Posted on 01/27/2010 8:50:15 AM PST by OneVike
I searched but did not see this ever posted, so here it is.
The Bangor Daily News reported back on July of 2009, about the ruling by the Maine Human Rights Commission that the Orono School Department discriminated against a transgender child by denying her access to the girls bathroom.
While the school departments lawyer warned that schools around the state may not be ready to manage the practical fallout from the decision, civil liberties advocates hailed the ruling as an advancement of human rights.
This ruling is a huge step forward for a vulnerable population that is entitled to the full protection of the law, said Zachary Heiden, legal director of the Maine Civil Liberties Union. There will always be voices who claim were not ready, were not there yet, the time to end discrimination is next year, or next session. But victims of discrimination should not have to wait.
The attorney for the child and her parents said his clients are very happy with the outcome of their complaint.
At the very heart of it is the issue of basic human dignity and fundamental civil liberties, said Eric Mehnert. It was a good decision.
But Melissa Hewey, attorney for the Orono School Department, said the ruling was a huge leap.
Im not sure that it takes into account practicalities that face educators around the state, she said. You can understand [the ruling] intellectually. You can agree with it intellectually. But practice is sometimes different and I think thats what may have escaped some people in this case.
The discrimination in question first occurred in October 2007 when the child was in the fifth grade at Asa Adams School. Until then, she was allowed to use the girls bathroom, although she was biologically male. But that fall, the transgender child was followed into the girls room by a male student who had previously started to harass her by stalking her and calling her faggot, according to the Maine Human Rights Commission investigators report.
After the second such episode, the boy was suspended and removed from the transgender childs class. At that point, school officials told the transgender child that she had to use a single-stall faculty bathroom at the other end of the school, and that was when her parents decided to take the matter to the Maine Human Rights Commission.
Paul Melanson, grandfather of the boy accused of harassing the transgender student, also filed a complaint with the Maine Human Rights Commission, saying that not allowing his grandson to use the girls bathroom or the faculty bathroom as the other child did was a violation of his grandsons right to public accommodation under the Maine Human Rights Act. Melanson had given his grandson permission to use the girls bathroom as long as the transgender student was doing so, according to the report.
Enough is enough, an irate Melanson said Monday of the commissions ruling.
It ticks me right off that youre letting a kid run the whole system, he said.
Melanson is now trying to inspire Maine moms to protest the decision, which he thinks is wrong and unfair to both boys and girls.
Little boys do not belong in the little girls room, and vice versa, he said. This isnt just about my kid. A lot of children have come up to me and said that this isnt right.
On Monday, the commission found that Asa Adams School did not unlawfully discriminate against Melansons grandson because of his sexual orientation, which is a heterosexual male.
Minor Student 2 was disciplined because his biological sex is male and his gender identity is male and he used the girls bathroom, the investigators report said.
Hewey said the commission made the right decision in this case.
You can hope that most people wont use their children as pawns to make political statements, she said.
Patricia Ryan, executive director of the Maine Human Rights Commission, said this decision is among the first to involve schools, sexual orientation provision, gender identity and the issues of bathroom use. She said schools in Maine likely will want to take a look at it.
It was the commissions second ruling in two months on transgender people and public restroom use. On May 18, the commission found that a transgender woman was discriminated against at a Dennys restaurant in Auburn when management would not let her use the ladies room until she had sex reassignment surgery.
Every time you get new jurisdiction, the first decisions that are made are always new, Ryan said. Theyre always in areas in which the courts have not had the opportunities to develop case law.
According to Mehnert, his clients wanted to bring the case in part because the parents previously wonderful relationship with school officials over their childs public accommodation had broken down.
The message that was sent from the superintendent said that it is OK to segregate this child, it is OK to ostracize this child, Mehnert said. I think [the parents] biggest challenge is their fear its a very real fear that the Orono school system has told them that they dont think they can protect the child.
Because the child started identifying as a girl at a very young age, the parents had worked with school officials to have a plan for reasonable accommodation, Mehnert said. But when the fifth-grade incidents happened, the school moved to resolve the situation with no interactive conversation, he said.
Hewey said school officials had the childs interests in mind.
Not only did they provide accommodation, a separate bathroom, that was the bathroom that the students health care practitioner recommended, she said.
Mehnert said his clients had hoped to look at the fifth-grade incidents as an opportunity for education rather than a problem.
They felt that the school could be a leader in what everyone sees as a very complex issue, and they were rebuffed, he said.
The Maine Human Rights Commission is the state agency charged with the responsibility of enforcing Maines anti-discrimination laws. It attempts to resolve complaints of discrimination to the mutual satisfaction of those who are involved, according to its Web site.
his, hers, and *social* science projects.
Thanks, I’ll get it pinged in a bit.
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Complete, freaking insanity. Every child in that school should be RIPPED out by their parents. The parents are complicit by not speaking - shouting - out about this. Except for the one mentioned, did I miss others? The other children are being mentally and spiritually tortured by the school administration that is kowtowing to the tiny minority of sickos who are using that one poor kid as a political pawn. The kid needs psychological help and parents who are not promoting perversion.
....can’t wait until a family of nudists challenges a school’s dress code.......
As long as we women could use it.I wish someone would invent one so we ladies would not have to get near a filthy toilet seat. I’m dead serious.This is the only reason I envy men.
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