead of relieved. His dreams of reaching the Olympics became blurry.
“I started really considering what it would actually mean to choose my happiness over my potential excellence,” he said.
After meeting with both teams and feeling support from both, Bailar decided to swim with the men’s team.
In the past, he has shared his story of accepting himself as a transgender male and the obstacles he’s faced, such as his eating disorder, on 60 Minutes and The Ellen DeGeneres Show.
During the Q&A, he was asked about arguments against transgender athletes, such as the stereotype that transgender men have more feminine bodies, making them worse at sports.
“My response is simply factual,” he said. “I beat 85 percent of all the men in this country.”
Bailar’s UF presentation marked the end of the fifth week of his six-week speaking tour. He speaks to audiences of all ages and backgrounds, from kindergarteners and UF students to therapists.
“The connections that I make with other trans folks means the absolute world to me because I can see that this means to them that they can exist too,” Bailar said. “I didn’t have that when I was a kid, and I want to give that to people.”
Pride Student Union president Georges Obayi said members look up to Bailar as a role model, prompting the group to invite him.
“We want to recognize that history is always being made every single day,” Obayi said. “There’s always new opportunities to be had, and we always want to encourage you to keep forging along on your path.”
(CNN) Several presidential candidates took to the stage on Thursday night at the CNN Equality Town Hall. However, no one shined brighter than the black trans folks in the audience who called attention to the violence against transgender people. They were the personification of democracy.
When California Sen. Kamala Harris graced the stage, an audience member asked, "How do we get those men to stop the killing of trans women of color? We are hunted." During Beto O'Rourke's segment, Los Angeles trans activist Blossom C. Brown grabbed the mic and demanded to be heard by saying, "Black trans women are dying, our lives matter! I am an extraordinary black trans woman, and I deserve to be here." She also called out the lack of black trans women and men asking questions. (They appeared later in the program.)
Washington — The U.S. Supreme Court probed arguments Tuesday from both sides of a Michigan case that could decide whether civil rights law shields transgender individuals from workplace discrimination or keeps intact the traditional meaning of sex bias.
Attorneys for Aimee Stephens of Metro Detroit, who was fired from a Garden City funeral home in 2013 after informing her boss she was transitioning from male to female, argued that her termination violated the Civil Rights Act's prohibition on employment discrimination based on sex.
Lawyers for Stephens' former employer, R.G. and G.B. Harris Funeral Homes Inc., countered the protections do not extend to gender identity or transgender status, arguing that Congress could not have anticipated the Stephens case when the Civil Rights Act was passed in 1964.
Justices debated how far the High Court could bend the 55-year-old law to apply to the 58-year-old Stephens, who had worked as a man at the funeral home for years while privately living as a woman outside of work. The court has a 5-4 conservative majority but it ruled 5-4 in 2015 that all 50 states must recognize same-sex marriages.
"...Title VII is a statute about individuals and whether individuals are being treated differently because of his or her sex. It's a statute that uses the word 'individual' twice and says is a particular person being treated differently because of her sex? And here, Ms. Stephens, was being treated differently because of her sex."
Michigan is among 29 states without discrimination protections for transgender individuals.
But Bursch argued the funeral home was within its rights to insist that Stephens adhere to its dress code for male employees during work hours.
"Treating women and men equally does not mean employers have to treat men as women," said Bursch, the former Michigan solicitor general who lost his defense of Michigan's gay marriage ban in 2015. "That is because sex and transgender status are independent concepts."
The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit last year ruled against Harris Homes, saying discrimination on the basis of transgender status is "necessarily" discrimination on the basis of sex.
"It is analytically impossible to fire an employee based on that employee's status as a transgender person without being motivated, at least in part, by the employee's sex," the unanimous three-judge panel wrote.
Justice Neil Gorsuch, appointed by President Donald Trump, argued for judicial restraint, citing the potential for civic unrest if the High Court further expands protections against discrimination on the basis of sex to include cases like Stephens'.
The "textual evidence" for extending gender discrimination protection to Stephens is "really close," Gorsuch said.
But he worried the court might be usurping legislative authority by veering from the traditional interpretation of sex discrimination and setting off "massive social upheaval."
"It's a question of judicial modesty," Gorsuch said.
But the justices quickly steered the arguments into other controversies involving transgender individuals but not connected to the funeral home case.
Chief Justice John Roberts, a swing vote in recent high-profile cases and an appointee of President George W. Bush, zeroed in on how the arguments of Stephens' attorney would apply to legal cases that have arisen about transgender bathroom access.
Other areas of federal law prohibit transgender people from participating in athletic competitions based on gender, said Justice Samuel Alito, a Bush appointee.
"A transgender woman is not permitted to compete on a woman's college sports team," he said. "Is that discrimination on the basis of sex in violation of Title IX?"
Stephens' attorney David Cole of the American Civil Liberties Union countered that he was not asking the Supreme Court to redefine the legal definition of sex even as he sought to convince the justices that Stephens' civil rights were violated.
"We're not asking that you update the statute," Cole said. "We're not asking that you redefine sex. We are accepting ... for purposes of this case, the narrowest definition of sex and arguing that you can't understand what Harris Homes did here without it treating her differently because of her sex assigned at birth."
"The purpose of Title VII as this Court defined it was to make sex irrelevant to people's ability to succeed at work," Cole added. "When Harris Homes fired Aimee Stephens because it learned about her sex assigned at birth being different from her gender identity, it did not make sex irrelevant to her ability to succeed at work. It made it determinative."
All the liberal justices seemed to agree.
It is inevitable that the court will have to weigh in on a broader transgender case said Justice Stephen Breyer, a President Bill Clinton appointee, citing controversies over bills passed in several states to prohibit transgender individuals from using public restrooms for their self-identified genders.
Stephens' lawyers have argued a ruling for the funeral home could potentially upend case law that has prohibited firing anyone — including straight people — for not adhering to sex-based stereotypes.
Breyer also accused attorneys for the funeral home of raising unnecessary fears about the court perhaps recognizing the civil rights of transgender people.
"You have made the argument as I call it the parade of horribles," he said.
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, appointed by Clinton, drew parallels to the evolution of the definition of discrimination to include sexual harassment in recent years.
"No one ever thought sexual harassment was encompassed by discrimination on the basis of sex back in '64," Ginsburg said. "It wasn't until a book was written in the middle '70s bringing that out. And now we say, of course, harassing someone, subjecting her to terms and conditions of employment she would not encounter if she were a male, that is sex discrimination but it wasn't recognized."
Discrimination against homosexual and transgender people is too prevalent in modern society, said Justice Sonia Sotomayor, an Obama appointee.
"We can't deny that homosexuals are being fired merely for being who they are and not because of religious reasons, not because they are performing their jobs poorly, not because they can't do whatever is required of a position, but merely because they're a suspect class to some people," Sotomayor said.
"They may have power in some regions, but they are still being beaten, they are still being ostracized from certain things," she continued. "At what point does a court say, Congress spoke about this...? ... And regardless of what others may have thought over time, it's very clear that what's happening fits those words. At what point do we say we have to step in?" she said.
Gay and transgender advocates rallying outside the court chanted Stephens’ name as she left the building following the arguments.
“It’s very positive, very uplifting to know that all these people are behind me,” Stephens said in a brief interview.
We're just trying to make right wrongs done to us — not only just to me but to a lot of the people you see standing here today,” Stephens added.
She described being inside the courtroom Tuesday as “different.”
“We just hope for the best and see what they come down with,” she said. “I'm optimistic.”
The "family's livelihood and legacy hang in the balance," funeral home owner Tom Rost said following the arguments.
While Rost said he worried about Stephens after she told him she planned to begin presenting as a woman at work, he said firing her "was a difficult choice" that was "in the best interest of the grieving families our business serves.”
Rost blasted the ACLU for trying to “punish” his family business, using it “as a pawn to achieve a larger political goal that it has been unable to achieve in Congress, where this issue belongs.”
“We’re hopeful the Supreme Court won’t impose such unjust punishment on us,” he said.
Justices “across the bench” were “troubled” by how the ACLU’s argument would eliminate all sex-specific policies in the workplace, whether they be sex-specific showers, dress codes, restrooms or sports teams, said Bursch, the attorney representing Rost.
“Every single one of those things would have to go,” he said.
“Justice Ginsburg observed that, unlike other classifications, certain distinctions require treating men and women differently. That should be patently obvious to all of us.”
Bursch highlighted comments from Roberts and Alito questioning whether courts should be in the business of what he called “rewriting the law.”
Asked about Gorsuch's comment that the text is a “close" call, Bursch said he disagreed.
“Title VII prohibits discrimination because of sex," he said. "... When you apply that test, no one could say the employee here was treated worse than a similarly situated woman because women were not allowed to dress as men when meeting with grieving clients, any more than Stephens was allowed to dress as a woman when meeting with grieving clients.”
Asked about the justices’ veering into discussions of bathrooms and “societal upheaval,” Cole was dismissive.
“There were transgender lawyers in the courtroom today, and the transgender men were following the men’s dress code and using the men’s restroom, and the transgender women were following the women’s dress code and using the women’s restroom," he said. "The sky did not fall.”
— After working for more than a decade as an advocate for at-risk children in Clayton County, Georgia, outside Atlanta, Gerald Bostock was fired when he joined a gay softball league.
On Tuesday, in one of the most important cases of its new term, the U.S. Supreme Court will consider whether existing federal law forbids job discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
A provision of federal law, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, makes it illegal for employers to discriminate because of, among other factors, a person's sex. But the lower federal courts are divided on whether that language also covers sexual orientation.
Brian Sutherland, an Atlanta lawyer representing Bostock, said it does. "One simply cannot consider an individual's sexual orientation without first considering his sex. A gay man is only a gay man if he's attracted to other men." It cannot be the law "that a gay man or lesbian woman can be married to their partner on Sunday and legally fired for it on Monday," Sutherland argued.
In response, the state of Georgia says Congress never intended to include sexual orientation when passing the law more than half a century ago. More than 50 efforts have failed since then to change the law and make that coverage explicit. The U.S. Justice Department agrees with the state, in a reversal from the position it took during the Obama administration.
"The ordinary meaning of 'sex' is biologically male or female; it does not include sexual orientation," the government said in its written brief. "An employer who discriminates against employees in same-sex relationships thus does not violate Title VII as long as it treats men in same-sex relationships the same as women in same-sex relationships."
The case comes to the Supreme Court that no longer includes Justice Anthony Kennedy, who wrote all of the court's significant gay rights decisions. He was succeeded by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who has no record of ruling on the issue but who is generally more conservative than Kennedy.
A companion case involves a New York skydiving instructor, Donald Zarda, who was fired after he told a female client, who wondered about being strapped so tightly to him during a jump, not to worry because he is "100 percent gay."
The court will also consider whether Title VII outlaws discrimination against transgender employees. A federal appeals court ruled that Aimee Stephens was impermissibly fired from her job at a Michigan funeral home two weeks after she told her boss she is transgender. The company said she failed to follow the dress code.
"The funeral home would have treated a woman who wanted to dress and present as a man, with grieving family members and clients of the funeral home, exactly the same way that Stephens was treated," said John Bursch of the Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative legal group representing her former employer.
But the American Civil Liberties Union said even if the meaning of Title VII is confined to biological sex, it still makes her firing illegal. If she had been "assigned a female rather than a male sex at birth," she would not have been fired for living openly as a woman.
The funeral home also fired her for failing to conform to its views of how men and women should dress and act, the group said, contrary to long-standing court rulings that forbid firing employees because of sex-based stereotypes.
Across the nation, 21 states have their own laws prohibiting job discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity. Seven more provide that protection only to public employees. Those laws would remain in force if the Supreme Court rules that Title VII does not apply in LGBTQ cases. But if the court rules that it does, then the protection would apply nationwide.