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Great Events from History: LGBTQ, 2nd Edition

Transgender Rights Added to New York City Law

by Pauline Park

Date: April 30, 2002

Also known as: Local Law 3

Locale: New York, New York

Categories: Civil rights; transgender/transsexuality; government and politics; laws, acts, and legal history; organizations and institutions

Key Figures

Tim Sweeney key strategist of the bill

Bill Perkins council member and lead sponsor of the bill

Margarita Lopez council member and key proponent of the bill

Pauline Park coordinator of the bill’s working group

Rudolph Giuliani (b. 1944), New York City mayor and key opponent of the bill

Peter Vallone council speaker and key opponent of the bill

Michael Bloomberg (b. 1942), New York City mayor who signed the bill into law

Summary of Event

The history of New York City’s landmark transgender rights law begins on June 30, 1998, with the founding of the New York Association for Gender Rights Advocacy (NYAGRA). Created to combat the pervasive discrimination and violence faced by transgender and gender-variant people, NYAGRA was the first statewide transgender advocacy organization in New York.

On November 24, 1998, NYAGRA members met with the Empire State Pride Agenda (ESPA)—the state’s largest and most influential lesbian and gay political organization—to seek its support for inclusion of “gender identity” and “gender expression” in the Sexual Orientation Non-Discrimination Act (SONDA), which was then pending in the New York state legislature. ESPA’s deputy director, Tim Sweeney, proposed instead that ESPA and NYAGRA work at the local level first. NYAGRA members agreed, with the understanding that the two organizations would revisit the question of transgender inclusion in SONDA at a future date after assessing the progress of the New York City transgender rights bill.

New York City’s Local Law 3 (2002)

A local law to amend the administrative code of the city of New York, in relation to gender-based discrimination.

Section 1. Legislative findings and intent. The City Council finds and declares that it is in the interest of the City of New York to protect its citizens from discrimination. Discrimination, prejudice, intolerance and bigotry directly and profoundly threaten the rights and freedom of New Yorkers. The City Council established the Human Rights Law to protect its inhabitants from these dangers. Included in the City’s Human Rights Law is a prohibition of discrimination against individuals based on gender. The scope of this gender-based protection, however, requires clarification. This local law is intended to make clear that all gender-based discrimination--including, but not limited to, discrimination based on an individual’s actual or perceived sex, and discrimination based on an individual’s gender identity, self-image, appearance, behavior, or expression--constitutes a violation of the City’s Human Rights Law.

Gender-based discrimination effects a broad range of individuals. But the impact of gender-based discrimination is especially debilitating for those whose gender self-image and presentation do not fully accord with the legal sex assigned to them at birth. For those individuals, gender-based discrimination often leads to pariah status including the loss of a job, the loss of an apartment, and the refusal of service in public accommodations such as restaurants or stores. The impact of such discrimination can be especially devastating for those who endure other prejudices due to their race, ethnicity, national origin, or citizenship status, in addition to gender-based discrimination. In adopting this legislation, the City Council declares that the ability of all New Yorkers to work and to live free from invidious discrimination based on gender is the guiding principle of public policy and law.

On October 8, 1999, NYAGRA convened the first meeting of the working group on gender-based discrimination, which chose Pauline Park to serve as its coordinator. The working group included ESPA (represented by ESPA executive director Matt Foreman after Sweeney’s departure in November, 2000), the Gender Identity Project (represented by Carrie Davis) of the Lesbian & Gay Community Services Center (later renamed the LGBT Community Center) and the six original sponsors of the bill—New York city council members Bill Perkins, Margarita Lopez, Christine Quinn, Ronnie Eldridge, Philip Reed, and Steven DiBrienza, all Democrats.

The core members (including Perkins, Lopez, Sweeney, and Park) crafted a strategy for enlisting the support of a majority of council members and building a broad coalition of LGBT and non-LGBT organizations. On February 29, 2000, the coalition launched the public phase of the campaign with a press conference on the steps of City Hall. Council members announced they were submitting a formal request for legislation.

When the bill was introduced on June 5, a majority of council members signed on as cosponsors. The working group was able to generate sustained coverage in the LGBT press and even occasional major media coverage for the campaign, culminating in a New York Times editorial (August 29) in favor of the bill, the newspaper’s first editorial on transgender issues. With that editorial and an opinion article in Newsday magazine by former mayor Ed Koch, it became clear that the city’s political establishment was now behind the bill. What had been a marginal issue in 1998, not even seriously discussed by LGBT activists, became central to the LGBT community’s political agenda, with ESPA and the LGBT political clubs insisting that candidates seeking their support in the 2001 elections for council and citywide office (mayor, public advocate, comptroller) endorse the bill. In fact, leading Democratic candidates for those offices rushed to endorse the bill and to show their support for transgender rights.

The one exception among candidates for the Democratic mayoral nomination was Speaker Peter Vallone, who, though refusing to state his opposition to the bill publicly, blocked it until he was forced out of office in December, 2001, because of term limits. Mayor Rudolph Giuliani (also term-limited by December, 2001) sent human rights commissioner Marta Varela to the general welfare committee hearing on the bill on May 4, 2001, to testify that the administration considered the legislation unnecessary, arguing that existing case law already protected those who are transgender from discrimination. Park insisted, however, that the legislation was necessary and rejected suggestions even from Sweeney, Perkins, and Lopez (and from Joe Grabarz, who succeeded Sweeney as ESPAs deputy director) that the bill be scrapped and that transgender rights be pursued through litigation.

Incoming council speaker Gifford Miller made the bill’s passage a priority, and it was reintroduced in January, 2002. On April 24, the new council passed the bill with a vote of 45-5, with one abstention, and on April 30 the new mayor, Michael Bloomberg, a Republican, signed it into law.

Significance

Enactment of Local Law 3 of 2002 amended New York City human rights law to add a definition of “gender” that included “gender identity” and “gender expression,” thereby protecting transgender and gender nonconforming people throughout the five boroughs from discrimination in employment, housing, and public accommodations. The passage of the bill represents important legal protection for the city’s transgender and gender nonconforming communities. Not only did the bill win transgender rights under law; the campaign for the bill transformed the political context in which transgender issues were understood.

Further Reading

1 

Currah, Paisley, Richard M. Juang, and Shannon Minter, editors. Transgender Rights. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2006.

2 

Hunter, Nan D., Courtney G. Joslin, and Sharon M. McGowan. The Rights of Lesbians, Gay Men, Bisexuals, and Transgender People. 4th ed. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2004.

3 

The New York Times. “Transgender Rights.” Editorial, August 29, 2000.

4 

Park, Pauline. “The Making of a Movement: The Story of the Successful Campaign for a Transgender Rights Law in New York City.” Paper presented at the eighth annual Mark E. Ouderkirk Lecture, the Museum of the City of New York, June 27, 2002.

5 

Schindler, Paul. “Bloomberg Set to Sign Transgender Rights Law.” Lesbian and Gay New York, May 9, 2002, p. 4.

6 

_______. “Transgender Activists Push Human Rights Amendment.” Lesbian and Gay New York, March 23, 2000, p. 17.

7 

Sharpe, Andrew N. Transgender Jurisprudence: Dysphoric Bodies of Law. London: Cavendish, 2002.

8 

Stryker, Susan. Transgender History: The Roots of Today’s Revolution. 2nd ed. New York: Da Capo Press, 2017.

9 

Swan, Wallace. Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Civil Rights: A Public Policy Agenda for Uniting a Divided America. New York: CRC Press, 2015.

10 

Taylor, Jami Kathleen and Donald P. Haider-Markel, editors. Transgender Rights and Politics: Groups, Issue Framing, and Policy Adoption. Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 2014.

See Also:

1986: Female to Male International Is Founded; 1992: Transgender Nation Holds Its First Protest; June 17, 1995: International Bill of Gender Rights Is First Circulated; 1998: Transgender Scholarship Proliferates; October 27, 1999: Littleton v. Prange Withholds Survivor Rights from Transsexual Spouses; 2002: Sylvia Rivera Law Project Is Founded; February 21, 2003: Australian Court Validates Transsexual Marriage; March, 2003-December, 2004: Transsexuals Protest Academic Exploitation; March 21, 2003: New Mexico Amends Its Human Rights Act; November 20, 2003: Transgender Day of Remembrance and Remembering Our Dead Project; May 17, 2004: Transsexual Athletes Allowed to Compete in Olympic Games; 2014: Time Magazine Calls 2014 the “Transgender Tipping Point”; 2015: Caitlyn Jenner Becomes the World’s Most Famous Transgender Person; 2017: Boy Scouts of America Accept Transgender Scouts

Citation Types

Type
Format
MLA 9th
Park, Pauline. "Transgender Rights Added To New York City Law." Great Events from History: LGBTQ, 2nd Edition, edited by Robert C. Evans, Salem Press, 2017. Salem Online, online.salempress.com/articleDetails.do?articleName=LGBTQ2E_0277.
APA 7th
Park, P. (2017). Transgender Rights Added to New York City Law. In R. C. Evans (Ed.), Great Events from History: LGBTQ, 2nd Edition. Salem Press. online.salempress.com.
CMOS 17th
Park, Pauline. "Transgender Rights Added To New York City Law." Edited by Robert C. Evans. Great Events from History: LGBTQ, 2nd Edition. Hackensack: Salem Press, 2017. Accessed September 15, 2025. online.salempress.com.