Home Blog Page 427

In ‘nasty parting shot,’ HHS finalizes rule axing LGBTQ nondiscrimination protections – NBC News

0

With little more than a week left to the Trump administration, the Department of Health and Human Services has finalized a rule permitting social-service providers that receive government funds to discriminate based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

Critics claim the new guidance could have wide-ranging implications for agencies that address adoption and foster-parenting, as well as homelessness, HIV prevention, elder care and other public services.

“Even as Trump administration officials abandon ship, HHS has announced yet another dangerous rule that invites discrimination against the very people federal grant programs are meant to help,” Sasha Buchert, senior attorney for the LGBTQ civil rights group Lambda Legal, said.

According to the 77-page release, published Tuesday in the Federal Register, Obama-era requirements that agencies refrain from discrimination on the basis of sex, religion, sexual orientation and gender identity and recognize same-sex marriages as legally valid violate the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.

“Given the careful balancing of rights, obligations, and goals in the public-private partnerships in federal grant programs, the Department believes it appropriate to impose only those nondiscrimination requirements required by the Constitution and federal statutes,” the rule states.

Slated to take effect on Feb. 11, the rule change is targeted at child welfare organizations, according to Julie Kruse, director of federal policy for LGBTQ advocacy group Family Equality. Whether private adoption agencies receiving taxpayer money can deny services to same-sex potential parents is at the heart of Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, now before the Supreme Court.

Kruse said both President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence have made allowing discrimination in adoption and foster care a priority over the last four years.

At the National Prayer Breakfast in February 2019, Trump bemoaned that St. Vincent Catholic Charities in Michigan was facing legal action “for living by the values of its Catholic faith” and turning away same-sex prospective parents. The president vowed that his administration was “working to ensure that faith-based adoption agencies are able to help vulnerable children find their forever families, while following their deeply held beliefs.”

That same year, HHS issued a  waiver  allowing a Protestant foster care agency to turn away Jewish foster parents and stopped data collection on LGBTQ youth in adoption and foster care.

In November 2019, HHS Secretary Alex Azar announced the agency would stop enforcing anti-discrimination protections against federal grantees, prompting a lawsuit by Lambda Legal and Democracy Forward on behalf of the LGBTQ social services groups Family Equality, True Colors United and SAGE. HHS has also ordered recipients of federal funding to accept employees’ religiously based refusals to perform job duties, including denying contraception to women and medical treatment to transgender patients.

According to Kruse, Tuesday’s final rule could also allow a homeless shelter to turn away a queer teen and a senior center to refuse to drive an elderly gay man to his doctor’s appointment. She’s confident it will be overturned by the incoming Biden administration, calling it a “nasty parting shot that won’t stand.” But she admits “it does clog up the works; it does delay protections.”

HHS was among nine federal agencies tasked by the Trump administration to draft guidelines safeguarding “religious freedom,” along with the Departments of Justice, Education, Labor, Agriculture, Housing and Urban Development, Veterans Affairs and Homeland Security and the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Those orders spun out of a White House faith and opportunity initiative launched in 2018 “to remove barriers which have unfairly prevented faith-based organizations from working with or receiving funding from the federal government.”

The Department of Education issued its final rule last September, determining religious universities and student groups were exempt from sex-discrimination statutes in Title iX of the Education Amendments of 1972. Then-Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos stated the change would “protect First Amendment freedoms on campus and the religious liberty of faith-based institutions.”

Dena Sher, associate vice president of public policy at Americans United for Separation of Church and State, called the DoE guidance “discrimination underwritten by tax dollars and tuition fees,” Inside Higher Ed reported.

HHS’s regulation change was announced the same day the Department of Labor’s own final rule took effect, expanding exemptions to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to any contractors — for-profit or nonprofit — who “hold themselves out to the public as carrying out a religious purpose.”

“Religious organizations should not have to fear that acceptance of a federal contract or subcontract will require them to abandon their religious character or identity,” Secretary of Labor Eugene Scalia said in a statement on Dec. 7.

In his LGBTQ policy statement, President-elect Biden promised to reverse the HHS rule “and work to ensure that qualified families are not discriminated against based on sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, sex, marital status, disability, or religion and that child-welfare agencies put the interests of children first, including those who are LGBTQ+.”

And in a statement on Monday, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., vowed to work with the incoming administration “to restore humanity to HHS.”

“From Day One, the Trump administration has been determined to roll back essential protections for LGBTQ+ Americans, religious minorities and other vulnerable communities,” Wyden, a member of the Senate Finance Committee, stated.

“It’s no surprise that in its last days the Trump administration has delivered a devastating blow to try and permanently greenlight taxpayer-funded discrimination and put the health and well being of children and families across the nation at grave risk,” he added.

Follow NBC Out on Twitter, Facebook & Instagram

Anderson Cooper opens up about the time when he `really, truly accepted` being gay – WION

Anderson Cooper recently talked about when he realised he was gay and when he ‘really, truly accepted’ his identity. Answering viewer questions, Cooper, 53, said that he first knew “something was up” around the age of 7. 

“I mean, I was probably, I don’t know, 7, when I kind of realized — I’m not sure I knew the word ‘gay’ at the time, but I realized something was up. Something was different,” he said.

Cooper added that while he had told people in high school, it wasn’t until after college that he “came around to really loving the fact that I was gay.”

“I think I really, truly accepted it — and not just accepted it, but fully embraced it and you know, came around to really loving the fact that I was gay — would probably be right after college,” he said. 

“You know, I kind of struggled in my teenage years, certainly, but even a little in college,” the father of one continued, explaining that “a lot of the things I wanted to do at the time, you couldn’t be gay.”

Cooper said he was interested in joining the military, but couldn’t, and felt limited in places he could travel for “safety reasons.” “It felt like there were a lot of limitations on it, and it wasn’t what I envisioned for my life,” he said. “Or, I imagined a family and getting married. All those things which weren’t possible at the time.” 

“So it took me a while to kind of fully embrace it,” Cooper continued. “But then at a certain point, I think about a year out of college, I thought, I don’t want to waste any more time worrying about this and sort of wishing I was some other way.” 

“Especially when you grow up, kind of feeling like you’re on the outside of things, and you’re kind of an observer of things or not necessarily in the mainstream, you see society from a slightly different view. And I think that can be very valuable, and can impact how you treat other people, and how you see things. So yeah, it’s enabled me to love the people that I’ve loved and have the life that I’ve had, so I’m very blessed.”

Cooper came out publicly in 2012, saying in a statement at the time that he “couldn’t be any more happy, comfortable with myself, and proud.” In 2016, he became the first out gay man to moderate a presidential debate. 

Cooper welcomed his first child, son Wyatt Morgan, in April of last year, and said last month that being a dad is “truly the greatest thing ever.”

Cooper co-parents Wyatt with his former partner Benjamin Maisani.

10 LGBTQ trailblazers changing the face of global travel – attitude.co.uk

0

The inaugural Attitude 101 list is here, and we’re shining a rainbow-coloured spotlight on 100 LGBTQ trailblazers – and one Person of the Year – whose contributions to their fields are changing the world as we know it.

After a difficult year, it’s time to look firmly to the future as we celebrate queer accomplishments from across a range of sectors.

Attitude 101 consists of 10 categories, each containing 10 individuals, and importantly forgoes any kind of ranking; instead highlighting the collective power of our community’s individual achievements.

Bridgerton star Jonathan Bailey appears on the cover of the Attitude 101 February issue, out now

The categories are as follows: Science, technology, engineering & mathematics; Fashion and design; Sport; Third Sector & Community; The Future (25 and Under), supported by Clifford Chance; Media and Broadcast; Financial & Legal; Arts & Entertainment. Plus a very special Person of the Year, whose achievements in 2020 have set a new precedent for what’s possible for LGBTQ people.

Travel, as we’ve probably come to appreciate more in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, has the ability to unite people across the globe, educating and enlightening both visitors and hosts. 

For LGBTQ people, travel can come with complications and moral dilemmas, with drastic differences in LGBTQ rights often shaping how we explore the world around us. 

The 10 LGBTQ trailblazers featured in the Attitude 101 Travel category are all individuals who are working to facilitate better environments for LGBTQ communities on the ground and for those wishing to expand their own horizons abroad.

Jurriaan Teulings – Photographer and travel journalist 

Jurriaan is an award-winning travel journalist and photographer, but he doesn’t do ‘gay’ travel.

As the globe-trotting snapper explains in the Attitude 101 February issue, whether in Iran, Colombia or Jordan, he travels ‘while gay’, which is a different thing entirely. And, if we say so ourselves, something he does better than anyone else.

John Tanzella – President and CEO of IGLTA 

Founded in 1983, IGLTA, the International LGBTQ+ Travel Association, is the world’s leading network of LGBTQ+-friendly tourism businesses with members in over 75 countries. At the helm of the organisation for 15 years, John Tanzella is predicting a busy 2021, telling Attitude, “We’re elevating all of our member promotion efforts in 2021 because we know how much all travel businesses are hurting.”

Atlanta will host the IGLTA’s 37th international business convention in 2021, and their charitable arm, the IGLTA Foundation, will work on increasing LGBTQ+ travel to India and raise awareness about the needs of transgender travellers.

Alan Joyce – CEO and MD for Qantas

In 1996, Alan Joyce left Dublin for the sunnier shores of Australia. It was not long before he joined Qantas, working his way up to CEO of the company in 2008.

Known for not mincing his words or opinions, in 2017, he was one of the leading voices campaigning for same-sex marriage in Australia. Joyce was making a speech when a disgruntled farmer took to the stage to assault him with a lemon meringue pie to the face.

In 2020, he cut his salary in response to the COVID crisis and he has taken on anti-vaxxers by proposing a ‘no jab, no fly’ policy.

Aron Le Fèvre – Director of human rights at Copenhagen 2021, a joint celebration of World Pride and Euro Games in Copenhagen & Malmö

We always get excited for a World Pride, but next year’s event in Denmark will sit under the Copenhagen 2021 umbrella, which also includes the EuroGames, an arts and culture programme and an LGBTQ Human Rights Forum.

Director of human rights at Copenhagen 2021, Aron Le Fèvre has secured Denmark’s Crown Princess and Prime Minister to speak at the Forum. The legacy for the event will be the Øresund Declaration, which hopes to do for international LGBTQ rights what The Paris Agreement did for climate change. Actually, let’s hope it does a lot more…

Arnaud Champenois – Senior vice president, global head of brand, marketing and communications for Belmond

Travel is all about the journey, and with Belmond you can choose from trains, cruises and safaris to luxury accommodation. It is Arnaud Champenois’s job to get that message out and he has also made it his mission that Belmond embraces their LGBTQ clientele, helping to create the company’s LGBTQ advisory board in 2016.

Arnaud told Attitude, “We have always been committed to creating environments where diversity is highly valued and we want everybody to feel included in everything we do, in everything we say and the people we employ.”

Juha Jarvinen – CCO of Virgin Atlantic

In 2019, Attitude partnered with Virgin Atlantic on the UK’s first Pride Flight to New York City to celebrate the anniversary of the Stonewall uprising. While 2020 has held no such highs, the airline has done its best for its customers.

“We have introduced flexibility to bookings, allowing customers to change dates, destinations and even the name on the ticket, as well as adding COVID insurance cover to all bookings,” Juha tells Attitude.

“We are [also] working with Open for Business to show the economic impact that anti-LGBTQ+ laws have on countries around the world and how these laws restrict tourism and limit growth.”

Lipian Bongani Mtandabari – Director of Ntsako Travel Africa

In 2012, at the age of 17, Lipian Bongani Mtandabari left his small town in Zimbabwe for the capital Harare to launch his first travel company, Phezulu Safaris. Then, in 2018, he moved to South Africa to start Ntsako Travel Africa, a Pan African travel company catering exclusively to the LGBTQ market.

In 2021, Ntsako will launch new travel packages to include highlights of the ‘queer lifestyle’ within South Africa and beyond. To help the African tourism industry, Lipian will lead LGBTQ diversity and inclusion masterclasses for tourism service providers on the continent.

Melissa Tilling CEO for Charitable Travel

Melissa Tilling is one of the bravest women in the travel biz, “I’m proud, as a transgender woman, that we launched our social enterprise at the start of Pride month in the middle of a pandemic,” she told Attitude.

“The principles of Pride in terms of self-affirmation, dignity and equality are entrenched in our social purpose, as is helping a wide range of charities rebuild and better help their beneficiaries.” And that is what her travel agency, Charitable Travel, hopes to do by donating all profits to good causes. Customers can support their chosen charity with a donation equal to 5 per cent of the holiday price every time they book

Liam Campbell – Editor and chief photographer for Elska magazine

Five years ago, Liam Campbell created Elska — the word is Icelandic for love — a bi-monthly magazine that sees him meet and photograph the queer men of a single city in each issue.

In 2020, he managed to shoot Kuala Lumpur and Sydney, and he ventured to Belfast in July for his most recent issue. He also re-released Elska’s most popular edition — Reykjavík. While Liam is more comfortable behind the camera, he hopes to bring out the beauty and confidence in everyone, telling Attitude, “My goal is always to try to prove that all different kinds of people and bodies are beautiful and worthy of our attention.” 

Jo Rzymowska – Vice president and MD for Celebrity Cruises

In her 15 years at Celebrity Cruises, which is part of the Royal Caribbean Group, Jo has been instrumental in making the brand as LGBTQ-inclusive as possible.

Celebrity hosted the first legal same-sex marriage at sea, celebrates Pride at Sea every June, includes diversity and inclusion modules in staff training and has created Anchored in PRIDE, an employee resource group. In response to COVID, the company formed a “Healthy Sail Panel”, producing open-sourced recommendations for the industry to utilise for the healthy return to sailing.

See the full list of 101 LGBTQ trailblazers in the Attitude 101 February issue, out now to download and to order globally.

Subscribe in print and get your first three issues for just £3, or digitally for just over £1 per issue.

Anderson Cooper shares when he realized he was gay: ‘One of the great blessings of my life’ – USA TODAY

0

Though he publicly came out almost 10 years ago, CNN anchor Anderson Cooper says he first knew “something was different” around the age of 6 or 7.

“I’m not sure I knew the word ‘gay’ at the time, but I realized something was up,” Cooper said in a Q&A session Monday on CNN’s “Full Circle,” adding that he began to tell friends when he was in high school but still struggled through college with fully loving himself.

“I think I really, truly accepted it – and not just accepted it, but fully embraced it and came around to really loving the fact that I was gay – would probably be right after college,” he said.

“A lot of the things I wanted to do at the time, you couldn’t be gay,” he said, citing an interest in joining the U.S. military, though out members of the gay community were not allowed to serve at the time. The military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy which prohibited openly gay, lesbian and bisexual Americans from serving, was officially repealed in 2011. 

He was also interested in getting married, but same-sex marriage was not legalized until 2015.  

After graduating from Yale University in 1989, Cooper decided he didn’t want to “waste any more time worrying about this” or “wishing I was some other way.” 

"I think being gay is one of the blessings of my life," Anderson Cooper said.

He came out as gay to the public on July 2, 2012, allowing friend and writer Andrew Sullivan to publish an email from him, saying it’d become clear that remaining silent on the topic had given the false impression that he had something to hide. 

“The fact is, I’m gay, always have been, always will be, and I couldn’t be any more happy, comfortable with myself, and proud,” he wrote.

Cooper has since welcomed a son, Wyatt Morgan Cooper, born April 27, 2020 via surrogate. He co-parents with his former partner, nightclub owner Benjamin Maisani. The two split in 2018 after nine years of dating, though they remain good friends. 

“I think being gay is one of the great blessings of my life,” Cooper added on “Full Circle.” “And it made me a better person, it made me a better reporter… It’s enabled me to love the people that I’ve loved and have the life that I’ve had. So I’m very blessed.”

Contributing: Anika Reed

‘I am a dad. I have a son’:Anderson Cooper proudly announces the birth of his son Wyatt

More:Anderson Cooper decided to co-parent with ex because he wants ‘more people to love my son’

Improving the Lives and Rights of LGBTQ People in America Center for American Progress – Center For American Progress

0

Introduction and summary

The Trump administration spent the majority of its four years in office launching a barrage of attacks infringing on the rights of LGBTQ people, promoting discriminatory policies, and creating barriers to access critical government services. These actions reflect the Trump administration’s blatant disregard for the rights, dignity, and well-being of LGBTQ people, their families, and communities. In particular, the damages promulgated by the administration exacerbated existing inequalities and disparities between LGBTQ and non-LGBTQ people in the realms of health, employment, the justice system and law enforcement interactions, education, housing, and immigration. The real-world consequences of these policies have detrimentally affected the everyday lives of LGBTQ people, particularly LGBTQ people of color living at the intersection of identities that experience multiple forms of systemic and institutional discrimination.

This month, President-elect Joe Biden will inherit a country reeling from the COVID-19 pandemic and the impacts of an executive branch that has spent the past few years sowing chaos and deploying its authority through federal regulations, legal memorandums, and litigation to weaken civil rights protections for LGBTQ people. The Biden administration must waste no time and exert every effort not only to disentangle and dismantle the harms perpetrated by the Trump administration, but also to strategically and proactively promote the rights and well-being of LGBTQ people. While this task will pose a tremendous challenge to the new administration, this new chapter also offers hope for positive changes that affirm the rights and lives of LGBTQ Americans.

This report highlights the urgency of reversing damaging actions of the Trump administration while presenting a thematic vision for what the Biden administration can accomplished through executive actions that prioritize the lives and rights of LGBTQ people. Although by no means exhaustive, the report draws a road map for the incoming administration to systematically dismantle state-sanctioned and government-funded discrimination against LGBTQ people and to take concrete actions that embed the rights of LGBTQ people into the bedrock of the infrastructure of the executive branch. Taken as a whole, adoption of these recommendations will help to restore the U.S. government’s commitment to ensuring the respect, dignity, and rights of LGBTQ people across the country and abroad. Specifically, this report’s recommendations are divided into seven critical areas in which a Biden-Harris administration can take meaningful action:

  • Create overarching multiagency priorities to improve the well-being of LGBTQ people.
  • Increase access to affordable, high-quality, nondiscriminatory health care services and insurance benefits for LGBTQ people.
  • Promote the economic security and financial stability of LGBTQ people by fostering inclusive labor practices and workplace policies.
  • Protect and strengthen the civil rights of LGBTQ people engaged with the criminal legal system and law enforcement.
  • Foster inclusive, safe, welcoming, and affirming schools and educational environments for LGBTQ students.
  • Ensure greater access to safe and stable housing for LGBTQ people, as well as support services for those experiencing homelessness.
  • Support fair and humane treatment of LGBTQ immigrants, including by promoting the rights of LGBTQ people abroad.

Undoubtedly, it will require determined, thoughtful, and strategic collaboration throughout the Biden administration to successfully implement these recommendations, which will pose a remarkable challenge. The authors look forward to the incoming administration rising to meet this challenge and urge it to collaborate and cooperate with LGBTQ stakeholders as it works to achieve these goals throughout its tenure.

Priorities

To reverse some of the most egregious and far-reaching harms perpetrated by the Trump administration, there are a number of overarching, multiagency actions that the Biden administration should execute to provide meaningful protections for LGBTQ people. These actions require effectively deploying executive authority both to eliminate damaging policies and to proactively advance the rights and interests of LGBTQ people.

Issue executive actions to ensure nondiscrimination in government services, benefits, and programs

In the past year, 1 in 3 LGBTQ people reported experiencing discrimination.1 These experiences negatively affect the physical, psychological, and financial well-being of LGBTQ people, who then alter their lives in significant ways to avoid discrimination. On June 15, 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed in Bostock v. Clayton County that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964’s prohibition on sex discrimination in employment prohibits discrimination because of sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI). Prior to the high court’s landmark decision, courts across the country were interpreting sex discrimination to also prohibit SOGI discrimination, not just in Title VII but also in other statutes that prohibit sex discrimination, such as Title IX, Section 1557 of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), and the Fair Housing Act (FHA).2 Despite the Obama administration’s efforts to extend these protections, the Trump administration exercised its authority to erode them—from rescinding guidance protecting transgender students in schools,3 to banning transgender people from openly serving in the armed forces, to erasing protections for LGBTQ people in health care and coverage.4 The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) even reversed the government’s stance on the inclusion of SOGI in sex discrimination under Title VII, opposing its own Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC).5

The Biden-Harris administration has a tremendous opportunity on day one to not simply restore the Obama administration’s protections for LGBTQ people but also to ensure that the federal government upholds these rights to the fullest extent of the law. Specifically, President-elect Biden should immediately issue an executive order that directs all federal agencies to review and update relevant regulations, guidance, and policies to reflect that SOGI discrimination is an illegal form of sex discrimination under the law. The president should also direct the U.S. attorney general to rescind discriminatory polices such as the October 4, 2017, memorandum limiting interpretations of sex under Title VII to biological sex6 and to issue guidance on prohibited discrimination because of SOGI in light of the Supreme Court’s decision. To ensure that the executive order is properly implemented and the advancement of LGBTQ equality is integrated as a priority throughout the federal government, the president should establish an interagency task force on LGBTQ equality, led by the assistant attorney general for civil rights, to elevate and coordinate efforts across government.

In addition to aligning the federal government’s enforcement of prohibitions on discrimination with the Supreme Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County,7 which affirmed that the prohibition on sex discrimination in Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 extends to discrimination because of SOGI, the new administration should ensure that people are not denied critical services due to their sexual orientation or gender identity.8 The federal government awards billions of dollars each year for programs and projects to improve the general welfare of Americans, including education programs, job training, housing and food assistance, and many other critical services. Discriminating against LGBTQ people undermines the effectiveness of these grants. In addition to combating discrimination in federal grants and cooperative agreements, the president should direct agencies to affirmatively address the disparities faced by LGBTQ populations, with a particular focus on people most in need of federal services, such as transgender and nonbinary people; youth; families; and older adults. Indeed, the new administration has a responsibility to ensure that its policies uphold the rights of LGBTQ people both domestically and globally.9 Initial recommendations for some of these initiatives are provided later in this report.

Data on experiences of discrimination and disparities are important tools for enforcing civil rights protections. To ensure proper enforcement of these protections, the executive order should also direct agencies to collect necessary information to determine compliance with civil rights protections for LGBTQ people and analyze the data collected to ensure proper compliance. According to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, “[T]he Commission has repeatedly found that data collection and reporting are essential to effective civil rights enforcement, and that a lack of effective civil rights data collection is problematic.”10

Issue executive actions to restore and protect religious liberty and civil rights for all Americans

Religious liberty is a fundamental American right11 that the Trump administration distorted and weaponized as a license to discriminate12 by infringing on the civil rights of others, with adverse impacts being felt most deeply and disproportionately by women, religious minorities, and LGBTQ people. The federal government has a compelling interest in combating discrimination against LGBTQ people, as well as religious minorities, people with disabilities, and people seeking reproductive health care, when accessing government-funded services. To fulfill its obligation to ensure equal treatment for these communities, it is imperative that the new administration take immediate action to rescind and replace executive order 13798, “Promoting Free Speech and Religious Liberty,”13 and executive order 13831, “Establishment of a White House Faith and Opportunity Initiative.”14 And, in conjunction, the administration should direct all agencies to review and reconsider all rules, guidance,15 regulations, legal opinions, and other16 harmful policies perpetuated as a result of these executive actions.

Restoring rules for faith-based providers

The recommendation to rescind executive order 13798 includes rescinding its memorandum17 and guidance,18 as well as disbanding the Religious Liberty Task Force19 responsible for implementing the guidance. In the case of executive order 13831, agencies should rescind the series of nine finalized rules20 revising regulations that govern how faith-based, religious organizations function and engage with federally funded services and programs under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Agency for International Development and the U.S. departments of Agriculture (USDA), Education, Health and Human Services (HHS), Homeland Security (DHS), Housing and Urban Development (HUD), Labor (DOL), Veterans Affairs (VA), and the DOJ. These rules21 broaden religious exemptions that favor taxpayer-funded organizations and remove crucial safeguards designed to protect people accessing government-funded services at faith-based providers from discrimination on the basis of religion. For example, the HHS rule22 removes the obligation that faith-based providers refer people to alternative providers if they refuse to provide services based on religious grounds; the DOL rule23 expands exemptions facilitating taxpayer-funded employment discrimination; the Education Department rule enables schools to discriminate against students who are LGBTQ, pregnant or parents, or who make decisions about their reproductive health that the school opposes on religious grounds; and the HUD rule24 permits faith-based organizations funded by HUD to discriminate in employment and relieves such entities of their former obligation to refer people to alternative services if the provider chooses to discriminatorily refuse service. It is imperative that the Biden administration direct the DOJ to lead efforts to engage in notice-and-comment rule-making to rescind these finalized rules across all affected agencies.

Both executive orders and their complementary policies have damaged the foundational separation of church and state; undermined the meaning of religious freedom; and provided employers, service providers, and other organizations with a broad license to discriminate. In order to ensure equal treatment for communities hit hardest by these measures and reverse the many harms perpetuated under the guise of religious liberty, it is essential that a new administration swiftly issue a cross-agency executive order that takes a multipronged approach to tackling this complicated issue. In addition to the above executive actions to ensure nondiscrimination in government services, benefits, and programs, the authors recommend that the executive order:

  • Accurately reflect the current state of the law.
  • Direct agencies to engage in notice-and-comment rule-making and issue guidance that accurately represents the current state of the law in regard to promoting the government and public interest. The order would need to strike a balance between no-establishment and free-exercise concerns that are the co-guarantors of religious freedom25 in order to institute a transparent and effective process for determining religious exemptions and third-party burdens.
  • Direct the DOJ to revise guidance, legal opinions, and its position in litigation to ensure that legal standards for religious exemptions and accommodations accurately reflect the law. Directives should include explicit language stating the agencies’ commitment to ensure religious liberty is not used to deny equal treatment under the law; does not outweigh or actively harm the civil rights or nondiscrimination protections of other protected classes; and does not place an inappropriate burden on third parties who do not benefit from them.
  • Emphasize the proper role for religious engagement26 by establishing religious outreach roles in the White House Office of Public Engagement (OPE) and reestablishing the Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships within the White House Domestic Policy Council to coordinate the operations of agency-based partnership centers, including those that are faith-based; direct the White House’s priorities related to religious freedom; and engage with religious communities in partnership with the OPE.

These actions will help to preserve church-state separation; restore religious liberty to its true purpose without privileging the religious tenets of conservative white evangelical Christians; and ensure nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ people accessing government-funded and -contracted services at faith-based providers, including those in the realm of health care, education, employment, and housing.

Reverse the transgender military service ban and ensure nondiscrimination for people with HIV in the military

In April 2019, the Trump administration’s ban on openly transgender military service went into effect.27 As a result, the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) instituted a dual-track policy that implemented a general ban, while retaining an inclusive policy for the openly transgender military personnel who were already serving, meaning that they had received a diagnosis of gender dysphoria from a military medical provider.28 Under directive-type memorandum 19-004, transgender service members, or the “exempt,” had to obtain a gender dysphoria diagnosis before April 12, 2019, to receive grandfathered protection and continue to serve. Alternatively, any service member who did not obtain a diagnosis by that deadline—the “nonexempt”—fell subject to the Trump administration’s exclusionary ban.29

The ban on service for openly transgender people in the military is blatantly discriminatory and undermines national security and military readiness by compelling transgender service members to leave the military and dissuading transgender people from openly serving their country.30 The Biden administration should take immediate action to repeal this dehumanizing policy, directing the DOD and any other relevant agencies to eliminate the separate tracks for grandfathered exempt service members subject to the inclusionary policy and nongrandfathered nonexempt service members subject to the exclusionary track. Thus, the federal government would reinstitute a single and consistent military standard, as recommended by Rear Adm. Alan M. Steinman.31

In conjunction with these actions, the DOD should adopt a comprehensive approach to eradicating discriminatory policies that disproportionately affect LGBTQ military service members, including people living with HIV. First, the DOD should amend directive 6485.0132 to remove the categorical prohibition of any person who is HIV-positive from appointment, enlistment, pre-appointment, or initial-entry training for military service. Second, the DOD should reverse the Trump administration’s “deploy or get out” policy, which directs the Pentagon to identify service members who cannot be deployed to military posts outside the United States for more than 12 consecutive months and process them for administrative separation from military service.33 Because the current military policy categorizes service members living with HIV as nondeployable, such members are subject to immediate discharge.34 Ultimately, both of these policies perpetuate stigmatization of and discrimination against people living with HIV, including LGBTQ people, and should be reversed immediately. Overall, discriminatory policies regarding military service of transgender people and people living with HIV undermine military readiness and national security, and adoption of the proposed recommendations would reflect the actions of an administration that respects the dignity and duties of all services members.

Create a federal plan to address rampant and increasing violence against transgender people, particularly Black transgender women

Tragically, in 2020, at least 37 transgender or gender-nonconforming people have been violently killed in the United States—making it the deadliest year on record for these populations in this country.35 Due to conditions created by systemic racism and transmisogyny, Black transgender women are particularly vulnerable to being subjected to these horrendous, dehumanizing acts of physical and sexual violence.36 In recognition of what the American Medical Association has described as a national epidemic of violence against transgender people,37 the Biden administration should prioritize establishing a cross-agency task force driven by a dual mission to address the killings of and violence against transgender people—especially Black transgender women—by investigating violence and the responses of law enforcement and to prevent violence by addressing enhanced data collection and hate crime reporting, discrimination, economic security, safe and secure housing, trauma-informed care, the criminalization of sex work, police violence against transgender people, and other safety concerns of transgender people. The task force should consist of representatives from DOJ, HHS, HUD, and DOL and should aim to center the voices, experiences, expertise, and long-standing work of transgender advocates and activists, particularly transgender people of color.

Create a task force subgroup to support COVID-19 relief for LGBTQ people

The COVID-19 pandemic is compounding existing disparities LGBTQ people face in the realms of health care access, educational achievement, safe and stable housing, experiences of poverty, and economic opportunities. The public health and ensuing economic crises have magnified the country’s systemic inequality,38 with those living at the intersection of multiple identities that are historically discriminated against and underserved—particularly LGBTQ communities of color and people with disabilities—being hit hardest. Mitigating the pandemic’s detrimental impact on the lives of LGBTQ people requires a strategically coordinated effort across several executive agencies. The new administration should incorporate into the existing COVID-19 Equity Task Force a subgroup to investigate and issue recommendations to provide COVID-19 relief for LGBTQ populations. In particular, in order to ensure that LGBTQ people, families, and communities are not left behind by the pandemic response, this group should take action to:

  • Explicitly include LGBTQ people in the vaccine distribution plan and ensure that COVID-19 testing and vaccinations are free.
  • Prohibit discrimination based on SOGI for service providers that receive federal funding for COVID-19 relief by engaging in notice-and-comment rule-making to rescind the finalized rule on HHS grants regulation,39 including grantees and contractors in the areas of health care, housing and shelters, and employment.
  • Withdraw HUD’s July 24, 2020, proposed rule40 allowing refusal of service to transgender people at single-sex shelters; request increased federal funding for shelters and the LGBTQ Youth Homelessness Prevention Initiative; and implement a national, comprehensive moratorium on evictions and foreclosures for all renters and homeowners for the duration of the COVID-19 pandemic.41
  • Encourage Congress to provide financial stimulus support for low- and middle-income households; ensure that COVID-19 essential workers are well paid and safe at work; expand paid sick leave and paid family and medical leave protections to include chosen family caregiving relationships akin to those for blood or legal relatives; and increase funding and access to subsidized housing assistance and unemployment insurance programs.
  • Eliminate onerous work requirements and increase budgeting for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and maintain the existing flexibilities implemented in response to COVID-19.
  • Ensure that HHS’ Office for Civil Rights (OCR) enforces the ACA’s statutory nondiscrimination protections in a manner that is consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County prohibiting discrimination based on SOGI.
  • Incentivize Medicaid expansion in states that have failed to do so.
  • Revise the existing HHS COVID-19 laboratory data guidance to require the collection and reporting of SOGI data in coronavirus and COVID-19 testing in a manner that is voluntary for individuals and sufficiently protects privacy and confidentiality.42
  • Issue guidance on best practices to support LGBTQ students learning remotely in unsafe or hostile home environments while severed from positive social connections, including how teachers and staff can lend support and resources inside and outside the classroom.

Make data collection a top priority

One of the most critical elements in the fight for LGBTQ equality is the access to reliable data on LGBTQ populations. Without a solid understanding of the difficulties faced by this community, it is impossible to create effective policy that targets and addresses their unique needs.43 Furthermore, by treating the LGBTQ community as a monolith, policymakers are ignoring these groups’ vast diversity of experiences, particularly among transgender individuals, intersex individuals, and people of color.

Currently, despite impressive efforts from various advocacy groups, there is scant information on the unique experiences of LGBTQ Americans; a number of key federal surveys do not include questions pertaining to SOGI, and there is little guidance for how these questions are asked.44 The Trump administration took steps to curtail the number of surveys that include these questions, further limiting the ability of policy advocates to understand and address the needs of LGBTQ Americans.45

In order to make meaningful progress in closing the data gap between LGBTQ and cisgender and heterosexual populations, the authors recommend that the new administration reconvene the Federal Interagency Working Group on Improving Measurement of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in Federal Surveys.46 This working group has put out several necessary reports highlighting recommendations47 for LGBTQ inclusion in federal surveys and established guidance48 for asking questions related to SOGI. Adopting these recommendations and updating assessments of federal surveys is an important step in helping agencies fill the gaps in data collection. While data collection is critical, gender markers on identity documents can lead to the misgendering of transgender people. These requirements should be reviewed to determine if a gender marker is necessary. The primary purpose of an identity document is to ensure that the person presenting the identification is who they say they are. Gender markers can cause harm and are not necessary to establish identity.

One of the largest problems in LGBTQ data collection is the lack of uniformity in both what questions are asked relating to SOGI and how these questions are presented. The Office of Management and Budget must establish data collection standards for SOGI, using both findings from the federal interagency working group and the recommendations49 from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on collection procedures as resources in this effort. Prominent among these proposals should be recommendations to:

  • Issue guidance that all agencies including SOGI questions in surveys and methodologies utilize the two-step question approach for gender identity, which includes a question about sex assigned at birth and a second question about current gender identity.50
  • Issue guidance to include a wide range of options related to SOGI that go beyond gay, lesbian, or bisexual, such as those who identify as queer, asexual, or two-spirit.
  • Issue guidance on best practices for collection of data for intersex individuals, who are currently the most underrepresented group in federal data collection efforts.

In the several instances where the Trump administration removed questions pertaining to SOGI from federal surveys, the incoming administration should reintroduce these questions in adherence to the above recommendations, including:

  • Add previously removed questions from the Annual Program Performance Report for Centers for Independent Living, a survey that highlights the experiences and needs of elderly and disabled Americans in assisted living programs.51 The two-step gender identity demographic question should also be included in the National Survey of Older Americans Act Participants, according to recommendations by SAGE.52
  • Revive the LGBTQ Youth Homelessness Prevention Initiative spearheaded by HUD. Although this program announced53 in 2017 that it was 60 days out from its data collection phase, there has since been no movement toward collecting the data necessary to make recommendations, which was slated to include interviews, focus groups, and surveys. The department should resume a timetable for data collection and report release.
  • Resume postponed efforts at the VA to add information on SOGI to online health records. A recent report by the Government Accountability Office established54 that the lack of data on LGBTQ veterans—89 percent of veterans have records not listing information on SOGI—makes it impossible to adequately provide for this population, especially transgender veterans.
  • The U.S. Census Bureau should conduct tests determining the operational implications and response rates of SOGI questions in the American Community Survey and decennial census, similar to their 2019 test of the census’ citizenship question. There was strong consideration in 2016 to add SOGI questions to the surveys that were more recently abandoned, despite assertations from both the DOJ and HUD in 2016 that such data collection would be integral in the fight against employment and housing discrimination.55
  • The Biden administration must direct the USDA Economic Research Service to collect data on SOGI in the data compiled for the Rural Atlas. Moreover, the USDA should collect data on SOGI of farm operators in the Census of Agriculture.

The White House should convene both public and private funders, in addition to legal advocacy groups and research institutions already engaging in data collection work, to discuss the issues of linking existing datasets to create a comprehensive picture of the difficulties of LGBTQ individuals. These datasets should also be made available on data.gov as a listed topic area.

Health and human services

LGBTQ people face unique challenges, inequities, and disparities both in terms of their physical and mental health as well as their abilities to access health insurance and health care. The physical and mental health of LGBTQ communities is drastically affected by forces such as adverse experiences of discrimination, stigma, violence, and other social, political, and economic determinants of health.56 In particular, compared with heterosexual and cisgender people, research demonstrates that certain populations of the LGBTQ community are more vulnerable to suffering from chronic health conditions; see higher prevalence and earlier onset of disabilities; and experience higher rates of illness and health challenges related to HIV/AIDS, substance use, mental illness, and sexual and physical violence.57 Moreover, due to racism and social determinants of health, LGBTQ people of color, particularly transgender people of color, face especially significant health disparities and obstacles to accessing insurance coverage and quality, affordable health care.58

Table 1

For four years, the Trump administration levied a barrage of attacks on the ACA that jeopardized access to insurance coveragtable, health benefits, and nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ communities, to devastating effect.59 Not only did the administration repeatedly try to undermine the law’s consumer protections, including nondiscrimination safeguards for LGBTQ people and protections for preexisting conditions, but it also made it easier for health insurance companies and providers to deny care and services by providing faith-based providers a license to discriminate against LGBTQ people and people seeking reproductive health care.60 As the country continues to grapple with the public health and economic consequences of the coronavirus crisis,61 the attempts to demolish the ACA and other critical health care policies are most detrimental for LGBTQ people, people with disabilities,62 people with preexisting conditions, and communities of color, all of whom have made significant gains under the law’s passage63 and deserve particular attention under a new administration that believes that health care is a right for all Americans. This section identifies essential actions to roll back harmful rules, guidance, and policies promulgated under the Trump administration’s HHS while also highlighting proactive measures that the Biden administration can take that meaningfully value and prioritize the health, lives, and rights of LGBTQ people. To achieve these aims, an agencywide ongoing commitment to addressing issues affecting LGBTQ populations is imperative.

Rescind and replace rules and regulations for Section 1557 of the ACA

The Trump administration promulgated a final rule implementing Section 1557 of the ACA—the health care law’s primary civil rights provision—that weakens critical protections issued by a 2016 Obama-era rule.64 Among other harms, the final rule attempts to erase specific nondiscrimination protections based on sexual orientation, gender identity, and sex stereotyping; eliminates regulatory prohibitions on transgender-specific exclusions in health insurance coverage and in the provision of services tied to transition-related care; restricts the scope of the regulations such that they only narrowly apply to specific activities that are federally funded or supported and no longer apply to all HHS-administered programs; implements religious exemptions for health care providers that enable discrimination and refusals to provide abortions; obscures the right of private individuals to challenge and report civil rights violations; permits health insurers to vary benefits in discriminatory ways against particular groups, including people living with HIV or LGBTQ people; and eliminates accessibility to services for people with limited English proficiency.65 Finally, the rule destroys nondiscrimination protections based on SOGI in 10 other federal health care regulations beyond Section 1557.66 The new administration should engage in notice-and-comment rule-making to rescind and replace the existing rule with one that builds on the 2016 rule by explicitly including SOGI within the definition of sex discrimination in the ACA, providing unambiguous protections for LGBTQ people, and ensuring consistency with the decision in Bostock v. Clayton County. Doing so would represent a milestone advancement for LGBTQ people accessing health care services and insurance coverage. Simultaneously, the new administration should reverse the “conforming amendments” that eliminate explicit nondiscrimination protections on the basis of SOGI in 10 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) regulations, which were implemented as part of the final Section 1557 rule.67

Rescind rules and regulations permitting overly broad religious and moral exemptions from providing contraception

The Trump administration issued rules and regulations facilitating religious68 and moral69 exemptions and accommodations for coverage of certain preventive services under the ACA. These rules exempt and accommodate any employer with religious objections and nearly all employers with moral objections to the ACA’s requirement that employers provide contraceptive coverage in their health insurance plans.70 Although these actions are currently under litigation, the Biden administration should immediately engage in notice-and-comment process to rescind these broad-based rules that undermine access to health care and should issue new rules that revert back to the narrower exemptions available under the Obama administration, which uphold the law and ensure that all employees can access the reproductive health coverage they need.

Disband the Conscience and Religious Freedom Division and rescind the denial-of-care rule

In 2019, the Conscience and Religious Freedom Division within the OCR at HHS issued its final denial-of-care rule.71 By expanding the OCR’s enforcement authority of health care conscience laws, this rule permits hospitals, doctors, insurance companies, and an array of other health institution workers and health providers to opt out of providing care or information that they claim violate their moral or religious beliefs. Absent evidence of any need, this includes denying services related to contraception and abortion, as well as gender-affirming care, under the guise of protecting conscience and free exercise of religion.72 The rule has disproportionate, adverse impacts for LGBTQ people, as well as women and religious minorities, seeking care, and the authors recommend that the Biden administration accept the 2019 vacating of the rule by federal courts73 and cease efforts to continue fighting for this rule in court. Additionally, the new administration should disband the Conscience and Religious Freedom Division;74 restore enforcement resources for conscience claims to levels that reflect its caseload; and increase resources and budget appropriations to support civil rights enforcement.

Rescind discriminatory HHS grants regulation

The Trump administration’s final rule on HHS grants75 explicitly strips beneficiaries receiving federally funded services of comprehensive nondiscrimination protections based on SOGI and eliminates the explicit requirement that grantees comply with the Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges and treat all marriages equally.76 The policy signals a tolerance for discrimination and creates confusion by forcing LGBTQ people to depend on an unreliable and non-LGBTQ inclusive patchwork of program-based nondiscrimination provisions. Because HHS grants total more than $500 billion annually77 and fund a wide array of programs and services that LGBTQ people rely on—including those addressing mental health, homelessness, intimate partner violence, anti-bullying efforts, aging care, and people living with HIV/AIDS—the depth and breadth of harm caused by the current regulation is difficult to overstate.78 The authors recommend that the new administration engage in notice-and-comment rulemaking to rescind the final rule and restore protections.

Rescind HHS waiver permitting discrimination in child welfare services

In 2019, HHS granted South Carolina a waiver allowing an exemption from HHS regulations prohibiting discrimination in the state’s child welfare system. An investigation by the U.S. House Committee on Ways and Means revealed that the waiver constitutes an improper, unprecedented act that permits discrimination based on religion and sexual orientation; violates the state’s statutory mandate to act in the best interest of the child; exacerbates the shortage of foster parents in the state; and disproportionately harms LGBTQ foster youth, who are already overrepresented in the foster care system.79 The Biden administration should immediately rescind this waiver to mitigate discrimination in public child welfare services.

Rescind the Title X domestic gag rule

The Title X Family Planning Program is the only domestic federal program exclusively specializing in providing people with reproductive health and family planning services, such as free and low-cost birth control; contraceptive education; sexually transmitted infection tests; breast and cervical cancer screenings; HIV testing and preventive services; and other kinds of preventive reproductive care.80 While saving taxpayers money,81 across the country, nearly 4,000 Title X-funded family planning and reproductive health centers annually service approximately 4 million low-income, under- and uninsured clients82 and play a crucial role in ameliorating health disparities and providing essential health care to LGBTQ people, women of color, and immigrant women.83 The final HHS rule84 implemented by the Trump administration prohibits Title X funding recipients from referring patients for abortion care; destroys the promise of unbiased information and comprehensive counseling options for pregnant women; redirects federal funds and expands referral networks to include anti-choice crisis pregnancy centers; and damages the patient-provider relationship by encouraging greater family participation.85 This rule has already jeopardized the health care of more than 1 million patients and reduced the network’s capacity by nearly 50 percent.86 The rule is undoubtedly exacerbating existing health inequities and barriers to care for LGBTQ people and may have a chilling effect for those seeking care. The new administration should immediately rescind this rule in its entirety, support increased Title X funding, and collaborate with the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Health to identify and eliminate anti-abortion language incorporated into foreign and domestic grants.

Restore and enhance critical LGBTQ data collection

The Adoption and Foster Care Analysis and Reporting System (AFCARS) collects case-level information on all children in foster care and those who have been adopted. The data are critical for determining awards, allocating funds, engaging in strategic planning, determining technical assistance, conducting reviews, and issuing reports on the HHS Children’s Bureau’s programs and services.87 The Trump administration’s final rule88 for AFCARS, among other provisions, eliminates data collection on the sexual orientation of youth in foster care as well as foster and adoptive parents and guardians, which was previously required under a 2016 Obama-era rule.89 The most recent rule undermines the safety, permanency, and well-being of LGBTQ children.90 The authors recommend that the new administration engage in notice-and-comment rule-making to rescind the final rule, replace it with data collection processes required under the 2016 Obama-era rule, and strengthen that rule by adding gender identity questions for foster youth, foster and adoptive parents, and guardians.

Issue an executive order on the national HIV/AIDS strategy

Due to the historic and monumental failings of the U.S. government to combat the HIV epidemic and eliminate HIV-related stigma, HIV continues to be a significant public health crisis in this country. Recent data reveal that approximately 1.2 million people are living with HIV; gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) make up the greatest share of new HIV diagnoses; transgender people have experienced marked increases in HIV diagnoses; and Black and African American and Latino and Hispanic communities continue to be disproportionately affected by HIV.91 The Trump administration failed to fully fund its plan and continued to undermine its success by leveling attacks against the ACA and the ability of people living with HIV to access affordable care and insurance coverage. The new administration should prioritize issuing an executive order to reestablish the Office of National AIDS Policy and a task force comprising key policy and public health experts to update, enhance, and implement the national strategy to end the HIV epidemic in the United States by 2025.92 The mission of these entities should include efforts to amplify resources and enact executive and legislative changes that promote evidence-based treatment, prevention strategies, and coverage of ancillary services for people living with HIV. Possible actions include but are not limited to increasing funding for and supporting enhancements to the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program in the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA); designing outreach and service provision strategies targeting key populations such as MSM of color, transgender people, and older adults; strengthening federal rules, regulations, and policies affecting people living with HIV, including those serving in the DOD or in the custody the Federal Bureau of Prisons; issuing recommendations to repeal HIV criminalization laws; issuing revised guidelines surrounding the Food and Drug Administration’s discriminatory and stigmatizing blood ban that are based on an individualized assessment of the risky behavior of the potential donor, rather than sexual orientation;93 and designating LGBTQ older adults and older people living with HIV as a “greatest social need” group in the Older Americans Act reauthorization.94

Eliminate transgender exclusions in health care

As mentioned above, the Trump administration’s final rule on Section 1557 eliminated critical provisions of a 2016 Obama-era rule that prevented discrimination based on gender identity and eliminated transgender-specific exclusions.95 Transgender-specific exclusions have historically been deployed by public and private health insurers to deny transgender people coverage for medically necessary care related to gender-affirming transition, even though the same services are standardly covered for cisgender people.96 For example, such services and procedures include hormone therapy, mental health counseling, and surgeries. In addition to the recommendations to ensure that Section 1557 of the ACA’s civil rights nondiscrimination protections encompasses SOGI, the new administration should take further action to explicitly eliminate transgender exclusions in health care. In particular, the Biden administration should finalize and publish the 2016 proposed rule97 establishing explicit nondiscrimination protections on the basis of SOGI within the Medicare and Medicaid conditions of participation for health care organizations. This includes clarifying that transgender exclusions—that is, arbitrary exclusion of medically necessary, transition-related care—is out of compliance with federal law.

Issue rules designating LGBTQ people as a medically underserved population and a HPSA population group

Due to the prevalence of discrimination, barriers to accessing health care, and significant health disparities experienced by LGBTQ people, the authors recommend that the HRSA engage in notice-and-comment rule-making to designate the LGBTQ population as a medically underserved population.98 Because of the shortage of health care providers with adequate training to provide care in an affirming, nondiscriminatory and culturally competent fashion, it is also recommended that the HRSA engage in notice-and-comment rule-making to designate the LGBTQ population as a health professional shortage area (HPSA) population group.99 The adoption of categorizations would complement the status of LGBTQ populations as an National Institutes of Health-designated health disparity population and represent an important step in ameliorating existing health inequities and disparities faced by LGBTQ communities.100

Strengthen standards related to protecting immigrant youth in HHS custody from sexual violence

Isolated from their parents and guardians, LGBTQ immigrant youth—many of whom already face disturbing rates of violence and trauma in their countries of origin—are particularly vulnerable to sexual abuse and harassment while in federal detention facilities.101 Currently, before being released to their parents or sponsors, unaccompanied children are temporarily housed by HHS’ Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) in a network of facilities operated by contractors and grantees.102 In 2014, the ORR submitted an interim final rule regarding standards to prevent, detect, and respond to allegations of sexual abuse and sexual harassment involving unaccompanied children.103 Problematically, the interim rule also contains an overextending religious exemption permitting grantees and contractors with religious or moral objects to abstain from complying with components of the sexual assault prevention and response standards.104 The Biden administration should issue a final rule that adopts comments suggesting mechanisms to enhance protocols to prevent, detect, and respond to sexual abuse and sexual harassment involving unaccompanied children. The rule should also eliminate the overly broad religious exemption currently in place since there should be no religious exemption to requirements for protecting children from sexual violence.

Expand mental health support services and training related to LGBTQ youth and adults

Myriad factors adversely affect the mental health of LGBTQ youth, including family rejection, stigmatization, discrimination, minority stress, as well as bullying, harassment, and assault at school that foster hostile environments for education and socialization.105 Indeed, compared with their heterosexual and cisgender counterparts, LGBTQ youth and adults are significantly more likely to experience depression, anxiety, suicidality, and substance use.106 Unfortunately, LGBTQ populations are often unable to receive the health services they require due to a dearth of training on LGBTQ-specific cultural competencies for health providers; limited access to mental health counseling services; lack of financial incentives for treating mental health issues; failures to integrate mental health and substance use care; and lack of awareness about the specific health needs of LGBTQ people.107 Recognizing these crucial problems, the new administration should take action to expand mental health support services and training for LGBTQ populations. Such actions include efforts to: direct HHS’ Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration to develop and disseminate cultural competency curricula and training on LGBTQ patients in federally funded medical facilities, medical training programs, and providers participating in Medicaid; encourage and incentivize states to expand the reimbursement and utilization of telemedicine mental health services to reach LGBTQ youth in underserved, rural areas through Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP); and request increased federal funding to support mental health and substance use disorder prevention targeting services for LGBTQ communities.108

Prohibit medically unnecessary surgery on intersex children

Intersex is an umbrella term used to describe someone with internal or external sex characteristics or reproductive anatomy that do not fit the standard binary definitions of female or male.109 Currently, intersex children are regularly subjected to medically unnecessary, cosmetic procedures to alter their natural variations in genital appearance or reproductive anatomy. These invasive operations are often performed on infants younger than age 2 and can have serious, lifelong mental health and physical consequences, high complication rates, adverse impacts on fertility, and reduced sexual function.110 Absent the full, free, and informed consent of the intersex individual, these procedures violate their human rights.111 The new administration should support efforts to protect intersex children from medically unnecessary surgeries, as recommended by the American Academy of Family Physicians112 and the World Health Organization.113

Protect LGBTQ older adults by fully implementing the 2020 Older Americans Act

Many LGBTQ older adults have experienced stigma and discrimination throughout their lives and encounter unique challenges to healthy aging.114 The COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated existing health and housing disparities among LGBTQ older adults, who are at increased risk of the virus’ harms and in need of access to quality, culturally competent care. The authors recommend that the Biden administration direct HHS’ Administration for Community Living, which is charged with maximizing the independence, well-being, and health of older adults and people with disabilities, to robustly implement the language and policies of the 2020 Older Americans Act reauthorization.115 This legislation requires that state and local departments of aging are held accountable for engaging in outreach to LGBTQ older people who are in need of services, as well as for participating in data collection and reporting on the needs of this population.

Create a senior position at the CMS to coordinate and enforce policies promoting the health and rights of LGBTQ people

Within HHS, the CMS maintains a broad array of responsibilities, including administering Medicare, partnering with state governments to administer Medicaid and CHIP, administering health insurance portability standards, and overseeing HealthCare.gov. The authors recommend establishing a senior position at the CMS responsible for overseeing, coordinating, and enforcing policies that incorporate the health and rights of LGBTQ people across all CMS programs. Duties may include addressing problems with nondiscrimination policies and compliance with conditions of participation, ensuring data collection and research support, monitoring implementation of Medicare benefits, and enhancing transgender-related clinical decision support, among other responsibilities.

Labor and economic stability

Evidence reveals that LGBTQ people are more likely than cisgender and heterosexual people to experience poverty and economic insecurity, although disparities in income, individual earnings, and poverty rates vary depending on the LGBTQ subpopulation in question.116 For example, lesbian and bisexual women earn more than heterosexual women but less than heterosexual men, who earn more than gay and bisexual men.117 Historic institutional and systemic discrimination such as failures to legally recognize same-sex partnerships broadly and in employment and government benefits has also negatively contributed to the financial well-being of LGBTQ families. Other critical problems LGBTQ people encounter include disproportionate unemployment rates, wage disparities, discrimination and harassment, overrepresentation in low-income jobs, and underrepresentation in high-wage, high-quality jobs. All of these problems adversely affect workforce experiences, serve as barriers to workforce entry, and narrow critical pathways to economic advancement for LGBTQ people, their families, and communities.118 For LGBTQ people living at the intersection of multiple identities, such as LGBTQ people of color, these challenges are even greater.

Table 2

Such discriminatory experiences are damaging to the health and well-being of LGBTQ people, worsening the disproportionate rate of economic insecurity they face.119 In addition to enforcing nondiscrimination protections secured in the Supreme Court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, there are many broad-based labor and workforce policies that could be adopted to improve the financial stability of LGBTQ workers, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic that has had inordinately detrimental impacts on historically marginalized communities.120 Such sweeping policies could include actions by the new administration to: address wage stagnation by raising the federal minimum wage; ensure that COVID-19 essential workers are well paid and safe at work; strengthen unions and worker cooperatives; support paid family leave and medical leave that adopts a broader definition of family; and repeal work requirements for public benefits programs. Beyond these robust policy recommendations to promote more widespread economic prosperity, there are specific actions the Biden administration should take to roll back harmful anti-worker policies adopted by the Trump administration, as well as proactive policies to improve the financial well-being of LGBTQ workers and all employees more broadly.121

Repeal discriminatory religious exemptions for federal contractors and subcontractors

The DOL’s Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs under the Trump administration issued a 2018 directive122 and a 2020 final rule123 that aim to expand the number of federal contractors eligible for religious exemptions. In effect, the rule would provide taxpayer-funded federal contractors and subcontractors with a broad license to discriminate against people who do not share the employer’s religious beliefs.124 Moreover, the rule would significantly weaken the nondiscrimination protections available under executive order 13672125 and executive order 11246,126 which safeguard employees of federal contractors and subcontractors from discrimination based on protected classes, including SOGI.127 The new rule’s language grants organizations, including for-profit corporations, claiming a religious affiliation the ability to be granted an exemption for engaging in discriminatory behavior. As such, the new administration should engage in notice-and-comment rule-making to rescind the final rule, as well as its implementing directive.

Strengthen LGBTQ-inclusive policies among contractors and small businesses

LGBTQ employees have suffered at the hands of the Trump administration’s anti-worker agenda, which has enabled corporate wage theft, limited worker powers, fought against unions, revoked nondiscrimination and civil rights protections, and weakened workplace safety conditions and enforcement mechanisms.128 The next administration should take comprehensive actions to foster LGBTQ-inclusive policies, improve working conditions, and proactively engage in quality job creation in the labor market. Broadly speaking, this means closing legal loopholes and rescinding rollbacks permitting contractors to damage work site stability and workers’ collective bargaining rights, and engaging in partnerships with community and workers organizations to ensure that workers are aware of their rights and feel comfortable taking action.129 For LGBTQ workers specifically, the Biden administration should direct the creation of a new reporting requirement that contractors disclose plans for inclusive recruiting and subcontracting; revive the Interagency Task Force on Federal Contracting Opportunities for Small Businesses;130 establish a new, equity-focused Federal Procurement Center to consolidate and strengthen support for minority and disadvantaged firms; annually report to the Monitoring Business Development Agency on the state of minority and disadvantaged business contracting; explicitly include LGBTQ identity in the Small Business Administration’s definition of minority-owned businesses; and take steps to affirmatively account for contractors utilizing religious exemptions.

Revoke fallacious restrictions on training for federal contractors

In 2020, the Trump administration issued executive order 13950, “Combating Race and Sex Stereotyping”131 which prohibits federal contractors, federal agencies, certain federal grant recipients and the military from conducting training related to critical race theory, implicit bias, and diversity and sensitivity trainings on “divisive concepts,” which include any form of race or sex stereotyping or sex scapegoating. The action reflects how the administration has actively undermined efforts to combat discrimination by using civil rights laws to target entities with inclusive policies. In a similar vein, the Office of Management and Budget’s memorandum on critical race theory in federal government training calls for agencies to cease and desist from trainings that include divisive concepts on critical race theory and “anti-American propaganda.”132 Both actions appear to be driven by the fallacious belief that workplaces with exclusionary and discriminatory practices are in need of greater protections, while those with inclusive trainings are creating hostile work environments. The Biden administration should revoke the executive order, memorandum, and all accompanying policies, and it should issue a new executive order promoting anti-racism and LGBTQ cultural competency training for federal program staff, as well as those receiving federal grants or funds.

Affirmatively promote employment opportunities for LGBTQ people

To address multidimensional barriers to entry and increase access to workforce participation, the next administration should prioritize issuing an executive order affirmatively promoting quality employment opportunities for LGBTQ people. The order may include actions including but not limited to: 1) establishing an interagency task force to promote economic opportunity for LGBTQ people, coordinate information sharing, and investigate and promote solutions to challenges facing low-income LGBTQ people and families; 2) designing and implementing an evidence-based pilot program with the aim of increasing workforce participation and access to higher-wage jobs for LGBTQ people, particularly transgender people, which should be accompanied by testing evaluation and a publicly available national report; 3) issuing guidance to clarify that transgender people are eligible for DOL programs for disadvantaged workers, Women’s Bureau programs, Small Business Administration women and disadvantaged workers programs, and U.S. Department of Commerce programs, including the Minority Business Development Agency programs; 4) evaluating, updating, and strengthening existing LGBTQ-focused workforce policies including those from the DOL Employment and Training Administration (ETA), Job Corps program, and Civil Rights Center’s internal enforcement gender identity guidance; and 5) conducting an audit on the accessibility of and equal opportunity complaints in one-stop career centers and ETA programs to ensure that LGBTQ people have full access to services provided by the public workforce system, which should be paired with incentives to reach LGBTQ populations through ETA programs, as well as other workforce and small-business grants.

Ensure the occupational safety and health of transgender employees

A new administration should update the DOL Occupational Safety and Health Administration guidance on sanitation standards to affirm protections for transgender employees and ensure access to toilet facilities consistent with the interpretation of the Supreme Court in Bostock v. Clayton County.133 In particular, the new standards should require all single-occupancy toilet facilities to be available without regard to sex; ensure that all employees have access to toilet facilities consistent with their gender identity; and permit employers to provide multiuser toilet facilities available without regard to sex, provided that the employer also provides the required number of sex-specific toilets. The adoption of such policies will ensure greater protections for transgender employees, while fostering a more inclusive and affirming work environment.

Amplify access to and investments in public benefits to protect basic living standards and support economic security

In addition to health care settings, LGBTQ people also experience discrimination and disparities in the areas of employment and housing, all of which create substantial barriers to attaining and maintaining economic security and adequate living standards. To help meet their basic needs in these areas, LGBTQ people and their families seek access to and are more likely than non-LGBTQ people to rely on public programs and federal benefits,134 including SNAP, Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), school meal nutrition, TANF, subsidized housing assistance, and unemployment insurance. Due to systemic and institutionalized racism, transphobia, and ableism, higher benefit usage rates are reported among LGBTQ people of color, transgender people, and LGBTQ people with disabilities. The public health and economic wreckage created by the COVID-19 pandemic has magnified the need to expand access to these crucial supports for LGBTQ people,135 who already face disproportionate economic hardships, higher rates of poverty and unemployment, and greater vulnerability to homelessness and food insecurity compared with the general population. Improving access to these crucial public benefit programs is a cross-cutting endeavor that requires coordination among different agencies and state actors; however, the new administration can amplify supports for LGBTQ people and their families who rely on these programs by: eliminating onerous and ineffective work requirements or qualifying training programs; expanding access to and increasing funding for these programs, while supporting broad-based policies to improve wages and working conditions; and investing in greater data collection to more fully capture and understand the receipt of public benefits.136 Regarding SNAP in particular, the new administration should withdraw the 2019 proposed rule restricting “categorical eligibility” to SNAP for families receiving another government benefit137 and engage in notice-and-comment rule-making process to rescind the December 2019 final rule that tightens criteria for time limit waivers obtained by states related to eligibility and work requirements for able-bodied adults without dependents participating in SNAP.138

Justice and law enforcement

Under the Trump administration, the DOJ’s resources were misused to undermine civil rights more broadly and LGBTQ equality in particular. The DOJ pushed for the elimination of explicit protections for LGBTQ people, undermined these protections through overly broad religious exemptions, and adopted an adversarial position in litigation to interpret civil rights laws to exclude LGBTQ people. Through then-Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ memos instructing the agency and the rest of the government to prioritize a narrow interpretation of religious liberty over other rights and the establishment of a clandestine Religious Liberty Task Force, when the DOJ upheld civil rights, they were primarily focused on elevating the rights of individuals who held certain Christian beliefs over the rights of others. The DOJ spearheaded efforts to roll back the Obama-era protections for transgender people across the government, endangering their rights and lives. Its commitment to undermining nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ people was so central that it opposed the EEOC before the Supreme Court in the Bostock v. Clayton County case, and it submitted briefs in support of discrimination against LGBTQ teachers in cases before state courts based on state law where the DOJ had no jurisdiction. The DOJ’s role in upholding the law and advancing civil rights for everyone must be restored.

In 2020, America experienced a renewed national reckoning with anti-Black racist state violence, yet rather than positively confronting these issues, the Trump administration undid much of the previous administration’s work to address racial disparities in the nation’s criminal justice system. It is past time for the government to begin seriously and sincerely considering fundamental change in the construction of criminality and the ways it is used to enact violence against marginalized people, especially Black people, but including LGBTQ people.

LGBTQ people, especially Black LGBTQ people, transgender people, and LGBTQ people experiencing poverty, have long served as objects of violence at the hands of law enforcement and the carceral system. As the DOJ itself has acknowledged, police have a history of intentionally targeting and harassing LGBTQ people in diverse and creative ways.139 This history is ongoing: 2020 survey data from the Center for American Progress show that 15 percent of LGBTQ people, 21 percent of transgender people, and 25 percent of Black LGBTQ people have experienced mistreatment or discrimination interacting with law enforcement just in the past year. The 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey found that the incarceration rate of transgender Americans was more than twice that of the general population.140 The same study found that the incarceration rate of Black transgender women was more than 10 times that of the general population. While U.S. policies explicitly criminalizing LGBTQ identities—through the regulation of sexual conduct, for example—have largely been dispensed with,141 the systematic criminalization of race, poverty, homelessness, HIV status, and survival economies such as sex work continues to serve as a means of perpetrating state violence against LGBTQ people at all levels of the criminal justice system. The Biden-Harris administration must act to ensure that the DOJ upholds the rights of LGBTQ individuals.

Prioritize civil rights enforcement

Despite its critical role in upholding the nation’s civil rights laws, funding for the DOJ Civil Rights Division has not kept up with the need, and staffing has declined since 2016.142 In its budget request, the next administration should increase funding and staffing for each section of the Civil Rights Division. The division should lead a whole-of-government effort to restore civil rights enforcement. It should uphold protections for LGBTQ people and cease the weaponization of religious liberty to undermine civil rights. The Special Litigation Section, which, among other things, upholds the rights of people in jails and prisons and in police interactions, must have sufficient funding and staffing to protect LGBTQ people from illegal and unconstitutional policing practices and conditions of confinement. The authors also recommend that the DOJ request greater resources for its Office of the Inspector General specifically to address civil rights violations within federal facilities.

Reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act

LGBTQ people are at high risk of violence, and there has been a horrifying increase in killings of transgender people, particularly Black transgender women, in recent years. The Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) must be reauthorized to ensure that critical funding supports culturally competent services and reaches people in need of assistance.143 To ensure that VAWA grants are serving LGBTQ people, the DOJ Office on Violence Against Women should award technical assistance grants to organizations with expertise in combating violence against transgender people and serving transgender people, including those who are incarcerated. It should also increase its allocation of grant money overall to support organizations serving transgender people and structure grant allocation to incentivize compliance with VAWA’s nondiscrimination requirements.

Ensure greater support for LGBTQ people subject to hate crimes

Anti-LGBTQ crimes detrimentally affect the physical, psychological, and emotional well-being of direct survivors, as well as the larger LGBTQ community, exacerbating stigmatization, minority stress, and existing health disparities. 2017 data adjusted for relative population size reveal that LGBTQ people represent the most targeted demographic group subjected to reported hate crimes.144 However, due to historic failures of courts and law enforcement to protect the targets of such violence, as well as distrust, fear of stigma, reprisal, and re-traumatization by law enforcement, widespread underreporting of anti-LGBTQ hate crimes prevail, and those statistics should be interpreted as lower-bound estimates. The Biden administration should incentivize states to improve their hate crime statistics processes and work with Congress to pass federal legislation eliminating the LGBTQ so-called panic defense.145 This legal tactic asks a jury to find that a survivor’s sexual orientation or gender identity explains the defendant’s loss of self-control and subsequent act of violence.146 The authors recommend that the next administration pair those efforts with guidance to agencies on how to create funding opportunities to support collaborative, restorative justice and community-centered consortiums. This includes structuring grant allocations to support community-based civil rights and social justice organizations united in their aim of building a national database on hate crimes; offering third-party reporting through hotlines or websites; anonymizing data collection; and providing survivors with support services and resources.

Undo the revision of the Transgender Offender Manual to properly enact PREA standards

One of the Trump administration’s most egregious changes in federal criminal justice policy targeting LGBTQ people was the 2018 revision of the Federal Bureau of Prisons’ Transgender Offender Manual, which is used to inform the placement and treatment of transgender incarcerated people.147 The Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003 (PREA) mandated the development of standards to eliminate sexual abuse in custody.148 In response to shocking data from the 2014 National Inmate Survey149 showing that transgender incarcerated people were roughly 10 times more likely than the general population to experience sexual victimization in custody, the DOJ issued guidance in 2016 that called for case-by-case determinations in housing transgender incarcerated people in sex-segregated facilities; taking into account factors including an individual’s self-identified gender identity and personal perception of safety; and explicitly forbidding policies that require housing transgender and intersex incarcerated people based exclusively on external genital anatomy.150 The 2018 changes to the Transgender Offender Manual maintain the required practice of case-by-case determinations, but the revision specifies that “biological sex” will be used “as the initial determination for designation” and removes any reference to gender identity. This revision places transgender inmates at increased, direct risk of sexual assault, including by or at the direction of correctional staff, and runs counter to the Bureau of Prisons’ own data on the safety of transgender incarcerated people. Under the new administration, the DOJ should promptly restore pre-2018 standards of housing transgender incarcerated people.

Additionally, standards for housing incarcerated youth should be structured similarly. As with transgender and gender-nonconforming adults, transgender and gender-nonconforming youth are at greater risk of victimization if they are housed primarily based on external genital anatomy. Determinations of the placement of transgender and gender-nonconforming people should be made on a case-by-case basis with special attention given to the gender identity and personal perceptions of safety of the individual. This should be accomplished by means of DOJ-issued guidance on PREA standards.

Implement recommendations from the LGBT Subcommittee of the Federal Advisory Committee on Juvenile Justice

LGBTQ youth are more likely to experience family rejection, victimization in schools, homelessness, police mistreatment, and drug use.151 Consequently, they are overrepresented in the justice system, including in juvenile detention facilities, with some research suggesting that 40 percent of incarcerated girls are LGBTQ.152 The DOJ Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) is well aware of this disparity: In fact, in January 2017, its Federal Advisory Committee on Juvenile Justice issued the final recommendations of its LGBT Subcommittee—a detailed list including recommendations for funding, data collection, training, and federal coordination.153 However, little has been done to implement the recommendations of the report. Under the new administration, the OJJDP should work to adopt the committee’s recommendations and meet with stakeholders to determine how best to implement them.

Issue guidance to ensure that formerly incarcerated transgender people obtain accurate ID

Reentry is a challenging process, which for many formerly incarcerated transgender people is made more difficult by the inability to obtain ID documents accurately matching their gender identity. Issuing guidance to facilities on how to assist transgender incarcerated people in obtaining accurate ID well before release would aid them in accessing necessary services upon reentry.

Initiate a LGBTQ- and HIV-targeted reentry pilot project

Reentry services in general lack sufficient resourcing, and providers that assist returning people with jobs, housing, health care, and education are often unaware of the specific needs of LGBTQ people and people living with HIV/AIDS. The authors recommend that the DOJ initiate a pilot project to create LGBTQ- and HIV-specific reentry services in one to three communities with a high need for directed services. Such a project would involve working with existing community organizations, health care providers, local governments, and stakeholders to develop strategies that address the needs of formerly incarcerated LGBTQ people, including safe and affirming housing, support for those experiencing discrimination in hiring and other areas, and inclusive sexual health services.

Use specific federal mechanisms to intervene in abuses by state and local law enforcement and institute LGBTQ-attentive policies

While federal authority over state and local law enforcement is rather limited, the DOJ retains mechanisms to hold law enforcement accountable for constitutional violations, including civil rights investigations and consent decrees. These mechanisms offer the federal government rare opportunities to influence departmental policies. Notably, consent decrees have been used to specifically address abuses of LGBTQ people by police.154 While consent decrees are only intended to address constitutional violations and by no means guarantee an end to police misconduct and brutality, they are one available form of intervention. The DOJ under former Attorney General Sessions issued a memorandum imposing strict new requirements to enact consent decrees, which must be corrected.155

In addition to intervening in cases of constitutional violations, the DOJ has the ability to implement and enforce reporting requirements for instances of potential law enforcement abuses. The Death in Custody Reporting Act of 2013 (DCRA) requires state and federal law enforcement agencies to report information regarding the death of any detained, arrested, or incarcerated person.156 The DOJ, by its own evaluation, has failed to implement the law in some federal agencies and all state agencies, having abandoned three different data collection proposals since 2016.157 While DCRA data collection has begun under the DOJ’s latest implementation plan,158 the plan requires much less detailed reporting than was initially proposed, and the data collected will not be publicly available. Data are needed to expose the extent of law enforcement abuses, and the DOJ is failing to meet its legally mandated obligation to collect them. Under a new administration, the authors recommend that the DOJ structure Bureau of Justice Assistance grants to incentivize implementation and enforcement of DCRA requirements, including by establishing strong and uniform requirements for states to report on subgrant activities and, within statutory limitations, responding to violations by withholding some grant funding to mandate compliance with reporting requirements.

As state and local governments consider demands for systemic change, the DOJ must use whatever means are within its power, including civil rights investigations and consent decrees, to address abuses by law enforcement agencies. The authors further recommend that consent decree implementations explicitly address not only systemic anti-Black racism but also the particular vulnerabilities of LGBTQ people and people experiencing homelessness.

Protect LGBTQ people from criminalization in trafficking enforcement

Due to the prevalence of homelessness, family rejection, and discrimination, LGBTQ people, especially LGBTQ youth, are at high risk of sex trafficking.159 Moreover, greater involvement of LGBTQ people, especially transgender women of color, in survival economies such as sex work—due to discrimination and exclusion from broader labor markets—has led to systematic profiling and harassment of such groups by law enforcement.160 The conflation of sex trafficking and sex work, and the overall criminalization of many forms of sex work, has resulted in further abuses upon trafficking survivors, such as victimization in sting operations and incarceration.161 This conflation is entrenched in federal policies such as the 2003 National Security Presidential Directive 22162 and the Global AIDS Act of 2003’s so-called Anti-Prostitution Pledge,163 which, although found by the Supreme Court to be unconstitutional as applied to U.S. entities, continues to hamper the effectiveness of in-country partner organizations’ critical efforts in responding to the HIV crisis.164 This entanglement has led to further dangers for both sex workers and survivors of trafficking, including incarceration and decreased access to health care and other critical services.165 There is much to be done to deconstruct these complex and intersecting issues; as such, the authors recommend that the administration consult with advocates and develop strategies to disentangle trafficking enforcement and sex work criminalization in federal law enforcement activities to the end of increasing anti-trafficking efficacy and avoiding additional criminalization of LGBTQ people.

Additionally, steps must be taken to restructure sex trafficking enforcement to center the needs of survivors and avoid criminalization. Developing DOJ-funded efforts through the Office for Victims of Crime and Bureau of Justice Assistance to combat human trafficking involves the creation of task forces, partnering federal agencies with state and local law enforcement and nongovernmental organizations or individuals.166 Due to the history of law enforcement abuses against survivors of trafficking, especially in the use of sting operations,167 the authors recommend that greater resourcing be given to task force entities such as state departments of labor, health agencies, and nongovernmental entities providing services to survivors to center their needs and avoid further victimization. To prevent further abuses, the administration must also ban federal law enforcement from engaging in sex acts within investigations. Finally, the authors recommend that the administration be proactive in protecting and supporting LGBTQ people from the dangers that criminalization of sex work poses for them. The DOL must consult with community organizations and advocates to develop programs and strategies aimed at increasing access to housing, employment, and health care for LGBTQ people engaged in survival economies.

Education

LGBTQ youth often struggle to navigate the complicated feelings and interpersonal challenges associated with coming out. During the pandemic, struggles related to mental health and well-being are magnified, particularly for youth of color and youth with disabilities. Despite increased acceptance, LGBTQ youth still experience rejection from parents at high rates and are often overrepresented in homeless168 and foster care169 populations. According to a 2019 survey from the Trevor Project, 71 percent of LGBTQ youth experienced discrimination in the last year, with 2 in 3 reporting that someone had tried to convince them to change their sexual orientation or gender identity.170 These challenges make it increasingly difficult to succeed in an academic environment and often lead to higher rates of absence, lower GPAs, and poorer educational outcomes.

Given these factors, it is critical that U.S. schools provide safety and stability for LGBTQ students. There are, however, still high levels of discrimination and a number of noninclusive policies that hinder these students’ success. Data from GLSEN’s 2019 National School Climate Survey171 show that 3 in 5 LGBTQ students felt unsafe at their school as a result of their sexual orientation, with 1 in 3 reporting missing school due to these feelings. (see Figure 1) However, the current Education Department has severely neglected complaints of LGBTQ students, particularly transgender students. CAP examined complaints filed to the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights and found that complaints filed by LGBTQ students were nine times less likely to result in corrective action under the Trump administration than under the prior administration and that fewer complaints overall proceeded to a formal investigation.172

Figure 1

In order to make a meaningful impact on the experiences of LGBTQ youth, it is essential to adopt policies that codify the rights of students, ensuring that legislation and legal rulings be applied thoroughly and previous guidance limiting the efficacy of nondiscrimination protections be revised.

Restore students’ rights under Title IX

Due to the disproportionate173 discrimination and harassment faced by transgender students in educational settings, it is critical to clarify federal protections. Federal guidance from 2016 clarified protections for transgender students under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, including the right to access sex-segregated spaces and activities based on their gender identity.174 However, guidance published in 2017 significantly limited the scope of Title IX, claiming—with little in the way of legal justification—that the law only applies to an individual’s “biological sex.”175 As recently as this past year, the Education Department has argued—with equally dubious legal justification—that allowing transgender students to participate in sex-segregated sports consistent with their gender identity is an act of sex segregation against cisgender students.176 A growing number of federal courts have affirmed177 that transgender students are protected under Title IX. This has been bolstered178 by the recent Bostock v. Clayton County decision, which held that Title VII protections against discrimination based on sex applied equally to an individual’s sexual orientation and gender identity—especially relevant given that many courts have already used Title VII case law to interpret Title IX.179 Under a new administration:

  1. The Education Department should ensure that Title IX is applied to protect against discrimination based on pregnancy, sex stereotypes, gender identity, and sexual orientation, as discussed above. It should ensure that educational institutions are aware of their responsibility under the law and that LGBTQ students know they are protected. This is consistent with prior litigation and interpretation of the word “sex” in the context of federal nondiscrimination protections, most recently clarified by the Bostock
  2. In order to allow for increased investigative capacity and ensure oversight and enforcement of nondiscrimination protections for LGBTQ students, the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights should request increased appropriations from Congress in their annual budget
  3. The Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights should resume180 the investigation of complaints related to transgender students’ ability to access all appropriate facilities—including bathrooms and locker rooms. Because many complaints to the Office for Civil Rights have been closed prematurely, the office should request that individuals resubmit rejected complaints for additional review. The Education Department should reopen the recent finding that Connecticut’s inclusive transgender youth policy violates Title IX.181
  4. The Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights should restore the May 13, 2016, guidance, which has been rescinded, ensuring that the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act applies to students’ legal or birth names and genders.182

LGBTQ students are also at particular risk of experiencing sexual harassment in schools—with 73 percent of LGBTQ college students reporting at least one experience of sexual harassment.183 Steps must be taken to codify protections for victims of gender and sexuality discrimination, as well as sexual harassment:

  1. The Education Department should engage in notice-and-comment rule-making to narrow the current definition of what constitutes as being “controlled by religious organizations” under Title IX exemption rules. Currently, any school or department of divinity qualifies as exempt, and this should be narrowed significantly to reflect the law.184 It should also clarify that although proactively notifying the Education Department’s assistant secretary to receive assurance on the validity of an exemption prior to such a request is not required, doing so shall be considered evidence of sincerity of a religious belief.
  2. The Education Department should engage in notice-and-comment rule-making to restore strong standards for what constitutes sexual harassment and the circumstances under which harassment must be reported. Specifically, the current guidelines state that there must be direct notice given to a “Title IX Coordinator or any official of the recipient who has authority to institute corrective measures on behalf of the recipient, or to any employee of an elementary and secondary school,” which significantly limits the scope of reporting for survivors.

Additionally, under Title IX, and in accordance with prior rulings affirming that students being treated unequally based on their sexual orientation violates the 14th Amendment, it is illegal under federal law for school administration or staff to unequally enforce any school rules related to public displays of affection in ways that single out LGBTQ students.185 Under the new administration, the Education Department and the DOJ should jointly release guidance that explicitly states that the enforcement of school rules pertaining to appearance, public displays of affection, and school events in ways that specifically target LGBTQ students is illegal.

Reverse guidance that gives license to discriminate

The Biden administration should revoke executive order 13798, “Guidance Regarding Department of Education Grants,”186 which allows religious organizations and providers to secure Education Department funds while maintaining their “religious character.” This is one of many recent efforts to broaden religious exemptions in a way that permits discrimination, in this case ensuring that entities that discriminate will be able to retain public funding.187 Further examples include guidance188 that reaffirms that colleges and universities receiving federal funding must comply with the First Amendment and uphold “free and open exchange of ideas” on their campuses. In an effort to increase the number of exemptions that could be requested under Title IV, this rule broadly defines the definition of a school “controlled by a religious organization” and removes the need to affirmatively notify the OCR if they are claiming a religious exemption. The guidance in both orders should be rescinded, and guidance codifying the limitations of religious exemptions under existing law should be released.

Issue guidance to ensure supportive staff

Significant research and evidence reveal the immense importance of supportive staff and positive LGBTQ representation, some of the strongest189 indicators for LGBTQ student success in education. In acknowledgement of this, the Education Department should:

  1. Establish an initiative specifically geared toward investigating and disseminating best practices for school policy and staff training to create supportive and inclusive environments for LGBTQ students, particularly through use of funding from Student Support and Academic Enrichment grants.190
  2. Provide resources for teachers and staff on creating positive environments for LGBTQ students, including examples of inclusive state and local policies and resources for professional and curricular development, building on the 2016 Education Department report “Examples of Policies and Emerging Practices” issued alongside new Title IX guidance.191

Promote LGBTQ awareness and history in the classroom

To make it increasingly possible for LGBTQ students to receive positive instruction on the history of the LGBTQ community and the civil rights icons involved in pushing for equality, the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) should include information highlighting LGBTQ history and experiences on its EDSITEment!192 website, which includes both lesson plans and teachers’ guides. The new administration should also request increased appropriations through the NEH to support states and districts so they can incorporate these resources and critical conversations about LGBTQ history and civil rights activism into relevant courses.

Protect the creation of LGBTQ-friendly spaces

In recognition of the difficulties that LGBTQ students have in finding supportive and affirming spaces in school, as well as the many restrictive policies limiting their ability to create and promote gender-sexuality alliances/gay-straight alliances (GSAs), the Education Department should issue new guidance affirming students’ rights to create and maintain GSAs. These rights are in accordance193 with the Equal Access Act, which clearly establishes that public schools cannot deny students the right to meet, regardless of the content of speech at such meetings.

Housing and homelessness

With regard to housing access generally, discrimination remains a major barrier to LGBTQ housing security. CAP survey data show that 28 percent of LGBTQ people and 45 percent of Black LGBTQ people reported that discrimination negatively affected, either moderately or significantly, their ability to rent or buy a home in the past year. Fifty-one percent of LGBTQ people and 63 percent of transgender people reported that it would be at least somewhat difficult to find an alternative apartment if refused due to discrimination.194 Higher rates of poverty among LGBTQ demographic groups also contribute to housing insecurity, leading to a situation where many face intersecting barriers to safe and stable housing.

Additionally, the social and economic marginalization of LGBTQ people has led to a crisis of LGBTQ homelessness, especially for transgender people and LGBTQ youth. While limited data exist to measure the true extent of transgender homelessness, the number of transgender adults experiencing homelessness is estimated to have increased 88 percent since 2016,195 and a disproportionate amount of transgender people experiencing homelessness are unsheltered.196 Furthermore, 20 percent to 40 percent of homeless youth in the United States identify as LGBTQ.197 However, HUD has spent the past several years limiting access to shelters for transgender people and has slowed efforts to address LGBTQ youth homelessness.

As in other areas, there are recent regulatory actions that need to be reversed and proactive solutions that a new administration could institute.

Strengthen equal access protections

The most recent high-profile attack on LGBTQ housing access is HUD’s 2020 proposed rule198 allowing federally funded single-sex shelters to deny service to transgender individuals seeking shelter. This threatens the safety of transgender people experiencing homelessness and endangers funding for shelters due to conflicts of laws.199 Withdrawing the proposal is crucial for the protection of transgender people experiencing homelessness.

In March 2017, HUD withdrew a proposed rule200 requiring federally funded shelters to hang a poster notifying residents of their right to equal access, regardless of sexual orientation, gender identity, or marital status. Dissemination of information on residents’ rights is important: Not only does it notify residents of their protections and increase access to recourse in the case of discrimination, but it also discourages shelters from discriminating in the first place. In addition to withdrawing the Equal Access Rule rollback, it should be a priority for HUD to move forward with the withdrawn poster proposal in order to ensure that the 2012 and 2016 rules are effectively enforced.

In addition to restoring previously planned enforcement mechanisms for the Equal Access Rule, efforts must be made to ensure compliance and effectiveness. The authors recommend that the new administration allocate sufficient resources to inform people of their rights and enforce Equal Access Rule compliance.

Restore Housing First incentives and Equal Access Rule compliance in the 2021 HUD CoC NOFA

The 2019 Notice of Funding Availability (NOFA) for HUD’s Continuum of Care (CoC) program included several changes dangerous for housing-insecure LGBTQ people.201 The NOFA removed incentives for program participants to use the Housing First model, under which housing is provided to people experiencing homelessness without mandatory participation in supportive services.202 Research has shown that Housing First is both cost-effective and successful, especially for disabled people and those experiencing chronic homelessness.203 Additionally, the NOFA excluded incentives encouraging program participants to comply with the 2016 Equal Access Rule. This means that shelters are less likely to appropriately and affirmatively serve transgender people. Reinstating Housing First and Equal Access Rule compliance incentives in the 2021 NOFA would encourage service providers to treat people experiencing homelessness effectively and with dignity. These changes should be prioritized under a new administration.

Restart implementation of the Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing regulation

Another of the Trump administration’s rollbacks in housing was the January 2018 suspension204 of HUD’s 2015 Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing regulation.205 The 2015 regulation was intended to implement the Affirmatively Furthering Fair Housing provision of the Fair Housing Act. The provision forbids discrimination in FHA-funded programs through processes to increase project transparency and accountability, including through assessments of fair housing to determine the extent to which program participants are complying. The 2018 regulation delayed the submission of assessments of fair housing by program participants, meaning that most program participants would not need to demonstrate compliance until 2024 or 2025. The authors recommend that a new administration undo this rollback by reinstituting an accelerated timeline for the assessment of fair housing process.

Reinterpret the disparate impact standard to prevent discrimination

An especially concerning regulatory change in the area of housing is the September 2020 final rule issued regarding the disparate impact standard under the FHA.206 The FHA prohibits disparate impact discrimination, which is conduct that, while not necessarily intentionally discriminatory, has discriminatory effects. The rule increases the burden of proof for disparate impact claims: Claims must show that a policy not only has a disparate impact on a protected class, but that, among other requirements, the policy is “arbitrary” and that the disparity is a direct cause of the policy. The rule makes it significantly more difficult for discriminatory housing policies to be challenged and amended and endangers people belonging to any protected class, including LGBTQ people. As such, the authors recommend that the Biden administration rescind the 2020 rule, restore the previous interpretation of the disparate impact standard of the FHA such that a lower burden of proof is needed for disparate impact claims, and remove requirements for proving arbitrariness and direct causation when policies disparately affect protected classes.

Evaluate and expand the LGBTQ Youth Homelessness Prevention Initiative

LGBTQ youth are 120 percent more likely than non-LGBTQ youth to experience homelessness due to a combination of factors, including family rejection, aging out of foster care, poverty, and abuse.207 Efforts by the federal government to address this crisis are currently narrow and underfunded. HUD’s LGBTQ Youth Homelessness Prevention Initiative serves just two pilot communities, in Houston and Cincinnati.208 Furthermore, a 2016 proposal to collect information assessing the efficacy of the program was withdrawn in early 2017.209 One action a new administration could take to support LGBTQ youth is to restore the evaluation and expand the initiative. Funding for the Runaway and Homeless Youth Act should be increased, and the administration should ensure that LGBTQ youth have access to transitional living programs.

Initiate a pilot housing program for LGBTQ older adults

Affordable and welcoming housing for LGBTQ older adults remains an issue as well.210 Many LGBTQ older adults have fewer savings and lack friends and family to care for them.211 Furthermore, they face discrimination when trying to access available housing: A 2014 matched-pair study found that 48 percent of same-sex couples experienced at least one time of adverse and differential treatment.212 While organizations are undertaking isolated efforts to provide housing and community to LGBTQ older adults, these efforts lack federal support and coordination.213 In addition to nondiscrimination policy, enforcement, and education, the new administration should make proactive efforts to address these issues. An initiative similar to HUD’s LGBTQ Youth Homelessness Prevention Initiative, targeted instead for LGBTQ older adults, could begin to build resourcing and research to combat isolation, financial hardship, and discrimination.

Immigration and foreign policy

Since entering office, the Trump administration waged a campaign to decimate the U.S. immigration system. The Migration Policy Institute estimates the Trump administration made more than 400 immigration policy changes.214 These attacks have disproportionately harmed LGBTQ immigrants. Among the changes are cutting refugee admissions from 84,994 in fiscal year 2016 to 11,814 in fiscal year 2018;215 essentially ending the ability to seek asylum;216 attempting to eliminate and now undermining protections under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program; undermining Temporary Protected Status; and creating a wealth test for immigration through its public charge rule. Furthermore, the administration expanded the number of people caged in detention to unprecedented numbers while ignoring basic health and safety standards—actions that have resulted in tragedies such as the deaths of transgender women Roxsana Hernandez and Johana Medina Leon. This is particularly concerning, as LGBTQ immigrants in detention are 97 times more likely than the general detained population to report being survivors of sexual abuse.217

A new administration must also work to improve conditions for LGBTQ people wherever they live. On the global stage, the Trump administration has abdicated U.S. leadership in human rights, compromising international efforts to promote LGBTQ equality. The administration’s demonstrated animus against LGBTQ people in domestic policy has been accompanied by tacit acceptance of anti-LGBTQ abuses worldwide. The United States gave up its seat on the U.N. Human Rights Council in 2018218 and has repeatedly missed opportunities to participate in U.N. deliberations about LGBTQ rights.219 The administration has also failed to fill the position of U.S. special envoy for the human rights of LGBTI persons, bringing targeted U.S. efforts to advance equality to a standstill.

Instead of actually participating in international human rights work, the United States has focused on rhetorically justifying its own abuses through the U.S. Department of State’s Commission on Unalienable Rights, which in 2020 released a final report prioritizing religious rights and property rights over others,220 in brash defiance of the established international understanding that human rights are “universal, indivisible and interdependent and interrelated.”221 However, rescinding the report and resuming participation in international human rights efforts would only begin to address the global crisis of anti-LGBTQ persecution. Proactive steps must be taken to support civil society organizations and human rights defenders abroad.222 CAP presents full recommendations for an LGBTI-affirming foreign policy agenda in its report “Transforming U.S. Foreign Policy To Ensure Dignity and Rights for LGBTI People.”223

Enact agencywide measures to ensure fair treatment of LGBTQ immigrants

DHS should enact SOGI-inclusive nondiscrimination protections that apply to all of the agency’s activities and personnel. The 2014 DOJ profiling guidance should be expanded to include DHS.224 The secretary of homeland security should issue a directive requiring DHS components to fully cooperate with the DHS Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties.225 To prevent discrimination against travelers, DHS should dramatically reform Transportation Security Administration airport passenger screening by requiring completely gender-neutral procedures and technology; minimizing the frequency and extent of pat-downs to the maximum extent possible; and prohibiting techniques or procedures that have the purpose or effect of singling out travelers based on race, religion, gender, or disability. LGBTQ immigrants are at high risk of trafficking, but unfortunately, rather than receive protection, they are frequently criminalized. Under the new administration, DHS should issue guidance prohibiting the use of criminal convictions related to trafficking to disqualify people from immigration benefits.

Restore and expand DACA

More than 66,825 LGBTQ people have received protection under DACA.226 The Biden administration should reinstate DACA, expand its protections, and ensure DACA recipients aren’t barred from federal benefits they need to thrive—including access to affordable health insurance on the exchanges. To ensure LGBTQ immigrants have access to the program, the administration should establish a support network of LGBTQ-affirming and culturally competent service providers to improve outreach to LGBTQ people eligible for DACA and assist with enrollment. Finally, DHS should screen DACA applicants to determine eligibility for forms of immigration relief that could provide a path to citizenship.

Rebuild the U.S. Refugee Resettlement Program and protect LGBTQ refugees

The Trump administration’s attacks on refugee resettlement have been particularly harmful for LGBTQ refugees, who are frequently at heightened risk of violence in camps and cities where they have been forced to remain while they wait for years to be resettled. The United States’ cap on the number of refugees allowed for resettlement in the country should be increased from 15,000 to 125,000 in the first year of the new administration. To ensure LGBTQ refugees have access to these slots, the assistant secretary for the State Department Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM) should request that the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees identify LGBTQ refugees for processing and possible resettlement in the United States. In some instances, LGBTQ people are unable to leave their country to seek protection. The assistant secretary for PRM should issue a directive to embassies for in-country processing of LGBTQ people unable to leave their country and ensure that consulate staff are properly trained on processing LGBTQ claims, credibility determinations, LGBTQ cultural competency, and respectful communication. To further streamline in-country referrals, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services should note whether LGBTQ people likely qualify as refugees in its country condition memos. To ensure that LGBTQ refugees are not subjected to persecution and mistreatment when they enter the United States and are provided the best opportunity to thrive in their new home, the State Department should collect voluntary SOGI information to ensure LGBTQ refugees are resettled by culturally competent providers and in locations with strong protections for LGBTQ people and access to needed services.

Restore and strengthen asylum protections for LGBTQ people

Policies such as the Migrant Protection Protocols, transit ban, asylum cooperative agreements, and rules that have made it essentially impossible to obtain work authorization and asylum must be rescinded. LGBTQ asylum training for the Refugee, Asylum and International Operations Directorate and asylum officers must be reinstated. These trainings should also be expanded to include U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers as well as immigration judges. The attorney general should issue a memo affirming that persecution on the basis of gender identity qualifies as a particular social group for asylum purposes and clarify that persecution from nonstate actors can qualify. DHS and DOJ should collect voluntary data on SOGI from asylum applicants to assess disparities in access to these protections. Since asylum officers are already well-qualified to make asylum determinations, they should be given the authority to make not just credible-fear determinations but also affirmative asylum grants at the border when appropriate. One of the most significant factors affecting a positive immigration case outcome is access to council.227 Under the new administration, the DOJ should recognize a right to counsel in removal proceedings and establish a pilot program providing legal representation to LGBTQ asylum-seekers.

Protect LGBTQ immigrants from abuse in detention

Due to the pandemic, immigration detention is even more unsafe. While DHS has reduced its detained population as a result of a court order to consider for release all immigrants in detention who are at heightened risk of COVID-19-related complications, it has not done nearly enough to deal with the pandemic and continues to detain far more individuals than is appropriate.228 Even prior to the pandemic, LGBTQ people, particularly transgender and nonbinary people, were extremely unsafe in immigration detention. CAP has documented hundreds of instances of medical neglect, abuse, and mistreatment of LGBTQ immigrants in detention, and DHS’ routine failure to follow its own rules has demonstrated that it is incapable of safely housing LGBTQ immigrants and that, when given any amount of discretion over custody decisions, will opt for detention.229 Under the new administration, the secretary of DHS should continue to decrease its detained population and issue a directive that detention resources should not be used to detain vulnerable populations, including LGBTQ people, and establish a presumption of release for these populations. DHS must make a custody determination within 48 hours for immigrants found to have a credible or reasonable fear of return and release those who can reasonably ensure appearance and will not endanger the safety of others on their own recognizance or into community-based alternatives to detention. To ensure LGBTQ asylum-seekers and others subject to mandatory detention are not exposed to violence in detention, the interpretation of “custody” under INA 236 should be expanded to include alternatives to detention.230 DHS should also establish a pilot alternative-to-detention project run by LGBTQ community organizations to ensure that LGBTQ asylum-seekers comply with government-imposed requirements. Community-based alternatives to detention have been found to be effective and far less costly than detention.231 To eliminate the profit motive that has expanded the immigration detention system, the use of for-profit prisons should be eliminated.232 Solitary confinement, which can constitute torture, has no place in civil immigration detention and should be banned. DHS should also prioritize protecting people in its custody from sexual violence and ensuring access to medical care.

Restore immigrant integration efforts

The White House Task Force on New Americans and the Building Welcoming Communities campaign should be reinstated and partner with LGBTQ-serving organizations to ensure that LGBTQ immigrants receive the support they need. The federal government should support cities in providing services that are accessible to LGBTQ immigrants and offered in a culturally competent manner, including health, employment, housing, language access, and education, and it should ensure that existing services are connected with LGBTQ immigrant communities.

Summary of legislative priorities

In addition to adopting the myriad executive actions recommended in this report, it is imperative that the Biden administration work with members of Congress to advance a legislative agenda that meaningfully strengthens the rights and improves the lives of LGBTQ people. While there are many important pieces of legislation to choose from, this report recommends the following legislative priorities that address some of the most urgent challenges facing LGBTQ communities: expanding nondiscrimination protections, balancing religious liberty and civil rights, expanding data collection on SOGI, and protecting LGBTQ people in detention and LGBTQ students.

Equality Act

Discriminatory experiences have significant adverse impacts on the financial, mental, and physical well-being of LGBTQ people, exacerbating existing disparities in economic stability, workforce participation, housing security, educational attainment, and health.233 Original analysis of new, nationally representative data from CAP reveals that more than 1 in 3 LGBTQ Americans faced discrimination of some kind in the past year, including more than 3 in 5 transgender Americans.234

To guarantee equal protection under the law and concrete nondiscrimination safeguards for LGBTQ people, the Biden administration should prioritize working with Congress to pass the Equality Act,235 which explicitly prohibits discrimination on the basis of SOGI in the realms of employment, housing, public spaces, goods and services, credit access, jury services, and federal funding. Additionally, the Biden administration should deploy its executive authority to secure the full enforcement of the Equality Act across all relevant federal agencies and departments.

Do No Harm Act

In 1993, Congress passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA) to ensure the government does not “substantially burden religious exercise without compelling justification,” unless doing so is the least restrictive means of advancing a “compelling governmental interest” such as prohibiting discrimination.236 As exemplified by many of the Trump administration’s executive orders to broaden religious exemptions, since its passage and the Supreme Court decision in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores,237 RFRA has been distorted to permit discrimination against vulnerable and historically marginalized populations.

As such, the new administration should prioritize working with Congress to pass the Do No Harm Act,238 which amends RFRA to prohibit granting exemptions to critical civil rights laws that could cause meaningful harm to third parties.239 Crucially, the legislation upholds religious liberty while legally protecting the civil rights of people disproportionately affected by abusive religious exemptions, including LGBTQ people, people seeking health care, and religious minorities.

LGBTQ Data Inclusion Act

Routine, standardized, and comprehensive data collection and disaggregation are essential to designing and quantifying the impact of evidence-based policies; understanding the conditions and discrimination experienced by LGBTQ people; and enforcing existing legal protections. Unfortunately, there is a dearth of data collection on LGBTQ people in the United States. Currently, only approximately 1 in 6 LGBTQ adults can be identified as LGBTQ from U.S. Census Bureau data,240 and a wide range of government surveys do not collect information on SOGI. The information gathered by these data collection tools shapes major policy decisions and allocations of critical resources241 related to health care, housing, employment, education, and other public benefits, thereby affecting the everyday lives of LGBTQ people and making the need for their inclusion even more urgent.242

The Biden administration should collaborate with Congress to pass the LGBTQ Data Inclusion Act,243 which requires government agencies to collect voluntary, self-disclosed information on SOGI in all existing surveys that collect demographic data, while preserving privacy and confidentiality.244

Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act

LGBTQ people, particularly youth and transgender people, experience alarmingly high rates of violence, sexual abuse, and harassment while in federal detention facilities and are more likely to be and remain detained, regardless of the flight or public safety risks they pose.245

The Trump administration’s cruel, dehumanizing approach to immigration has exacerbated existing weaknesses and failures in the U.S. immigration system, particularly for LGBTQ immigrants in detention. The new administration should prioritize working with Congress to pass the Dignity for Detained Immigrants Act246 to protect the health, safety, and well-being of LGBTQ immigrants in federal detention facilities, many of whom are fleeing life-threatening persecution and violence in their countries of origin. The legislation features many important policies to better protect immigrants, such as a provision establishing a presumption that vulnerable individuals, including LGBTQ people, should be placed in community-based supervision programs rather than detention facilities.

Safe Schools Improvement Act

LGBTQ students face myriad challenges in educational settings, including concerns for their safety; discriminatory school policies; and harassment, bullying, and assault. These experiences of victimization and discrimination are damaging to the physical and mental health of LGBTQ students, foster hostile school climates, and adversely affect students’ academic success, leading to worse educational outcomes.

As such, the Biden administration should work with Congress to pass the Safe Schools Improvement Act.247 This bill would require school districts in states that receive funding under the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 to adopt codes of conduct that prohibit bullying and harassment in K-12 schools on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, disability, and SOGI.248 Importantly, the legislation also requires states to report data on bullying and harassment to the Education Department.

Conclusion

The Biden-Harris campaign promised to stand up for LGBTQ people, asserting that “As President, Biden will stand with the LGBTQ+ community to ensure America finally lives up to the promise on which it was founded: equality for all. He will provide the moral leadership to champion equal rights for all LGBTQ+ people, fight to ensure our laws and institutions protect and enforce their rights, and advance LGBTQ+ equality globally.”249

The past four years have represented a backslide in federal policy advancing LGBTQ rights. The Biden-Harris administration faces the dual task of undoing the previous administration’s attacks on LGBTQ people and initiating proactive policy solutions. These challenges and barriers to equality are diverse, nuanced, and complex, but a presidential administration has the power to engage in these issues seriously and effectively. In the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision on Bostock v. Clayton County, there is much work to be done in implementing nondiscrimination policies throughout the various executive agencies. Nondiscrimination policy alone, however, is insufficient. As this report’s recommendations emphasize, comprehensive efforts to further LGBTQ-inclusive policies must be backed up by substantive and continued funding, effective enforcement, and meaningful engagement with LGBTQ stakeholders to address the assorted crises and disparities faced by these communities. The new administration has an opportunity to work closely with the LGBTQ community on advancing equality, and this report provides a road map for restoring the U.S. government’s leadership in this work.

About the authors

Caroline Medina is a policy analyst for the LGBTQ Research and Communications Project at the Center for American Progress.

Sharita Gruberg is the senior director for the LGBTQ Research and Communications Project at the Center.

Lindsay Mahowald is a research assistant with the LGBTQ Research and Communications Project at the Center.

Theo Santos is the special assistant for the LGBTQ Research and Communications Project at the Center.

Acknowledgements

The authors wish to thank Zoe Willingham, Harper Jean Tobin, Kellan Baker, Laura Durso, Aaron Ridings, Guthrie Graves-Fitzsimmons, Maggie Siddiqi, Karla Walter, Livia Lim, Antoinette Flores, Jamille Fields Allsbrook, Alex Schmitt, Larry Korb, Betsy Pearl, Maggie Jo Buchanan, Maura Calsyn, and Tom Jawetz for their assistance with this report.

Endnotes

Anderson Cooper: ‘Being gay is one of the blessings of my life’ – CNN

0
(CNN) —  

Anderson Cooper was asked by a viewer on Full Circle about how old he was when he accepted that he was gay.

“I think I really, truly accepted it. And not just accepted it, but fully embraced it and came around to really loving the fact that I was gay right after college,” Cooper said.

Cooper shared that he struggled to come to terms with being gay because of limitations he and others faced in the late 80s. Anderson thought about joining the military, but in 1982, the US Army declared homosexuality to be “incompatible with military service.” Anderson wanted to travel, but being gay was illegal in some countries. In the late 80s and early 90s, a couple states allowed same-sex couples to register for domestic partnerships, but weren’t allowed to marry.

“It wasn’t what I envisioned for my life,” he said. “I imagined a family, getting married, and all those things which weren’t possible at the time.”

“I think about a year after college I realized I don’t want to waste any more time worrying about this and wishing I was some other way,” Cooper said. “I think being gay is one of the blessings of my life. And it made me a better person, it made me a better reporter.”

“It’s enabled me to love the people that I’ve loved and have the life that I’ve had,” Cooper said. “So I’m very blessed.”

To watch the full segment, go to cnn.com/fullcircle

Bi surfer is Athlete of the Year; TikTok for your love of sports – Outsports

Good afternoon east coast, and good morning to our readers in other time zones! Welcome to The Huddle for today, Jan. 11, 2021. It’s Monday. We hope you had a relaxing weekend and that you remain safe and secure! It’s admittedly a tense time for a lot of folks, including us, and we invite you to reach out if you need support, for any reason, at outsportshuddle@gmail.com

Your need to read time today is 90-seconds, as usual.


Today’s Outsports Headlines:

Justin Thomas’ apology for anti-gay slur falls short

They met while with the Arkansas Razorbacks. Now they’re engaged to marry


In other LGBT Sports news…

How the WNBA helped turn Georgia blue by ABC News out gay correspondent Steve Osunsami

LGBT Organizations Athlete Ally, GLAAD, PFLAG Join Chorus To Remove Trump

Adam Rippon & His Mom Reflect On His Coming Out Experience

Tyler Wright is SurferToday’s “Athlete of the Year 2020”

Lululemon Maui Pro - Women’s WSL Championship 2019
Out Bisexual Champion surfer Tyler Wright of Australia at Honolulu Bay on December 2, 2019 in Maui, Hawaii.
Photo by Cait Miers/WSL via Getty Images

Also new today…

Nickelodeon’s first NFL playoff game is slime-filled fun

The Ravens’ celebration dance on the Titans’ logo was the perfect petty revenge

The Browns scored a TD on the first play after an 18-year playoff drought

Matchup for the ages: Saints, Drew Brees will host Buccaneers, Tom Brady

The NFL’s 8K camera makes real life look like a video game

N.Y. Ranger quits Twitter to protest Trump’s ban


OutShouts:

The Sports Equality Foundation today launched its own TikTok account for your love of Sports!

The very first video is from out queer athlete Couper Gunn.

If you don’t have TikTok on your phone, you can view content by clicking here.

Outsports is teaming up with the Sports Equality Foundation, GO! SPACE and ECA to empower LGBTQ athletes, coaches, and sports leaders, and together demonstrate that equality in sports transforms everyday culture to be more welcoming and inclusive for all.

Be Authentic, Be True, Be You for Your Love of Sports.

Sports Equality Foundation

Members of the ECA and GOSPACE and all out athletes, coaches and sports folk are invited to contribute their own “I AM” video for the TikTok account. Click here for details!

If you’re an LGBTQ person in sports looking to connect with others in the community, head over to GO! SPACE to meet and interact with other LGBTQ athletes, or to Equality Coaching Alliance to find other coaches, administrators and other non-athletes in sports.


Highlights from Social Media:

Draw some inspiration today from Kyle Stepp who posted this on Instagram with the hashtag #gayathlete:

If you want your social media post to be included here, or to share one showcasing LGBTQ sports, email us the link at outsportshuddle@gmail.com or tag @Outsports on Instagram or Twitter!


Podcast Du Jour

Nearly every day of the week, Outsports has a new podcast for your enjoyment. Today, British sprinter Corinne Humphreys tells our Cyd Zeigler on the Outsports podcast, Five Rings To Rule Them All. that coming out as gay has helped her enjoy her sport more, and she also discusses the importance of empowering LGBTQ youth. Listen here:

This and all Outsports podcasts are available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify and on every platform where you find Outsports!


Today’s Sports Calendar

NBA:

Click here for ESPN’s schedule of men’s pro basketball action today.


NCAAM:

Click here for ESPN’s schedule of men’s college basketball action today.


NCAAW:

Click here for ESPN’s schedule of women’s college basketball action today.


SOCCER:

Click here for ESPN’s schedule of soccer action today.


Share your thoughts in the comments below or email us at outsportshuddle@gmail.com

Thanks for reading all the way to the end. The next edition of The Huddle will appear tomorrow morning on Outsports.com Stay safe!

Oakland County’s Dave Coulter on LGBTQ Representation – Hour Detroit – Hour Detroit Magazine

0
dave coulter
Democrat Dave Coulter’s election as Oakland County executive marks a dramatic shift in the traditionally Republican county’s politics.

There’s no more striking proof that Oakland County has transformed from GOP stronghold to Democratic haven than the 2020 election of former Ferndale Mayor Dave Coulter as county executive. Coulter, 60, is the state’s first openly LGBTQ person to lead a county, having dispatched former state Sen. Mike Kowall by 11 points on Nov. 3.

Coulter was appointed to the post by the Oakland County Commission in August 2019 following the death of L. Brooks Patterson, the longtime GOP boss who made a career of resisting cooperation with Detroit or neighboring counties. The new chief sees the future quite differently, and now he has an electoral mandate to pursue more regional efforts,
as he explains to Hour Detroit.

Hour Detroit: This is an obvious question, but I can’t find your answer anywhere. How did you come out publicly? 

Dave Coulter: You know, there wasn’t a moment or a declaration. The first time it became publicly relevant was when I ran in 2002 for the Oakland County Commission in a district that included Ferndale, Hazel Park, and a little bit of Royal Oak. I decided to run as an open person, as myself. I certainly wouldn’t want someone to think they could use that against me. 

Was there a time when you wondered if you could even run for office because you’re gay?

Wonder about it? I assumed I couldn’t. I’ve been interested in politics and government since high school. But when I realized my sexuality in my 20s, running just wasn’t feasible. There were no role models of openly gay people in office. I decided I would stay involved in politics, help other candidates, but I never imagined a path for myself to elective office back then. 

What changed your mind? 

Moving to Ferndale. I was born and raised in Macomb County, in St. Clair Shores. When I came to Ferndale in 1991, I found a diverse, accepting community. I got to know some of the politically active people. There was still a question of whether an openly gay person could win, even in Ferndale. But that acceptance made me think it was possible. 

You’re the first Democrat elected to your new job. What has changed about Oakland County? 

A lot of people didn’t recognize how the county’s demographics were changing because Brooks was still there and he was larger than life. We have a lot of good-paying jobs here in IT and engineering, so we have a workforce of younger, educated voters who tend to be more progressive. And the foreign-born population has expanded significantly over the last couple of decades. Plus, we used to be a moderate Republican county, and many of those people are turned off by the increasingly conservative bent to their party. Then Trump poured an accelerant on that phenomenon.

“You can still be fired from your job or kicked out of your rental house for being gay in this county. ”

— Dave coulter

The 2020 primary got very ugly, with TV ads from Treasurer Andy Meisner that implied you are corrupt and/or racist. Have you and he spoken since?

Oh, sure. Andy was my state representative for six years while I was county commissioner. We had endorsed each other in various elections over the years. Andy reached out to me after the election; we shared a beer and talked about how we move forward. I was very angry, but I’m in a different place now. Nobody likes a sore winner. 

Patterson was known for opposing regional cooperation. How about you? 

When you live in Ferndale, which borders Detroit, you understand that our issues don’t respect these artificial geographic boundaries. These are our neighbors and our friends. The metro Detroit area is in competition with other regions in the country and the world for talent and jobs. This notion that our competition is Detroit or Wayne or Macomb was really shortsighted to me. 

What will change under your leadership?

I talk with the other leaders in the region often, and that’s intentional. I’ll give you a small example that was very gratifying to me. When COVID-19 hit, [Detroit] Mayor Duggan, because he used to run a health system, understood what this was going to be like and became laser-focused on testing. Mike was out of the gate with the first drive-thru testing
location in the region, but he very intentionally put it at the State Fairgrounds at Eight Mile and Woodward to make it accessible to people in Oakland and Macomb. That was special to me, an indication that we can work on these kinds of problems together. 

Do you feel a special responsibility to LGBTQ people given your position? 

Of course, yes. I want to represent well. And even though we’ve made a tremendous amount of progress, we’re not there yet. You can still be fired from your job or kicked out of your rental house for being gay in this county. So there’s still work to do. 

The surprising age gaps between 8 celebrity LGBTQ couples – INSIDER

  • For some LGBTQ celebrity couples, age is just a number. 
  • Sarah Paulson is nearly 32 years younger than her partner, Holland Taylor.
  • RuPaul and Georges LeBar; Matt Bomer and Simon Halls; and Tom Ford and Richard Buckley all have an age difference of 13 years. 
  • Visit Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Throughout Hollywood, there are celebrity couples with significant age gaps, and the same can be said for famous couples that identify as LGBTQ

Sarah Paulson and Holland Taylor, for example, have over 30 years between them, and other gay celebrity couples have more than a decade age gap. 

Here are eight LGBTQ couples in Hollywood with surprising age differences. 

Biden’s ambitious LGBT agenda poises him to be nation’s most pro-equality president in history – Washington Post

0

Since then, Biden’s views on the LGBTQ community have become clearer and louder.

When he left the vice presidency, Biden partnered with other advocates to start the As You Are campaign to advocate for families’ acceptance of their transgender children, which “dramatically improves their child’s self-esteem and decreases the likelihood they will experience depression or suicidal ideation,” the Biden Foundation was cited as saying in a 2019 announcement.

Now advocates say the 78-year-old will be the nation’s most pro-LGBTQ president ever. He and Vice President-elect Kamala D. Harris have promised an ambitious slate of actions that would go beyond reversing what LGBTQ advocates have called President Trump’s “discrimination administration.”

Transgender rights have become a lightning rod in the relentless culture war that has come to dominate American politics, pitting conservative Christians who want their religious views to be accommodated against liberal and secular Americans who think some of those views trample on minority groups’ rights.

Just weeks before it leaves office, the Trump administration handed out a 400-page document detailing how federal contractors and recipients of government grants can cite their religious views to refuse to provide health coverage for birth control and other reproductive care and adoption services to single people or LGBTQ couples.

Biden has called religious freedom “a fundamental American value,” but also promised to reverse Trump administration policies that are “misusing these broad exemptions.”

“Biden has made it clear that he intends to weaponize the law to crush dissent, in order to implement a far-left agenda,” said Kristen Waggoner, general counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservative legal organization that says it protects religious and moral convictions and freedom of speech. “That impacts not just people of faith, but all Americans who want to live life according to their convictions. The government can’t engage in religious bigotry.”

Alliance Defending Freedom is representing Christian adoption agency New Hope Family Services in an ongoing legal battle with New York state over its policy to only place children in homes with married opposite-sex couples.

“We live in a pluralistic society,” Waggoner said. “The government should not single out and punish those who believe that the best home for a child includes a married father and a mother.”

A judge recently sent the case back to a lower court, ruling that it should be allowed to continue its faith-based approach to adoption as the case proceeds, a move Waggoner cited as a win for religious liberty.

Biden has said he will protect the rights of anyone who qualifies to adopt, regardless of religion or family composition. Biden, who is Catholic, has split from his church’s stance on some issues, saying he values “the dignity of every person.”

During a town hall meeting with voters, Biden surprised even longtime LGBTQ advocates when he addressed the killing of transgender women — largely of color. At least 43 transgender or gender-nonconforming people were killed in the United States in 2020, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Advocates praised Biden for bringing the issue to the national stage and vowing to direct federal resources to prevent and prosecute such homicides.

“There’s an opportunity here for a national discussion on transgender people of color who are often just left out of the national conversation,” said David J. Johns, executive director of the National Black Justice Coalition, a civil rights organization dedicated to the Black LGBTQ community. “Even though the transgender community may have more visibility in TV shows like ‘Pose,’ the vitriol at the policy level that exists within the system leaves no promise of justice.”

Johns said he hopes to see more LGBTQ leaders of color appointed in Biden’s administration.

“That way they can show up and craft policy which will ensure that people of color can raise the alarm about issues of mental health, safety, housing or dealing with police in their communities,” he said.

Biden has promised that his administration will “look like America,” and has said he will provide anti-bias training for federal employees and offer incentives for states that adopt programs that help prepare transgender people for the workplace.

But he could face his most laborious hurdle in passing the Equality Act, a package of measures that protect against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation that was passed by the House in 2019 but blocked by the Republican-led Senate.

That act — which Biden has pledged to make a policy priority during his first 100 days in office — has been a cornerstone of the community’s fight for equal rights in housing and employment since it was first discussed after the Stonewall riots in 1969.

If Republicans retain control of the Senate, the legislation’s passage will remain unpredictable. Some Republicans have instead backed the Fairness for All Act, which provides some LGBTQ protections while also granting certain exceptions for religious institutions and organizations.

Much of the battle over LGBTQ rights has been happening in statehouses, where those issues have been lightning rods in the nation’s culture war. This has kept policy debates about restroom access and puberty blockers largely beyond the reach of the federal government, but the rhetoric coming out of the White House does have influence, said Drew Anderson, a longtime LGBTQ advocate who used to work with GLAAD.

“It always helps to have an LGBTQ ally in the White House who will call it for what it is: hatred for an everyday American,” Anderson said.

Biden has credited his passion for LGBTQ issues to his late son Beau Biden’s close friendship with Sarah McBride, who is transgender.

McBride worked on Beau Biden’s reelection campaign for attorney general in Delaware, where they later collaborated to pass protections for transgender people in housing, health insurance and employment.

The Biden family developed a close relationship with McBride after Beau Biden died of brain cancer in 2015. McBride’s husband, Andy Cray, had died of cancer the year before.

“The president-elect has always been far out ahead on transgender issues. And I think all of us benefit from knowing people who are trans and organic agents of change in daily life,” said McBride, who was elected in Delaware in November as the first openly transgender state senator in the country. “But I know Joe Biden also wants to honor and carry forward his son’s work and legacy on this issue.”

In it, he calls transgender equality “the civil rights issue of our time.”

Puerto Vallarta Nominated for 2020 Gay Travel Awards – The Yucatan Times – The Yucatan Times

0

Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, Mexico – The warmth Puerto Vallarta offers its visitors has once again been recognized internationally. On this occasion, Puerto Vallarta has been nominated as the world’s best Beach Destinations in the 2020 edition of GayTravel.com’s 2020 Gay Travel Awards.

Puerto Vallarta shares the nomination with Cancun and Los Cabos in Mexico, in addition to Aruba; Bali, Indonesia and Phuket, Thailand.

Likewise, the Westin Resort and Spa Puerto Vallarta hotel stands out among the nominees in the Beach Hotels category.

Now in its fifth year, the Gay Travel Awards’ mission is to recognize and promote gay-friendly travel-related destinations and companies.

These leading organizations and destinations – among them Puerto Vallarta and Westin Resort and Spa Puerto Vallarta hotel – inspire many other companies and brands to follow their spirit of inclusivity, constant innovation to improve their amenities, responsibly maintain health protocols and offer excellent services.

For years, Puerto Vallarta has been celebrated as the premiere vacation destination for the LGBT community in Mexico. And, in 2017, Puerto Vallarta received the honor of becoming the first city in Mexico to be granted Gay Travel Approved status by GayTravel.com.

‘Gay Travel Approved’ is GayTravel.com’s seal of excellence bestowed upon select travel partners around the world that have shown themselves to be deserving of recognition and praise by the LGBTQ+ community.

And Puerto Vallarta fits the bill with its wide variety of activities and amenities for LGBTQ+ travelers, along with iconic annual events such as “Vallarta Pride” in May, the “White Party” on New Year’s Eve, and the “Beef Dip” party in January, among others.

“Responsibly, events like these that attract a lot of people have been postponed this year, but the hospitality, the fun, the beaches and their clubs, the hotels, restaurants, bars and nightclubs are ready to receive the members of the LGBTQ + community at any time, with all the corresponding health measures,” shared Luis Villaseñor, interim director of the Puerto Vallarta Tourism Promotion and Publicity Trust.

“The LGBTQ+ community is very important to Puerto Vallarta,” he added, “it is a faithful tourism segment that appreciates the hospitality of a gay friendly destination. And, because gay travelers strongly support local tourist service providers, they are a highly appreciated tourist group with which PV has had a long, affective, and inclusive relationship.”

MOTIVATING TRAVEL

GayTravel Chief Visionary Officer Steve Rohrlick said: “This year has been like no other. With the pandemic raging across the globe, many travelers are restricted from traveling or are waiting for a safer time to venture out. With that said, those safer times are just around the corner. The Gay Travel Awards give us all a moment to focus on the industry’s best as a prologue to us all getting back out there.”

Considered by many to be the San Francisco of Mexico, gay tourists from all over the world travel each year to beautiful Puerto Vallarta, an easily accessible, accepting, and a very affordable gay beach destination.

There are hotels, bars, nightclubs, beaches, and even drinks specifically for LGBTQ+ travelers, and due to the safety and welcoming environment for these guests, Puerto Vallarta has consistently been awarded by different media and portals, the most recent in 2019 as the second best LGBTQ + beach destination in the world by Newsweek.

Gay traveler recommendations have positioned this beach destination among the best LGBTQ+ vacation options in the world.

Source: Banderas News

Comments

comments

Gay Couple In Fun And Flirty Ad For Cadbury – Star Observer

With Christmas feeling like it was just yesterday but somehow also years ago, you’ll be pleased, or sickened, to hear that the annual chocolate eating festival known as Easter Sunday is only 84 sleeps away! And the good folks at Cadbury in the United Kingdom have released a splashy and LGBTQI inclusive ad celebrating their seasonal star’s 50th birthday!

The Cadbury Creme egg that will not only give you a hankering for some ooey gooey gay goodness but will also get you thinking about new ways to share your Creme egg with the special someone in your life!

The ad goes through all the questionable ways in which one consumes their Creme eggs (I personally went through a dark time of sucking the Creme out of the smallest hole possible in either end, ala the egg blowing technique in reverse and then shoving the egg in my gob whole – OMG, the texture when the pressure gets too much and the hollow egg caves in your mouth, HOOO HA!)

Uh umm – sorry yes well, where was I!?

Advertisement

 Oh yes, the questionable ways to consume Cadbury Creme eggs – the amusing ad goes through a few imaginative ways to do it before getting to the good stuff and showing what we all came here to see – an apparently real life gay couple, Callum Sterling and Dale K Moran quasi make out on screen with the enthusiastic narration: “We are down with that!”

Oh yes we are!

British folks really love their creme eggs

The Brits might possibly overtake the Aussies when it comes to Cadbury Creme Egg mania, just judging by the hilarious difference of the marketing budget when you compare this ad to Cadbury Australia’s Creme egg website effort, non existent page here.

Hopefully that statement doesn’t ruffle Australian Cadbury Creme Egg fans’ feathers but really, when you have a quick look at the UK Cadbury website search results for the Creme egg and witness some of the truly disturbing recipe ideas (Creme Egg Toasted Sammich anyone?), you’d probably have to agree!

While we may not get a chance to see the ad on television in Australia, the wonders of the internet allows you to enjoy the spectacle none the less and you can check it out here.

LGBTQI representation growing, slowly

The ad marks a SLOWLY growing trend of representation of the LGBTQI community in advertising with spots from global brands featuring gay and lesbian themes getting more common by the… decade (insert eye roll emoji here). Renault featured a lesbian couple in an ad for their car the Clio in 2019 and Doritos in Mexico released an ad at Christmas time last year featuring a touching true story about a divorced man struggling to work out a way to tell his son and his boyfriend that he understands and accepts who they are – for the Spanish sob fest with English subtitles, click here.

Trump Admin. Just Quietly Revoked LGBT Health Protections – Instinct Magazine

0
Trump holding Bible in front of St. John’s Church in Washington D.C. on June 1 (Photo Credit: Screenshot of video from NBC News YouTube Channel)

Even in the aftermath of riots in the Capitol building, a coup attempt, the loss of several Republican Congress members’ approval, and the resignation of many White House staffers, the Trump Administration continues to push for religious freedom policies.

According to the Washington Blade, the Trump Administration has removed anti-discrimination policies placed by the Obama Administration. Specifically, regulations within the Department of Health & Human Services that prohibited religious-charged discrimination have been revoked. Instead, they have been replaced with a new rule that supports religious freedom in government-funded programs. This now means that a taxpayer-funded program like adoption or fostering services can refuse LGBTQ people looking to house children in need. Or, LGBTQ youth in need of support could be turned away. Religious minority groups or women looking for abortions or other services are also at risk.

“Given the careful balancing of rights, obligations, and goals in the public-private partnerships in federal grant programs, the department believes it appropriate to impose only those nondiscrimination requirements required by the Constitution and federal statutes applicable to the department’s grantees,” the new federal rule says.

Photo by August de Richelieu from Pexels

Many advocates and human rights organizations have come out to oppose this 11th-hour policy change from the Trump administration.

“In the coming weeks, Congress should swiftly reject this regressive rule,” said the Human Rights Watch in an official statement. “The Congressional Review Act allows Congress to disapprove of a recently enacted regulation and, with the president’s signature, prevent it from taking effect. With an upcoming presidential transition, the US government should take this opportunity to make clear again that the programs it funds are open to all qualified people, regardless of their sexual orientation or gender identity.” 

“The federal government should protect our country’s most vulnerable people instead of issuing rules that license discrimination,” said Rachel Laser, the CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church & State, to the Washington Post. “People should never be turned away from the services they need. That is especially true for children in foster care and the families who want to provide them with loving, safe homes. Rather than prioritizing the best interests of children and families, the Trump administration’s new rule invites taxpayer-funded foster care agencies to discriminate against them.”

Donald Trump the 2018 Conservative Political Action Conference / Image via Gage Skidmore and Wikimedia Commons

“At the 11th hour, the lame duck Trump-Pence administration has published its parting assault on the LGBTQ community via a federal regulation that would permit discrimination across the entire spectrum of HHS programs receiving federal funding,” reported Human Rights Campaign President Alphonso David before urging, “The Biden-Harris administration and Secretary Designate Xavier Becerra must urgently work to rescind this discriminatory regulation.”

With less than two weeks left of the Trump Administration, it’s true that there isn’t much time before the next administration can change this new ruling. But, the timing of this change does not go without notice. Not only was it done in the midst of the administration’s collapse due to a failed coup attempt in the shape of a violent riot, which led to deaths and injuries, but it came with such little time left in Trump’s “reign.” Even with its light flickering out, the administration pulls a low blow against minority groups in America. And possibly, the act itself is a small but significant example of the administration’s legacy.


Source: The Washington Blade, Human Rights Watch, Human Rights Campaign,

#GaysOverCovid: Maskless parties lead to rift within LGBTQ community – NBC News

0

Long before the final countdown to the new year, the party was raging in the Mexican resort city of Puerto Vallarta.

“Ring in the New Year at White Party Puerto Vallarta: UNITY where restaurants, gyms, bars and clubs are open and ready to welcome you to the ultimate New Years weekend getaway!!!” read the online invitation for American party promoter Jeffrey Sanker’s annual New Year’s Eve circuit party, a large all-night dance event for gay men.

Local officials were putting pressure on Sanker as the party neared, according to the Los Angeles Blade. Puerto Vallarta hospitals were at or near 100 percent capacity, and the state of Jalisco, where the resort town is located, was being throttled by Covid-19, with a reported 65 percent positivity rate, according to local news reports.

People visit a beach in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, on June 16, 2020.Cesar Rodriguez / Bloomberg via Getty Images file

Instead of canceling, Sanker moved the event to nearby Nuevo Vallarta, just 10 miles north, but in a different state with more relaxed Covid-19 regulations, according to NBC affiliate KMIR of Palm Springs, California, where Sanker began his White Parties nearly 30 years ago.

Ticket holders got messages from Sanker’s company, White Party Entertainment, asking them not to post about the party on social media to avoid “causing any issues with the public,” according to KMIR and photos shared on social media.

It’s no surprise that Sanker — who didn’t respond to multiple requests for comment over a period of five days — wanted to keep the event out of the public eye. Americans vacationing and gathering during the pandemic against the advice of public health officials have been the target of fierce criticism and public shaming on social media.

In an email sent to NBC News on Friday, Jack Ketsoyan, a publicist for Sanker, refused to answer any questions.

A cadre of Instagram accounts run by LGBTQ people have recently begun targeting fellow members of the queer community, particularly gay men, accusing them of publicly violating public health directives. Among the most popular is @GaysOverCovid, which as of Friday had over 120,000 followers. Since the summer, the anonymous account has been reposting travel photos that gay men have uploaded to their social media accounts. The account shares the men’s social media handles — often the same as their full names — and places of work. @GaysOverCovid did not respond to direct messages requesting comment.

Instagram accounts hawking gossip, sometimes called “tea accounts,” aren’t new. Some call out the behavior of social media influencers; others track the latest news about celebrities and YouTube personalities. But the influx of accounts policing behavior around Covid-19 has been an innovation of the pandemic and the social constructs it has created. And accounts like @GaysOverCovid are at the center of a debate over whether shaming those who allegedly violate pandemic guidelines — or show poor judgment that puts public health at risk — does a public service or creates an irreversible toxic division within the LGBTQ community.

“To continue to see front line workers in Puerto Vallarta amidst a global pandemic is an absolute outrage! Where is their moral compass or any sense of ethics?” read the caption from a recent post on @thegayrona Instagram account.

The post showed contrasting screenshots from another Instagram account: the first of a muscular young man taking a selfie wearing medical scrubs in a Chicago hospital, the next of the same man posing in a pool next to a sea lion in a photo geotagged to Puerto Vallarta.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, asking to be identified only as a “gay male working in tech,” @thegayrona’s creator said he was frustrated to see fellow gay men posting photos of seemingly carefully planned vacations during a devastating new wave of Covid-19 deaths in the U.S.

“I’m sure everyone at some point in the last nine months has broken the rule and said, ‘I’m going to see this one friend that I trust,’ but this is someone that decided to buy a plane ticket and book a hotel, figure out transportation and figure out parties,” he said.

Many of the travelers were doctors and nurses who followed a pattern of posting shots of themselves on the front lines of the pandemic and receiving the first dose of a Covid-19 vaccination, followed by photos taken poolside over the New Year’s holiday, the account’s creator said.

“You see a nurse or a doctor post a photo on their page getting the shot administered to them, and then they view that as a one-way ticket to a circuit party,” he said. “It’s such a dangerous tone to set for the community.”

The creator of another account, @theyshouldknowbetter, said that it doesn’t single out gay people, but has posted about many LGBTQ health care workers to encourage quarantining after possible exposure to the virus.

It recently shared photos of a man posing in the offices of Dr. David Rosenberg, a plastic surgeon in Beverly Hills, California, where the description alleged the man worked, followed by Instagram posts from the same man’s subsequent trip to Puerto Vallarta.

Rosenberg said Thursday that when he learned about the social media posts, he spoke to the employee, a clerical worker not involved in patient care, and required him to quarantine upon his return to Los Angeles and to test negative before he goes back to work.

“We are committed to protecting the patients who come to see us, and that is why our employee is required to quarantine,” Rosenberg said.

One traveler, Ron, said he and his friends felt as though they had been targets of “a witch hunt with strong intentions of really hurting someone” after their Facebook photos of a New Year’s holiday trip to Puerto Vallarta were reposted by the @BostonGaysOverCovid Instagram account.

Ron, a Boston-based health care worker, said the trip was planned to celebrate his husband’s 40th birthday, and he stressed that they didn’t attend the circuit party. He didn’t want his surname published for fear of further online harassment.

“We have spent our time here being ultra safe — staying at our rental, socially distancing on a beach with my pod, wearing masks except for our pictures,” he said by email.

“None of us participated in those party activities,” he added, saying he and his husband traveled with four other people. “We wore masks. We tested multiple times before arriving and plan to have tests afterwards. We were labeled in error just for traveling.”

Some members of the LGBTQ community have started a campaign to unmask the creators of the #GaysOverCovid accounts.

In a public plea on a circuit party page on Facebook, Lan Vu, 37, of San Francisco, offered a $500 reward to help identify the posters behind the accounts. Calling the accounts “toxic,” he has encouraged members of the community to report them to Instagram as harassment and cyberbullying, he said in a telephone interview.

Vu contracted Covid-19 in March after he traveled to a party in Miami, and he said he tested positive for antibodies in May and September.

“For gay people, clubbing and bars … it’s a sanctuary where we can be free and forget about reality for a little bit,” he said. “It’s been so long, and a lot of people are starting to want their normal lives back.”

A better use of the accounts’ huge reaches would be to simply encourage people to quarantine when they return home, Vu said.

While there are no known prominent examples of tough consequences for those who faced social media scrutiny from the #GaysOverCovid movement, there are examples elsewhere.

George Santos, a gay former candidate for New York’s 3rd Congressional District seat, said his fiancé was fired as a pharmacist after a New York Times article shared Santos’ Instagram post from a New Year’s Eve party the two attended.

“My fiancé & I had to leave our home this evening with our 4 dogs thanks to the @nytimes publishing of my Instagram showing me attending the #MarALago New Year’s Eve party,” Santos wrote. “My fiancé a pharmacist who worked 12h/7days shifts for 9 months was fired! The violence against us is real.”

He received little public sympathy.

“You’re a guy running for Congress, and you’re upset that the paper that covers your district is … covering your campaign-oriented Instagram account?” shot back Chris Geidner, BuzzFeed’s former legal editor.

@TruthWinsOut, a gay advocacy group, tweeted: “A pharmacist who attends a maskless party should be fired. He set a horrible example and was derelict in his duty as a medical professional.”

On the fringes of the debate are other themes: how behavior of partiers during a pandemic could brand the broader gay community as selfish, setting back progress for acceptance. While there are many heterosexual people who have ignored public health guidance, none of them have required other straight people to set themselves apart from those not following the rules.

“This is definitely a moment where we can be critical of gay culture,” said Chris Conner, a visiting professor of sociology at the University of Missouri who studies gay movements and is gay himself.

Conner said the New Year’s parties underscore another divide in gay culture — one between those with privilege and those without, a divide that often intersects with racial lines, as well.

“They have the disposable incomes to get on the plane and go to a party,” he said. “They’re probably used to being able to get whatever they want, at any time, and that includes health care.”

Zack Ford, a former editor of LGBTQ news at the defunct news site ThinkProgress, said many of the men being publicly criticized see themselves as victims, rather than recognize the role they potentially play in spreading the virus.

“Covid has really tested American notions of freedom, and I think there are a lot of people who for one reason or another don’t appreciate the impact their actions have on other people’s safety,” he said.

Despite the debate over the behaviors of the men who haven’t abided by Covid-19 guidelines, Ford said that the rift in the community is small and that it’s limited to a subset of people.

“There’s not a gay civil war, there’s not a huge fracture, but this is one little moment of ‘Hey, people did the wrong thing, and they got called out for it, and that doesn’t make them victims,'” Ford said.

Follow NBC Out on Twitter, Facebook & Instagram

This Low-Impact, High-Intensity Workout Burns Major Calories and Requires No Equipment – POPSUGAR

0

Two things we love: low-impact workouts and high-intensity interval training (HIIT), and yes, before you ask, you can get both at once. For proof, look no further than this 30-minute HIIT workout, which was designed by ACE-certified personal trainer Jennifer Nagel, CEO of Figured Out Fitness, to burn calories and work your whole body.

“Low impact does not mean low intensity,” Nagel told POPSUGAR. To get the most intensity (and effectiveness) out of each exercise, she explained, make your movements bigger and “add a little punch” to each one. “Bring as much energy as you would for any other HIIT workout,” and you’ll burn more calories and get the most out of the workout. HIIT workouts are an especially good choice for incinerating calories, she added, because they can trigger the EPOC (excess post oxygen consumption) effect, which occurs when your body continues expending a modest amount of calories after an intense workout. Burning calories through exercise, along with a healthy diet, can help you get into the moderate calorie deficit (burning more calories than you consume) that’s necessary for weight loss, if that’s your goal.

So if you’re here to give your joints a break, keep your workout on the quiet side (your neighbors will love you), or just work your body in an efficient and effective way, lace up your shoes and keep reading for a 30-minute low-impact routine you’ll love.

30-Minute Low-Impact Bodyweight HIIT Workout

Directions: Start with three minutes of light cardio, such as marching in place or step swings (shown ahead) and these dynamic warmup exercises. Then, start the HIIT circuit. Perform the first exercise for 30 seconds, completing as many reps as you can with proper form. Rest for 30 seconds by marching in place (this is your active recovery period). Repeat for all five exercises, then rest for one minute. Repeat the circuit for five rounds.

After the fifth round, cool down for one minute by walking in place, then complete this stretch session, holding each stretch for 10 to 20 seconds.

For more of a challenge, Nagel said you can do each exercise in the circuit for 45 seconds, followed by 15 seconds of active recovery.

Warmup
Step swing
Standing march


Exercise Time
Alternating reverse lunge 30 seconds
Lateral walk with arm raise 30 seconds
Straight-arm modified jack 30 seconds
Alternating kneel to squat 30 seconds
Step out to squat 30 seconds