The North Carolina General Assembly sent a bill to Gov. Pat McCrory Wednesday that bars local governments from passing nondiscrimination ordinances and prevents people to use bathrooms based on the gender with which they personally identify.
After three hours of debate, the Senate voted 32-0 in favor of the bill. Eleven of the Democrats present left in protest because they said they were excluded from writing or amending the bill.
The next step for the bill was McCrory’s office, and as of press of time, his office did not make a comment of whether or not he would pass it.
The bill was prompted by Charlotte’s nondiscrimination ordinance that included the bathroom provision, which McCrory opposed. The bill is named House Bill 2 and would strike down Charlotte’s ordinance because it prohibits local governments from enacting their own legislation to ban discrimination.
Instead, the bill would create a statewide law that would ban discrimination on the basis of “race, religion, color, national origin or biological sex” at businesses and other “places of public accommodation.” However, the law would not prevent citizens from discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.
Roy Cooper, the Democratic nominee for governor, posted a video and said the legislature is “putting discrimination into law.”
If McCrory signs the bill, 17 cities and towns had their nondiscrimination ordinances revoked, according to Equality NC.
Bans for school districts
Students would not be allowed to use communal bathrooms and locker rooms that do not match their biological sex. Transgender students would be allowed to use single-occupancy restrooms.
These measures would only be enacted in public schools and facilities and would not affect the practices of private businesses.
Employees contracted to do government work could also be discriminated against on the grounds of sexual orientation and gender identity.
Are federal funds threatened?
Democrats expressed concerns that North Carolina could lose $4 billion in federal education funding for violating Title IX nondiscrimination requirements. Republicans responded by saying separate facilities are permitted by law, but if the state is found to be violating Title IX, it would have plenty of time to comply to avoid losing the money.
Democrats were upset that the Republican majority rushed a bill to the floor, and it was only being seen for the first time that day.
Republicans added biological sex to the list of nondiscrimination factors, which includes race and religion. Biological sex means the sex listed on someone’s birth certificate, according to the bill.
Democrats sought to add sexual orientation and gender identity to the protected categories, but Republicans rejected the amendments. Republicans argued that the state law allows for transgender people to change the sex listed on their birth certificates after gender reassignment surgery.