Legitimate reasons to exclude transgender people from female spaces include enabling privacy or decency and preventing trauma or to ensure health and safety
Don't Miss
Most Read
Trending on GB News
Trans women can be legally excluded from single-sex services such as changing rooms, domestic violence refuges and hospital wards to prevent trauma and enable privacy, the equalities watchdog has said.
Guidance surrounding all female spaces says it is lawful to ban someone who is born a man, if it would be less effective or impractical and the organisation can demonstrate its actions are proportionate,
The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) said organisations must balance the impact on all service users and demonstrate “a sufficiently good reason” for banning transgender people.
It could be illegal if an organisation cannot show such action is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim, the EHRC has said.
Legitimate reasons include, enabling privacy or decency, to prevent trauma or to ensure health and safety.
The fresh guidance, published on Monday, is intended to be a practical guide to help organisations such as hospitals, retailers, hospitality and sports clubs implement policies that are legal and balance the needs of different groups.
Female and male toilets
WikiCommons
It is the first time guidance on this issue has been issued, and follows pleas for clarity from the Commons Women and Equalities Committee and service providers.
It also follows a request from LGBTQ+ organisation Stonewall and other groups for the UN to review the EHRC’s international accreditation because of its stance on trans rights.
This was refused by the Global Alliance of National Human Rights Institutions last week, with the EHRC appealing to critics to “reset relations” and “put aside past disagreements”.
Throughout the new guidance, the EHRC has provided hypothetical examples of organisations interpreting the Equality Act in practice.
These include a domestic abuse refuge excluding trans women from emergency accommodation if feedback from female survivors “indicates that they would feel uncomfortable sharing accommodation with trans women for reasons of trauma and safety”.
US swimmer Lia Thomas who is at the centre of the debate surrounding transgender people competing in female sports
Brett Davis
The refuge could compile a list of alternative sources of support for trans women in the local area, it said.
Organisers of a group counselling session for female victims of sexual assault could exclude trans women if they judge that those attending “are likely to be traumatised by the presence of a person who is biologically male”, it says.
And it says a leisure centre could choose to exclude trans women from female-only fitness classes “because of the degree of physical contact involved”.
Another example could be a gym introducing an additional gender-neutral changing room with self-contained units, due to concerns about the safety of trans men changing in existing open-plan communal changing rooms.
The EHRC says some providers may wish to develop a policy on how services are provided to trans people, but this is not legally necessary.
It is good practice to record reasons and evidence for taking a decision to provide a separate or single-sex service, it adds.
For example, a hospital providing a single-sex ward because patients expressed concerns about staying on a mixed ward could record evidence of this, such as a patient survey.
When making decisions, providers should treat everyone with dignity and respect, and be aware that trans people may need access to services relating to their biological sex.
For example, it would likely be unlawful if a trans man is denied access to breast screening and told this service is provided for females only, the watchdog said.
It also advises organisations to consider “less restrictive options where possible”.
It gives the example of a women’s clothes shop deciding it is not necessary to exclude trans women from changing areas as the privacy and decency of all users can be assured by the provision of separate cubicles.
It said it is most likely to be proportionate to exclude, modify or limit trans people’s access when a provider has limited resources and physical space to make changes, or when dealing with groups with particular needs, such as female victims of male assault.
Baroness Kishwer Falkner, EHRC chairwoman, said: “Our mission at the EHRC is to protect the rights of everyone and ensure that people across Britain are treated fairly.
“There is no place for discrimination against anyone based on their sex or gender reassignment.
“Where rights between groups compete, our duty as an independent regulator is to help providers of services and others to balance the needs of different users in line with the law.
“Organisations are legally allowed to restrict services to a single sex in some circumstances. But they need help to navigate this sensitive area. That is why we have published this guidance – to clarify the law and uphold everyone’s rights.”