Gender identity added to
state's anti-bias law
BY
"People were unwilling to have me work
with them when they could tell when I was transitioning," Weiss said.
Only able to get a job as a legal secretary,
Weiss had to "go back" and work her way up. After getting a doctorate
degree, Weiss now is an assistant professor of law and society at
Weiss said her experience beginning nearly a
decade ago is similar to what many transgender people deal with in the work
force. The state, however, is looking to end this type of workplace
discrimination.
Beginning today,
"What this is going to do is provide a
push in for people so they can start to get jobs," said Weiss, who holds
workshops with corporations and small businesses to teach workplace diversity.
"Even though there will continue to be unemployment, they will find that
it is going to relieve some of the frustrations they have that they can't get
jobs at all."
Several other states give transgender people
certain protections under sex or disability discriminations laws, and four more
states — Colorado, Iowa, Oregon and Vermont — have transgender
anti-discrimination laws coming into effect this year.
"It's just the right thing to do,"
said Sen. Ellen Karcher, D-Monmouth, one of the law's
primary sponsors. "We're all human beings, and I just thought we should
give them the rights they deserved."
Barbara Casbar Siperstein, director of Gender Rights Advocacy Association
of New Jersey, said making the law "black and white" presents an
opportunity to "educate people and make them think."
"One of the things I think that we all
want, as people, is respect," Casbar Siperstein said.
Violators could face stiff penalties. The
law allows for a pre-trial investigation done by the state Division on Civil
Rights or a civil court hearing, and anything from a cease-and-desist order to
compensation for the harmed party could be issued. Fines also could be handed
out, from $10,000 for a first offense to $50,000 for multiple offenses.
The current expansion adds to the oldest
civil rights statute in the country, which was passed in 1945, said Frank Vespa-Papaleo, director at the state Division on Civil
Rights.
The original law prohibited discrimination
of race, nationality and ethnicity in employment, but was rarely enforced. The
section in the state Constitution outlawing discrimination in education and
military service was the first to explicitly state such a ban when it was
drafted in 1947.
Vespa-Papaleo added that the state's civil rights law is among the
broadest in the country.
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Michael Rispoli:
mrispol@gannett.com