Take Action

Louisianans:

Call your representatives and tell them to vote NO on the bathroom ban! HB608 is heading to the Senate floor. We need to make sure this harmful bill does not pass. Call your Senator TODAY and tell them to vote NO on HB608!

Ohioans:

Call your representatives and tell them to vote NO on the bathroom ban! HB183 passed out of committee this week. We need to make sure this harmful bill goes no further. Tell your representative TODAY to vote NO on HB183!

State Matters

Self-care note: While some of the following stories celebrate and affirm LGBTQ+ people, many cover legislation targeting the LGBTQ+ community, particularly trans and nonbinary youth. Please be kind to yourself and use your discretion while reading this section. 

Advisory: State news is representative but not exhaustive due to space constraints; feel free to forward news about your state to advocacy@pflag.org to consider for inclusion.

District of Columbia - Councilmember introduces bill to study trans and gender diverse deaths in the district. Councilmember Brooke Pinto’s (D-Ward 2) bill would create a special committee to determine and study trends related to the cause of death of transgender and gender diverse people in the District. Some LGBTQ+ activists have expressed concerns about the bill, arguing the resources to implement it would be better spent elsewhere and that the committee could violate the privacy of deceased trans people and their families.

Maryland - Deep funding cuts for HIV programs to go into effect this summer. Ryan White program funds Maryland gets from the federal government are being cut by 76%. AIDS Action Baltimore and other partners sent a letter to the Maryland Department of Health asking them to give at least 12 months of bridge funding using state discretionary funds to make up the budget shortfalls HIV support service providers will face. 

Mississippi - Gov. Reeves signs anti-trans bathroom ban into law. The legislation mandates that the state’s schools have single-sex restrooms, changing rooms and dormitories. Its text narrowly defines someone’s sex as sex assigned at birth.

New Hampshire - Anti-trans legislation met with opposition from dads. Anti-equality legislators have introduced several bills this session to limit the rights of trans youth, including banning them from playing school sports. Self-identified conservative dads have come to the State Capital to oppose these bills and talk about how important sports were to their trans kids. 

New York - Judge strikes down Nassau County executive order banning trans athletes from county facilities. Judge Francis Ricigliano ruled that Nassau County Executive Bruce Blakeman didn't have the authority to deny park permits to women’s and girl’s teams, leagues, and organizations that allow trans women athletes to participate.

Same-sex couple files class-action lawsuit against New York City for denying them in-vitro fertilization benefits. Corey Briskin and Nicholas Maggipinto planned on having children via a surrogate, but they cannot qualify for IVF insurance coverage under New York City’s health care plan. The couple argues that they are being discriminated against on the basis of sexual orientation because same-sex couples cannot meet the definition of infertility which would entitle them to IVF benefits.

Ohio - Trans candidates support bill to change name change disclosures on candidacy forms. Under current Ohio law, candidates must list any prior name they’ve used in the last five years on their candidacy petitions, which caused issues for several trans candidates for office this year. Some of those candidates are publicly supporting a bill which would end the requirement that candidates disclose previously used names if they obtained a legal name change.

Pennsylvania - Pennridge School District votes to overturn anti-trans bathroom ban. By a 5-to-4 vote, the school board adopted a policy to provide separate bathrooms for students and faculty use based on gender identity as well as single use restrooms.

Utah - State Auditor criticizes new anti-trans bathroom ban. State Auditor John Dougall released a statement saying he didn't sign up to become a "bathroom monitor" and then posted a video to X, formerly known as Twitter, saying "If this bill were actually about making girls safer, you would think that the legislature would actually spend some money retrofitting bathrooms and providing greater privacy and greater safety.”

Court Matters

Fourth Circuit Court rules parents cannot opt their children out of classes in which lessons or books on LGBTQ+-related topics are taught. A group of parents brought a lawsuit challenging Montgomery County, Maryland Public Schools’ policy that “mandates the inclusion of literature with LGBTQ+ characters as part of the ELA (English and Language Arts) curriculum '' without an opt-out provision in May of 2023. Montgomery County originally allowed parents to opt their children out of some ELA lessons, but rescinded the opt-out policy because the number of requests grew difficult to manage, student absenteeism soared, and it created a stigmatizing environment for students who are LGBTQ or have LGBTQ+ family members. 

Eighteen states sue Biden Administration over new federal rules protecting transgender Americans from workplace discrimination. Attorneys general from 18 states, led by Tennessee, are suing the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and the Department of Justice over the federal agency’s new rules ensuring employers recognize trans workers’ pronouns and allow trans employees to use restrooms and wear clothing that aligns with their gender identities.

Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals rules health insurance exclusions for gender-affirming care violate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. A trans employee of the Houston County Sheriff’s Office in Georgia was denied coverage for gender-affirming surgery. The employee sued in 2019 and the case eventually reached the 11th Circuit, which ruled in her favor on May 13th. 

U.S. appeals court hears oral arguments in lawsuit challenging the admission of a trans woman into a sorority. Six members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority at the University of Wyoming are challenging Artemis Langford’s admission to the chapter, arguing it violates the sorority’s by-laws. Langford has the support of her sorority chapter’s leadership, and a majority of her sisters voted to admit her. 

Federal Matters

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) releases updated workplace harassment rules. Under the new rules, employers refusing to use transgender workers' preferred pronouns and barring them from using bathrooms that match their gender identity amounts to unlawful workplace harassment under federal anti-discrimination law. The guidance replaces five prior guidance documents on workplace harassment, covering race, color, religion, sex (including pregnancy, childbirth or related medical conditions, sexual orientation, and gender identity), national origin, disability, age (40+), and genetic information.

Global Matters

Liechtenstein - Parliament legalizes same-sex marriage. The vote was nearly unanimous, with 24 out of 25 members of parliament voting for the bill. Liechtenstein is the 22nd European country to legalize same-sex marriage.

Peru - Government classifies trans people as mentally ill. The decree was criticized by human rights groups both in Peru and abroad.

Russia - Two online film distributors charged with violating so-called LGBT propaganda law. Russia expanded its restrictions of what it calls promoting LGBT propaganda last year. Kinopoisk and Restream Media face charges for violating those restrictions, which Kinopoisk claims stem from having U.S. television series “Supergirl” available on its site; “Supergirl” features a same-sex relationship.

Media Matters

Defrocked United Methodist pastor seeks reinstatement. Beth Stroud was defrocked as a United Methodist pastor in Philadelphia twenty years ago because she acknowledged living in a committed relationship with another woman. In early May, delegates at a United Methodist Church conference struck down the UMC’s longstanding anti-LGBTQ policies and created a path for clergy ousted because of those policies to seek reinstatement. Stroud hopes that United Methodist clergy from eastern Pennsylvania will restore her pastoral credentials soon.

Colorado Gay Rodeo Association to hold 41st annual Rocky Mountain Regional Rodeo. The event includes traditional rodeo competitions as well as drag events. Another gay rodeo in Kansas City is also coming up, and has inspired a local man with a neurodegenerative disorder to stay active

 

PFLAG National
(202) 467-8180 | love@pflag.org

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