Rolfe
Adult human female
It is, though.
Same same, but you folks keep making these bold claims without ever pointing to any legal analyses showing which paragraphs and clauses of the law will be applied by the courts in this case. It is doubtful that the single-sex exceptions even apply here, since the CLC claims “it is not providing single-sex facilities as defined within the EqA.”
It is, though.
This is basic Equality Act interpretation, not based on the Supreme Court judgement.Where are you seeing that in the text of the decision itself?
AlsoWhere gender reassignment is the protected characteristic, in the case of a male person proposing to or undergoing gender reassignment to the opposite sex, the correct comparator is likely to be a man without the protected characteristic of gender reassignment
In other words, if as a matter of law, a service-provider is required to provide services previously limited to women also to trans women with a GRC even if they present as biological men, it is difficult to see how they can then justify refusing to provide those services also to biological men and who also look like biological men.
It all comes down to this right here. Which specific part of the EqA will the City of London Corporation (CLC) rely upon to argue for how they are running the ponds right now (as three separate mixed-sex spaces, two of which are based on the protected characteristic of gender identity alongside the protected characteristic of sex)? If they are relying on Paragraph 27 of Schedule 3 (“Single-sex services”) then they will have to work with what the Supreme Court said about what "sex" means in that text.If it's not a single-sex space then the EA dispensation to exclude men on the basis of sex doesn't apply.
Yep! I understood your argument the last half dozen times. I'm past it now: Waiting to see if anyone tries it, and how the courts end up ruling when they do. Meanwhile I'm wondering about other aspects of the broader conundrum. Like how they'd actually enforce it if they did try.It's just not lawful. If you let some men in, you can't exclude other men on the basis that they're men. Or if you let some non-"trans" people in, you can't exclude anyone on the grounds that they're not "trans".
Gender Identity isn't a protected characteristic, having a GRC is. Additionally, the SC ruling indicated that services labeled as "women" or "men" are always assumed to be referring to sex, and not to gender identity. Thus, the "men's pond" is a pond of male human beings and cannot allow any females to use it without having to relabel it as mixed sex.It all comes down to this right here. Which specific part of the EqA will the City of London Corporation (CLC) rely upon to argue for how they are running the ponds right now (as three separate mixed-sex spaces, two of which are based on the protected characteristic of gender identity alongside the protected characteristic of sex)? If they are relying on Paragraph 27 of Schedule 3 (“Single-sex services”) then they will have to work with what the Supreme Court said about what "sex" means in that text.
The protected characteristic in the UK is 'gender reassignment', which does not require a GRC. In fact, it is defined so loosely that somebody who has begun thinking about changing their pronouns would probably qualify as having the protected characteristic.Gender Identity isn't a protected characteristic, having a GRC is. Additionally, the SC ruling indicated that services labeled as "women" or "men" are always assumed to be referring to sex, and not to gender identity. Thus, the "men's pond" is a pond of male human beings and cannot allow any females to use it without having to relabel it as mixed sex.
Thanks for the clarification.The protected characteristic in the UK is 'gender reassignment', which does not require a GRC. In fact, it is defined so loosely that somebody who has begun thinking about changing their pronouns would probably qualify as having the protected characteristic.
Yep! I understood your argument the last half dozen times. I'm past it now: Waiting to see if anyone tries it, and how the courts end up ruling when they do. Meanwhile I'm wondering about other aspects of the broader conundrum. Like how they'd actually enforce it if they did try.
AIUI, they cannot do that. The SC ruling makes it clear that such restrictions must be based on biological sex.It all comes down to this right here. Which specific part of the EqA will the City of London Corporation (CLC) rely upon to argue for how they are running the ponds right now (as three separate mixed-sex spaces, two of which are based on the protected characteristic of gender identity alongside the protected characteristic of sex)? If they are relying on Paragraph 27 of Schedule 3 (“Single-sex services”) then they will have to work with what the Supreme Court said about what "sex" means in that text.
What page was that?SC ruling indicated that services labeled as "women" or "men" are always assumed to be referring to sex, and not to gender identity.
What page was that?The SC ruling makes it clear that such restrictions must be based on biological sex.
I don't recall where any British ruling has affirmed that any use of gendered language by service providers must be interpreted in the same way as the terms are used in the EqA. Surely the courts recognize that language mutates over time.That invokes the EA2010 whether they like it or not...
If you don't want me to ask where the ruling said that, don't make the claim that the ruling said that.Damion, I'm just not up for playing pedantic litigation games today.