| News Item | ![]() |
DALLAS MAKES HISTORY WITH
ANTI-DISCRIMINATION BILL
Texas history was made on Wednesday, May 8, 2002, when Dallas officials enacted an
amendment to the city's nondiscrimination ordinance. With a 13-2 city council vote, and a
stroke of the mayor's pen, Dallas now becomes the first city in Texas to extend
protections to all its transgendered citizens. Dallas joins both Austin and Fort Worth
with city-wide protections based on sexual orientation.
Last July, Houston became the first in Texas to extend protections based on gender
identity by amending the nondiscrimination policy covering city employees.
Members of Dallas' Transsexual Community made an eleventh-hour appeal to add transgender
community equal protection under the new law. Transgender leaders complained that the
ordinance's original language left transgenders out of the bill.
Mayor Laura Miller sought the language revision after learning of the transgender
community's concerns and reviewing the language of the proposal. "I didn't think that
we gave a good enough definition of sexual orientation," Miller said. "I wanted
the community and for city officials to be comfortable with it."
"It is important to be specific, as other cities have been, when addressing the
issue," said Tylana Marie Coop, initiator of the last-minute request. "The
change at the last minute to cover "gender identity" shows that a few or even
one person who stands up for change, educating in a respectable fashion, can and will make
a difference for the transgender community."
"It's why it is important for leaders to consult transgenders and other cities who
have worked through it," Coop said. "I believe most people want to be fair once
they have been educated about transgender issues."
Gay Alliance president Maria Rubio said that she is pleased that city officials adjusted
the ordinance's language to the satisfaction of the transgender community. Everyone
involved in the ordinance's preparation intended for it to be comprehensive, she said.
"We had good intentions, and we thought it included everything it needed," Rubio
said. "I'm glad we got it straightened out before it passed."
The newly enacted nondiscrimination ordinance prohibits discrimination on the basis of
race, age, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation or national origin. It defines sexual
orientation as "an individual's real or perceived orientation as heterosexual,
homosexual, or bisexual or an individual's real or perceived gender identity."
Miller said that few people complained to her about the proposed ordinance in the weeks
prior to its passage. The few who did claimed that homosexuality and transsexualism is a
personal choice rather than an innate characteristic.
"Including "gender identity" in the Dallas Non-Discrimination Ordinance is
a major victory for the transgender community," Coop added. "Dallas, now joins
other major cities, like New York City, in setting an example for the nation."
"Now other cities and leaders may have the courage to the same."
![]()