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    January 31

    A Note from the Chair of MTPC: Commit to do Something!

    Note from the Chair of MTPC:
    Commit to do Something!

    In order for "An Act Relative to Gender-Based Discrimination and Hate Crimes" to become law in Massachusetts, more people need to commit to doing something - anything - to help get this law passed.  The same people who opposed gay marriage are - surprise! - opposing us. 

    The best thing you can do?  Talk about it, with your friends, family, and, most important of all, your legislators. Help us generate ripples of interest and support, by letting those around you know how important this is to you.  If you can't talk about it with everyone, don't worry.  The two people you can speak to are your State Representative and Senator.  They and their office staff will treat you with courtesy and respect - that's their job.  Be sure to let your elected officials know how strongly you support this legislation.  

    Another good thing is giving time or money to MTPC.  No campaign for legislation ever has enough of either one.  Donate now, at www.MassTPC.org.

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    Commit yourself to doing something.  And do it sooner, rather than later.  

    Those who want to do more, awesome.  Look around MassTPC.org, you'll find something that needs your help.  Email info@masstpc.org with what you want to do.  

    Meanwhile, here's something you can do today: check the list of current co-sponsors (see below), and if your Rep or Senator is not shown, call and ask them to support this bill.  There's a week left for them to do so (deadline Feb 4).  If they agree to sign on as a co-sponsor, be sure to thank them for standing up for fairness, equality, and civil rights.

    Later we can share the satisfaction of having helped shape a future more friendly to freedom of gender identity and expression. 

    Sincerely,

    Nancy Nangeroni

    Steering Committee Chair

    January 26

    Brandeis to sell school's art collection

    A financial crisis is forcing Brandeis University to close the school's 48-year-old Rose Art Museum in September and to sell off a prized collection of contemporary American art, the university announced today.
    To read more, visit http://www.boston.com

    January 23

    Obama Outlines His Gay Agenda On WhiteHouse.gov

    Obama Outlines His Gay Agenda On WhiteHouse.gov

    Barack Obama 84375376 Talk about efficiency. WhiteHouse.gov, the official site of the President, was updated to reflect the changeover from President George Bush to President Barack Obama within a few minutes of Obama's inauguration. Has anyone visited the site yet, and if so, have you seen The Agenda page? I have to say that I am impressed—it lays out Obama's civil rights agenda, which includes broad support for the LGBT community.

    January 21

    Scientists Develop World's Fastest Graphene Transistor

    IBM Scientists from the company´s T. J. Waston Research Center have demonstrated the operation of a graphene field-effect transistors at GHz frequencies. Graphene is a special form of graphite, consisting of a single layer of carbon atoms packed in honeycomb lattice, similar to an atomic scale chicken wire. With a top gate deisgn and a gate length 150 nm, the team has achieved a cut-off frequency of 26 GHz for graphene transistors; the highest frequencies reported so far using this novel non-silicon electronic material. Image: IBM

    (PhysOrg.com) -- IBM Researchers today announced that they demonstrated the operation of graphene field-effect transistors at GHz frequencies, and achieved the highest frequencies reported so far using this novel non-silicon electronic material.

    Get the rest of the story here

    -Dana

    January 18

    Congratulations Ethan!!

    Please join me in congratulating Ethan St. Pierre of TransFM.org for his recent recognition for being an outstanding contributing member of the transgender community.  Ethan was awarded "The Man of Year" at last week's First Event.  First Event is one of the largest transgender conferences in the world and it is held right here in Boston.

    Congratulations Ethan and thanks for all the wonderful work you do for our community.

    Sincerely,

    Dana Zircher

    Software and Sex Changes

    January 16

    Retail Employer Can Fire Transgender Employee for Violating "Dress Code"

    Retail Employer Can Fire Transgender Employee for Violating "Dress Code"
    Chief Judge Robert L. Miller of the U.S. District Court for the
    Northern District of Indiana ruled on January 5 that an employer who
    discharged a gender-transitioning (male-to-female) retail sales
    employee for letting her hair grow longer than the employer deemed
    appropriate for men and using make-up, had not violated the ban on sex
    discrimination under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and a
    similar Indiana state law, because the employer was merely enforcing a
    non-discriminatory dress code. Creed v. Family Express Corporation,
    2009 Westlaw 35237.
    Presenting herself as Christopher Creed, the plaintiff was hired as a
    sales associate and began work in February 2005. She had already begun
    to research transitioning prior to being hired, and after successfully
    starting on her new job, began wearing clear nail polish, trimming her
    eyebrows, and sometimes wearing mascara. In the fall of 2005, Creed
    started "growing her hair out and wearing it in a more feminine
    style," and started to use the name "Amber." Local management and
    co-workers in the store were supportive of her gender transition,
    according to Creed, who also stated that no customers complained to
    her and the store management never told her that they had received any
    complaints. She received positive job evaluations, and was designated
    "greeter of the month" three times.
    Family Express had a formal dress and grooming policy, which Creed
    claims she was first shown in December 2005, a few weeks before she
    was discharged. She dressed in conformance with the policy, but her
    personal appearance was not in conformance with the specification for
    men due to her hair length and make-up. Creed claims the store manager
    never complained to her about her appearance. On the other hand,
    Family Express claimed that numerous customer complaints were made to
    the store manager, who relayed them to the corporate Human Resources
    Department, and the Director of Operations also testified about
    customer complaints. However, no written documentation was offered in
    support of the employer's motion for summary judgment, merely
    affidavits.
    A district store manager and the director of operations came to the
    store on December 14 and called Creed into a meeting. What was said in
    the meeting is disputed. Creed claims she was told she could not
    present herself in a feminine manner at work, and was asked whether it
    would "kill her" to appear masculine for eight hours a day while at
    work. When Creed, who had altered her appearance as part of the
    necessary "life-experience" preparatory to taking the medical steps
    involved in gender transition, refused to cut her hair and abandon her
    current appearance, she was discharged. She filed suit under Title
    VII, claiming sex discrimination.
    Judge Miller's opinion uses respectful language and appears at times
    sympathetic to Creed's situation, but ultimately he concludes that
    case law supporting the right of employers to have dress codes and
    apply them uniformly takes priority over the employee's right to
    express her gender identity. Miller acknowledges the case law on sex
    stereotyping, but concludes – rather bizarrely, in my view – that it
    really doesn't apply, claiming that the employer was not acting based
    on stereotypes about how men or women should present themselves, but
    was merely requiring all employees to comply with a non-discriminatory
    dress code.
    Under the case law on dress codes, employers are allowed to prescribe
    employee appearance, so long as their dress and grooming code is
    "non-discriminatory." This means, according to the courts, that
    employers can impose different requirements on men and women as to
    things such as hair length and dress, so long as neither sex incurs a
    greater burden than the other. This rule may seem equitable in terms
    of employees whose physical sex and gender identity coincide, but it
    is a recipe for disaster for an employee who is transitioning on the
    job.
    Miller stated that the court had treat Creed as a man for purposes of
    analyzing her discrimination claim, and held, in effect, that an
    employer who is uncomfortable with a transitioning employee may adopt
    a dress code for which the transitioning employee's appearance is
    non-conforming, and then discharge the employee for failing to conform
    to the dress code. This seems totally inconsistent with the developing
    case law on sexual stereotyping and gender non-conformity, which holds
    that discharging an employee for failing to conform to the employer's
    gender stereotypes may violate Title VII.
    Part of the problem here, of course, is that Indiana is in the 7th
    Circuit, which is the home of some of the worst decisions on this
    subject. In the neighboring 6th Circuit, two appellate decisions have
    now upheld Title VII actions for transgendered employees who were
    fired when their employer learned they would be transitioning.
    Reading Miller's decision is quite frustrating. Equating this case to
    Jespersen, where the 9th Circuit upheld the dismissal of a woman who
    refused to comply with the employer's requirement to wear make-up,
    seems logically wrong to me. Although I disagree with the Jespersen
    holding, even accepting it as it stands, one would have to distinguish
    between a woman whose gender identity is female but who prefers not to
    wear make-up, and a man whose gender identity is female and who
    prefers to wear make-up, in terms of deciding whether the employer's
    insistence on a particular appearance is really the application of a
    non-discriminatory dress code.
    In any event, this case against points up, if further evidence were
    needed, the failure of Title VII's sex discrimination provision to
    provide appropriate protection for the individual employee's right to
    private life. The recent comment by President-Elect Obama that he
    intends to seek enactment of the Employment Non-Discrimination Act to
    include gender identity as well as sexual orientation is welcome news,
    but it will be important to establish in the statute – not just in the
    legislative history – an intent to allow employees to appear in their
    desired gender identity on the job. In this case, nobody was
    complaining that Creed was not presentable, or that her appearance had
    actually impeded her ability to work. And basing the discharge on
    customer complaints seems counter to the lessons of race and sex
    discrimination under Title VII, where courts have in other contexts
    rejected the argument that customer preferences or biases should be
    allowed to dictate the personnel policies of a company subject to a
    statutory obligation not to discriminate on the basis of race or sex.
    A good employee such as Amber Creed should not be subjected to this
    kind of humiliating discrimination because of some intolerant
    customers.

    January 11

    A New Year's Message...

    So I guess you know I've been starting to speak out more on TransFM.org and that I've been really giving back on the chat rooms and trying to offer my best support.  While my work on the board has mostly enabled me to meet more transgender folks like myself and to ensure that they have the support networks they will need in place. 

    It is this and for many other reasons...  In fact

    It is much more than giving back to our small community which I, no; which we all have witnessed strengthen and grow over the past ten years.  I think that even amidst this very horribly disturbing economy, I have found solace and so look forward to watching my daughter grow to become the woman she is destined to be.

    As a post-operative transsexual woman who's daily life is nothing short of incredibly complicated. 

    I urge you to remember that in order to find your solace; You must not be afraid to look for it.

    Love and Respect,

    -Dana

    January 01

    This just awesome!

     

    London Library offers Transsexual people for rent

    Not exactly what your thinking. It's not an escort service, it's a
    Library. Those crazy Brits have come up with a living library that
    isn't filled with books but people, you borrow, spend time with, and
    return.
    Pretty cool concept.
    It works like a conventional library. Tables and chairs are set out
    for study. Librarians bustle purposefully, staffing the checkout desk.
    Except these aren't books on loan. They're people.
    Welcome to the Living Library. Here, you borrow individuals who
    represent stereotypes that often are the target of prejudice or
    hatred.
    At this east London library on a recent Saturday, there were 26
    "books" available, including a Muslim, an immigrant, a transgender
    individual, a witch and an Indian atheist.
    Readers borrow them for half an hour, hear their narrative, question
    them, even pry a little, and -- so the theory goes -- break down some
    of their preconceptions and stop "judging the book by the cover."
    Editorial reference, LINK <http://etransgender.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=1970>
    Copyright (c) 2008 The Canadian. All rights reserved.
    http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/home/Frontpage/2008/12/31/02958.html