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Malloy To Conn. Public Employees: Avoid NC

Ashley Joubert-Gaddis, director of operations at South Dakota's Center for Equality, demonstrates her support against a bill that would have required transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms matching their sex at birth. North Carolina recently passed a similar bill that applies to all people using bathrooms in schools and government buildings.
James Nord
/
AP
Ashley Joubert-Gaddis, director of operations at South Dakota's Center for Equality, demonstrates her support against a bill that would have required transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms matching their sex at birth. North Carolina recently passed a similar bill that applies to all people using bathrooms in schools and government buildings.
Ashley Joubert-Gaddis, director of operations at South Dakota's Center for Equality, demonstrates her support against a bill that would have required transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms matching their sex at birth. North Carolina recently passed a similar bill that applies to all people using bathrooms in schools and government buildings.
Credit James Nord / AP
/
AP
Ashley Joubert-Gaddis, director of operations at South Dakota's Center for Equality, demonstrates her support against a bill that would have required transgender students to use bathrooms and locker rooms matching their sex at birth. North Carolina recently passed a similar bill that applies to all people using bathrooms in schools and government buildings.

Connecticut is the fourth state to tell its public employees not to travel to North Carolina. That's in response to a new law in North Carolina critics say discriminates against the LGBT community.

The law requires transgender people to use restrooms and changing rooms that correspond to their sex and not their gender identity. Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy says that means state employees may be in danger if they use a restroom while they’re in North Carolina -- say, for national conferences.

“Imagine an individual who’s transitioning to another sex, who is for all appearances a man, has to go into a woman’s room to use that facility. That’s a very risky proposition. It could be a riotous situation,” Malloy said.

Malloy has now signed an executive order telling state employees to avoid travel in North Carolina unless they’re contractually obligated. He also sent an open letter to North Carolina businesses inviting them to move to Connecticut because he says the state is open and inclusive. And he says he expects North Carolina will eventually overturn the law.

“What North Carolina has made a decision to do is put itself on the wrong side of this argument,” Malloy said.

The states of New York, Washington and Vermont have also banned public employees from travelling to North Carolina.

Copyright 2016 WSHU

Davis Dunavin loves telling stories, whether on the radio or around the campfire. He fell in love with sound-rich radio storytelling while working as an assistant reporter at KBIA public radio in Columbia, Missouri. Before coming back to radio, he worked in digital journalism as the editor of Newtown Patch. As a freelance reporter, his work for WSHU aired nationally on NPR. Davis is a proud graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism; he started in Missouri and ended up in Connecticut, which, he'd like to point out, is the same geographic trajectory taken by Mark Twain.

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