Lambda Legal Showbiz and Celebrity Breaking News

Biden’s New School Rules Protect LGBTQ Students - www.metroweekly.com
metroweekly.com
19.04.2024

Biden’s New School Rules Protect LGBTQ Students

Supreme Court decision finding that the Civil Rights Act protects LGBTQ workers from workplace discrimination, and that instances of anti-LGBTQ discrimination are inherently a form of sex-based discrimination.The revised Title IX rules also restore some protections for students who make sexual assault allegations against other students, offering them alternatives to Trump-era policies that required live hearings in which students could cross-examine each other when an accusation was contested.Democrats, including some LGBTQ advocates, had long criticized the Trump-era policies, arguing they were overly deferential to students accused of sexual violence.The new rules also expand the types of harassment complaints that schools are required to investigate, asserting that schools must address any unwelcome sex-based conduct that is so “severe or pervasive” that it limits a student’s equal access to an education, but do not completely roll back provisions instituted under former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos intended to bolster accused students’ due process rights.“These regulations make it crystal clear that everyone can access schools that are safe, welcoming and that respect their rights,” Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona said in a call with reporters on Thursday.Regarding the explicit LGBTQ protections, Caronda added, “No one should face bullying or discrimination just because of who they are, who they love.

Refusing Trans Insurance Coverage is Unlawful, Court Rules - www.metroweekly.com - county Anderson - North Carolina - state West Virginia
metroweekly.com
29.04.2024

Refusing Trans Insurance Coverage is Unlawful, Court Rules

filed a lawsuit against West Virginia officials on behalf of a Medicaid participant, Christopher Fain, who was denied coverage for gender confirmation surgery. That same lawsuit also previously challenged a similar exclusion contained in West Virginia’s state employee health insurance plan on behalf of two state employees who could not obtain coverage for gender-affirming treatments, either for themselves or their dependents.Lambda Legal subsequently added additional transgender plaintiffs to the case, including Shauntae Anderson.The state employee plaintiffs’ claims were eventually resolved by a 2022 settlement with The Health Plan of West Virginia, Inc., which removed its exclusion on gender-affirming care.The lawsuit subsequently resumed, challenging only the Medicaid exclusion.In August 2022, a federal judge ruled that West Virginia’s Medicaid program could no longer discriminate against transgender recipients by failing to cover the cost of surgical care deemed medically necessary for treating a person’s gender dysphoria.

Nashville Settles HIV Discrimination Lawsuit - www.metroweekly.com - USA - Nashville - county Davidson - Virginia
metroweekly.com
05.04.2024

Nashville Settles HIV Discrimination Lawsuit

separate court case.However, since 2022, the Pentagon has stopped discharging active-duty service members due to their HIV status.That year, a Virginia federal judge ruled that the military could not discharge, refuse to commission, or categorically bar people with HIV from deploying, especially if they are asymptomatic and virally suppressed — making it highly unlikely that they can pass the virus to others.Additionally, in 2022, Davidson County voters approved an amendment to Metro Nashville’s charter removing the requirement that police recruits abide by military fitness standards, instead allowing the Civil Service Commission to set its own requirements. Subsequently, in 2023, Doe, enlisting the help of Lambda Legal, sued the Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, arguing that the Metro Nashville Police Department’s policies were not only discriminatory but violated federal law, including the Americans with Disabilities Act.As part of the settlement, the Metro Nashville government not only must provide Doe with monetary relief, but agrees to update and rewrite the city’s Civil Service Medical Examiner’s policies to make clear that people living with HIV are no longer categorically banned from serving as first responders or police officers.“I feel vindicated,” Doe said following the settlement.

Iowa’s “Don’t Say Gay” Law Blocked by Federal Judge - www.metroweekly.com - state Iowa
metroweekly.com
03.01.2024

Iowa’s “Don’t Say Gay” Law Blocked by Federal Judge

initially flagged 374 books for removal from shelves for possible violations, eventually reducing that number to 64.Similarly, the Norwalk Community School District also issued a list of 64 books for removal. Mason City banned 20 books from its schools, using artificial intelligence to help determine which ones should be banned — resulting in some classic novels, like The Handmaid’s Tale and Beloved, being banned.Republican Gov.

LGBTQ, immigrants’ rights groups condemn possible changes to asylum rules - qvoicenews.com - USA
qvoicenews.com
30.12.2023

LGBTQ, immigrants’ rights groups condemn possible changes to asylum rules

A coalition of key LGBTQ+ and immigrants’ rights groups has come forward with a strong condemnation of potential revisions to the United States asylum system. In a letter addressed to President Joe Biden, Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas, and members of Congress, organizations including Immigration Equality, the Human Rights Campaign, GLAAD, and Lambda Legal have outlined severe concerns regarding the implications of these changes for LGBTQ+ asylum seekers. Photo: Provided by The White House

9-Year-Old Transgender Boy’s Family Sues North Carolina - www.metroweekly.com - state Arkansas - North Carolina
metroweekly.com
19.10.2023

9-Year-Old Transgender Boy’s Family Sues North Carolina

The News & Observer.The law bans minors from accessing gender-affirming treatments and threatens medical providers who assist transgender minors in accessing them with the loss of their license. It also prohibits state funds, including Medicaid dollars, from being used to cover the cost of gender-affirming care.

Federal Judge Blocks Idaho’s Trans Restroom Ban - www.metroweekly.com - Florida - Virginia - state Idaho - state North Dakota
metroweekly.com
13.08.2023

Federal Judge Blocks Idaho’s Trans Restroom Ban

Idaho’s law is similar to laws in at least eight other states that have passed laws in recent years barring transgender students from using school facilities matching their gender identity — although it does not go as far as laws in North Dakota and Florida that go beyond schools to prohibit transgender people from accessing gender-affirming restrooms in some or all government buildingsHowever, Idaho’s law does contain what critics have called a “bounty” — in which cisgender students and their parents may sue schools for up to $5,000 if they find a transgender student using facilities that do not match that student’s assigned sex at birth. As a result, the plaintiffs have claimed, the law encourages people to seek out and harass transgender students in the hope of finding them violating the law in exchange for a monetary award.Under the now-blocked law, schools would have been required to provide a “reasonable accommodation” for transgender students unwilling or unable to use restrooms matching their assigned sex at birth.

Missouri Sued Over Ban on Gender-Affirming Care - www.metroweekly.com - state Missouri
metroweekly.com
28.07.2023

Missouri Sued Over Ban on Gender-Affirming Care

The law, SB 49, which is scheduled to take effect on August 28, prohibits health care providers in Missouri from prescribing puberty blockers, hormones, or gender confirmation surgery — the latter of which rarely is prescribed for those under 18 — to minors suffering from gender dysphoria.The law contains an exception for those who have already begun gender-affirming care that will allow them to continue receiving it if their doctors believe that stopping treatment would do more harm.The law also prohibits Medicaid from covering the cost of any transition-related treatments or procedures, regardless of the age of the patient — meaning low-income transgender adults are effectively barred from accessing gender-affirming care, and prohibits incarcerated individuals from obtaining gender confirmation surgery.The lawsuit argues that the ban is unconstitutional, violating the rights of transgender youth by discriminating against them on the basis of both sex and gender identity, and violating parents’ fundamental right to make decisions they believe to be in the best interest of their children.The lawsuit also claims that, unless the court issues an injunction to block Missouri from enforcing the law, all the plaintiffs will be irreparably harmed. By banning the transgender youth from accessing gender-affirming care, the state is likely to exacerbate the youths’ feelings of anxiety and gender dysphoria, as well as lead to potential mental health issues.

Idaho Sued Over Anti-Transgender Restroom Ban - www.metroweekly.com - state Idaho
metroweekly.com
10.07.2023

Idaho Sued Over Anti-Transgender Restroom Ban

school facilities law, which was signed into law by Republican Gov. Brad Little in March and took effect beginning on July 1, requires all public and charter schools serving students in grades K-12 prohibit transgender students from accessing multi-user restrooms and other facilities that do not match their assigned sex at birth. Beginning in 2016, various schools throughout the state adopted policies allowing transgender students to use facilities matching their gender identity, meaning that some students who previously used restrooms or locker rooms matching their gender identity, without incident, will now be barred from the very same facilities they used the previous school year.The family of the seventh-grader and the student association argue in their lawsuit that the school facilities law discriminates against transgender students on the basis of gender identity and violates their right to privacy.

Trans Ex-Inmate Sues for Being Kept in Solitary for 6 Years - www.metroweekly.com - state Missouri
metroweekly.com
08.07.2023

Trans Ex-Inmate Sues for Being Kept in Solitary for 6 Years

Missouri Department of Corrections for placing her in solitary confinement for more than six years because she is living with HIV.The former inmate, known as Jane Roe, was housed at the Jefferson City Correctional Center between 2015 and 2021. During her time in custody, she was placed in solitary confinement because her HIV status was deemed to make her a danger to others. The lawsuit, filed in the U.S.

Judge Strikes Down Florida’s Medicaid Ban on Trans Health Care - www.metroweekly.com - Florida
metroweekly.com
23.06.2023

Judge Strikes Down Florida’s Medicaid Ban on Trans Health Care

rule prohibiting Medicaid from covering the cost of gender-affirming medical treatments that assist a transgender-identifying person in transitioning.The rule, approved last August by the Florida Agency for Health Care Administration, applies to treatments sought out by both minors and adults, declaring that transition-related treatments do not “meet the definition of medical necessity” to qualify for coverage under Medicaid.The rule was passed as Florida officials have sought to crack down on all forms of LGBTQ visibility, including passing a law blocking transgender youth from accessing gender-affirming treatments.Under the administration of Republican Gov.

Supreme Court Blocks West Virginia from Enforcing Trans Sports Ban - www.metroweekly.com - USA - state West Virginia - county Liberty
metroweekly.com
07.04.2023

Supreme Court Blocks West Virginia from Enforcing Trans Sports Ban

signed into law in 2021.However, Justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas dissented, saying they would have granted Morrisey’s request.A federal judge previously blocked the law from taking effect while a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the ban proceeds.The plaintiff in the case, 12-year-old Becky Pepper-Jackson, is a transgender girl who tried to join her middle school girls’ cross-country team, but was informed that she would be barred from the team due to the law prohibiting transgender athletes from competing in female-designated sports.Pepper-Jackson sued state officials, her local school board, the West Virginia Board of Education, and the West Virginia Secondary School Activities Commission, arguing that the law is unconstitutional and discriminatory.In July 2021, U.S. District Court Judge Joseph Goodwin, of the Southern District of West Virginia, issued an injunction blocking the law from taking effect on the grounds that Pepper-Jackson was likely to prevail in her claim that the law is discriminatory.Six months later, Goodwin rejected Pepper-Jackson’s claim that the law violates Title IX, the federal law prohibiting sex-based discrimination, finding the ban constitutional and asserting that the state had a legitimate interest in ensuring cisgender female athletes are not disadvantaged by having to compete against athletes assigned male at birth.

Texas federal judge: Businesses not required to cover PrEP - qvoicenews.com - USA - Texas - New Orleans
qvoicenews.com
03.04.2023

Texas federal judge: Businesses not required to cover PrEP

According to a Texas federal judge Reed O’Connor, insuring against HIV transmission violates the religious freedom of businesses that object to LGBTQ+ people, meaning insurance companies cannot be forced to cover the medicines. As a result of his ruling, a host of preventative services required to be covered by insurance providers under the Affordable Care Act are in doubt. Photo: Screen grab from Administrative Office of the United States Courts’ video.

Pentagon to Pay $1.3 Million to Military Members with HIV - www.metroweekly.com - Virginia
metroweekly.com
22.09.2022

Pentagon to Pay $1.3 Million to Military Members with HIV

Nick Harrison of the D.C. Army National Guard, sued after he had his request for a medical waiver rejected after he tried to commission as a Judge Advocate General’s Corps (JAG) officer.Two airmen, using the pseudonyms Richard Roe and Victor Voe to protect their identities and private medical information, sued after the Air Force tried to forcibly discharge them on the grounds that their HIV status made them “unfit for military service” — despite testimonials to the contrary from their commanding officers and personal care providers.Both the Harrison and Roe cases were combined for purposes of discovery and argument, with the plaintiffs challenging the military’s longstanding ban on active-duty service members with HIV.

Lesbian Who Sued Government Can Become Foster Parent - www.metroweekly.com - USA - Texas - county Christian
metroweekly.com
02.07.2022

Lesbian Who Sued Government Can Become Foster Parent

voluntarily dismissed her lawsuit last week, while reserving the right to sue in the future if similar restrictions are reintroduced at a later point in time.  She is currently in the process of becoming a licensed foster parent.“Providing a loving, nurturing home for a refugee child is my desire,” Easter said in a statement.

Republicans in Congress Urge Supreme Court to Allow Website Designer to Refuse Same-Sex Wedding Clients - www.metroweekly.com - Smith - Colorado
metroweekly.com
17.06.2022

Republicans in Congress Urge Supreme Court to Allow Website Designer to Refuse Same-Sex Wedding Clients

brief, which casts Smith’s refusal to serve same-sex couples as a matter of religious freedom and artistic expression protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.Smith, the owner of the firm 303 Creative LLC, claims that she should be allowed to refuse to create websites for same-sex couples on the basis of her personal religious beliefs opposing homosexuality, and her refusal to communicate a message that implicitly supports same-sex marriage.Enlisting the help of the anti-LGBTQ legal group Alliance Defending Freedom, Smith sued the state of Colorado in 2016, demanding an exemption from the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act, which prohibits businesses that open themselves up as places of public accommodation from discriminating against people based on sexual orientation.Smith claims she will do some work for LGBTQ clients, but creating wedding websites for those individuals would not only violate her religious beliefs but would violate her freedom of artistic expression, as each website she creates is a specially-tailored, one-of-a-kind product reflecting her own creativity.A federal district judge ruled against Smith in September 2019, finding that her proposal to post a statement outlining her objection to promoting same-sex weddings “proposes an unlawful act” because it would deny services to same-sex couples on the basis of their sexual orientation.

State Department issues first gender-neutral United States passport - www.metroweekly.com - USA - Colorado
metroweekly.com
29.10.2021

State Department issues first gender-neutral United States passport

statement on Wednesday.The State Department announced the change in June in response to a years-long lawsuit filed by Dana Zzyym, an intersex and nonbinary Colorado resident and Naval veteran, who sued to compel the State Department, under both the Obama and Trump administrations, to issue a passport reflecting their true identity.

Appeals court rejects wedding website designer’s attempt to overturn Colorado’s anti-discrimination law - www.metroweekly.com - Colorado
metroweekly.com
29.07.2021

Appeals court rejects wedding website designer’s attempt to overturn Colorado’s anti-discrimination law

ruled against Smith, finding that her proposal to post a statement outlining her objection to promoting same-sex weddings “proposes an unlawful act because it proposes to do something — deny services to same-sex couples — that a different statute, the Accommodations Clause, prohibits.”Smith appealed that decision, but on Monday, a three-judge panel for the 10th U.S.

Federal judge blocks West Virginia’s transgender athlete ban from taking effect - www.metroweekly.com - USA - county Harrison - state West Virginia - county Liberty
metroweekly.com
23.07.2021

Federal judge blocks West Virginia’s transgender athlete ban from taking effect

a West Virginia law barring transgender student-athletes in K-12 schools and state colleges and universities from competing on sports teams that align with their gender identity.On Wednesday, U.S.

Martina Navratilova demands exemption for women’s sports from Biden’s pro-LGBTQ executive order - www.metroweekly.com
metroweekly.com
04.02.2021

Martina Navratilova demands exemption for women’s sports from Biden’s pro-LGBTQ executive order

executive order prohibiting discrimination against the LGBTQ community.Speaking with BBC Radio 4, Navratilova, who has won 18n Grand Slam singles titles, proposed a provision that would set forth certain guidelines intended to ensure a level playing field in elite women’s sports.She said she supports the idea of allowing transgender athletes to compete, but wants to ensure that cisgender women are not placed at a competitive disadvantage, saying the physical advantages for transgender females

Federal judge blocks Trump order prohibiting workplace diversity and sensitivity trainings - www.metroweekly.com - California
metroweekly.com
24.12.2020

Federal judge blocks Trump order prohibiting workplace diversity and sensitivity trainings

lawsuit was filed in early November by a coalition of LGBTQ groups, as well as a business with federal contracts to provide such training to correctional staff and government agencies, who argue that the order, issued by President Trump on Sept. 22, violates their free speech rights and right to due process under the U.S.

Trump immigration rule would prevent most LGBTQ and HIV+ refugees from seeking asylum - www.metroweekly.com
metroweekly.com
12.12.2020

Trump immigration rule would prevent most LGBTQ and HIV+ refugees from seeking asylum

rule would rewrite asylum law without authorization from Congress and reinterprets who qualifies as a “refugee” in a limited way so that most LGBTQ or HIV-positive refugees would no longer qualify.

Martin Jenkins as a gay Black man would bring diversity to CA Supreme Court - qvoicenews.com - USA - California - San Francisco
qvoicenews.com
10.11.2020

Martin Jenkins as a gay Black man would bring diversity to CA Supreme Court

If approved, California Supreme Court nominee Martin Jenkins would be the first Black man and gay person to sit on the state’s highest court. Photo: California Supreme Court.

California SB 132 would house transgender inmates by gender identity - qvoicenews.com - California
qvoicenews.com
17.09.2020

California SB 132 would house transgender inmates by gender identity

Activists took a stand for transgender visibility at Dodger Stadium on Oct. 29, 2018 during game five of the World Series. Near the top of the sixth inning, members of TransLatin@ Coalition dropped a 20-by-15-foot Transgender Pride flag banner reading “Trans People Deserve To Live” from a left field balcony. Photo: Twitter

Court rules that State Department must recognize gay couple’s daughter as U.S. citizen - www.metroweekly.com
metroweekly.com
31.08.2020

Court rules that State Department must recognize gay couple’s daughter as U.S. citizen

ruled that the U.S. State Department violated the federal Immigration and Nationality Act when it denied Simone Mize-Gregg, a child born via surrogacy in England, a passport because of its refusal to recognize the marriage of her two fathers, Derek Mize and Jonathan Gregg, as legally valid.Under the Immigration and Nationality Act, children of married U.S.

Court strikes down Idaho law barring transgender people from changing their birth certificates - www.metroweekly.com - state Idaho
metroweekly.com
09.08.2020

Court strikes down Idaho law barring transgender people from changing their birth certificates

previously issued in 2018, in response to a lawsuit brought by several transgender plaintiffs challenging the state’s previous ban prohibiting any individual from amending the gender marker on their birth certificate.

New York resident sues state for failing to offer nonbinary gender marker on driver’s licenses - www.metroweekly.com - New York - New York
metroweekly.com
01.08.2020

New York resident sues state for failing to offer nonbinary gender marker on driver’s licenses

lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, alleges that the state’s policy prohibiting nonbinary people from obtaining documentation with an accurate gender marker violates Saba’s right to equal protection under law, and infringes upon their free speech rights by forcing them to state a gender identity with which they do not identify.

Trump’s ban on transgender military service could be easily reversed in 30 days, memo says - www.metroweekly.com
metroweekly.com
24.07.2020

Trump’s ban on transgender military service could be easily reversed in 30 days, memo says

memo, authored by retired Rear Admiral Alan Steinman, M.D., the former Surgeon General equivalent of the U.S.

Popular Topics

Our site celebfans.org offers you to spend the best time ever reading Lambda Legal latest news. Enjoy scrolling Lambda Legal celebrity news and gossip, photos, videos, scandals, and more. Stay tuned following daily updates of Lambda Legal stuff and have fun. Be sure, you will never regret entering the site, because here you will find a lot of Lambda Legal news that will never disappoint you!

Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.
DMCA