* * *
The University of Arizona Restroom Access Statement can be found at:
http://fp.arizona.edu/affirm/restroomaccess.htm.
* * *
The push for “diversity” on many college campuses throughout the country has gone too far.
The University of Arizona is one of the most transgender friendly colleges in the country according to the Committee on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Studies UA website.
But does this make the University of Arizona less friendly to heterosexual students who make up the majority of the university population? When the rights of heterosexual students are infringed upon in the name of diversity, the answer is yes. Examples of the violation of privacy of heterosexual students are hidden in the fine print, and many students don’t even know it is there. The
restroom policy at the University of Arizona is one of those fine print policies.
At the University of Arizona, all students are allowed to use whichever restroom, male or female, that they choose, putting heterosexual students at risk for assault and violation of privacy. These “gender neutral restrooms” and the policy that goes with them were implemented on behalf of the transgendered students feeling discriminated against because they aren't comfortable with being forced to use one specific restroom.
When I called various offices on campus to get more information about the policy, no one seemed to know about it or just simply weren't going to talk about the origin of the policy. Although the policy was made on behalf of the LGBT, Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender studies group on campus, when I called their office for more information about why they wanted this policy implemented, they told me it would be better to talk to the Diversity Resource Office on campus. When I called the Diversity Resource Office, the Director Dr. Raji Rhys-Wietecha said that she wasn't on the committee anymore for this topic, and I was told by the secretary to call a woman by the name of Mary Beth Tucker at the Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action Office.
Once I got in contact with Mary-Beth Tucker, she told me because she was not on the committee at the time the "statement on restroom access at the University of Arizona" was passed and signed in 2006, she did not know much about the policy. She did tell me however that the university president at the time, President Peter Likins, fully supported the statement.
If the goal of the University is to "create and sustain a campus environment that supports and values all members of our community," why does the restroom access policy at the University of Arizona violate the privacy rights of the majority of heterosexual students at the University? The scary thing is, according to Mary Beth Tucker the trend is popular among many universities across the country, including the University of California, Oregon State University, the University of Vermont..
It is understandable that the university wants to respect a mother or father taking their child into a restroom, as well as giving caregivers the convenience of helping someone into a restroom; any reasonable person would not object to these actions, but only in these two cases does this policy make sense.
“Obviously I understand parents with an opposite sex child using the restroom, but I can see where they are going with it,” said Ashley Ralston-Alvarez, a junior at the University if Arizona, “there are too many loopholes that come with it.”
Using parents and caregivers as an excuse for an open door allowing anyone to choose which restroom they feel like using is unfortunate.
The University of Arizona claims that the reason for implementing the policy was to avoid discrimination against gender identity. The university defines gender identity as "an individual's actual or perceived gender, including an individual's self-image, appearance, expression, or behavior, whether or not that self-image, appearance, expression, or behavior is different from that traditionally associated with the individual's sex at birth as being either female or male." This definition leaves room for excuses that may or may not be true for abusing restroom access rights.
Before attending the University of Arizona, Ashley Ralston-Alvarez attended Pima Community College, where she explained an incident regarding a male using the female designated restroom.
“When I was at Pima we had an issue where a male was sitting in the middle stall in the female restroom and grabbing women from underneath,” she said. Leaving the option open for anyone to use any restroom makes room for people with the same motives as the male at Pima to take advantage of and abuse the policy for inappropriate reasons, violating privacy and the rights of all students.
It is no different at a university. If a male wants to go into the female specific restroom at the University of Arizona for any reason, he can easily accomplish his goal by claiming he was being discriminated against based on gender identity, whether or not he is transgendered. Men are now able to enter the women's restroom freely as well as women using men’s restrooms because of this policy. The university also believes that "transgendered individuals may be subject to harassment or violence when using male or female-specific restrooms. Consequently, this statement has been developed to declare the University’s commitment to creating an inclusive and supportive campus environment."
“They are helping one group out but what does that do for most of the student population?” Ralston-Alvarez said.
Have they thought about the harassment female and male students may receive from other students because of gender-neutral restrooms? Being inclusive in this case has gone too far. Women are especially at a heightened risk on college campuses to harassment and violence due to the implementation of this policy.
While the university believes that by implementing this policy it is not participating in discrimination, the majority of the students who are in fact not transgendered, are being discriminated against by being forced to accept any gender, male, female, transgendered, into either gender specific restroom. Not only does this make heterosexual students uncomfortable, it increases the risk of sexual assault and invasion of privacy.
“I would definitely feel very uneasy about it,” said Ralston-Alvarez after being asked how she would feel about having the opposite sex in the female restroom with her.
Ultimately the restroom access statement at the University of Arizona may benefit a small minority of transgendered students, but overall poses a threat to privacy and increases the potential for harassment towards heterosexual students.
The President and all his staff responsible for this ridiculous policy and statement should be fired and sent back to kindergarten to learn the facts of life. Human beings, like all animals, are born either male or female. This is a biological fact of life, known even to infants. The chromosomes of every human being (with the exception of some anomalies) indicate the sex. "Transgender" human beings imagine that with suitable cosmetic changes they can become members of the opposite sex from how they are born are mentally ill; they have not changed their sex but only external traits, like makeup.
by Athena Posted on 03/15/2009
This sounds like another bigoted right-wing article to me. If you look at the scientific evidence, there is virtually none suggesting that transgendered behavior is simply learned. Instead, it results from an interaction between complex biological processes (genetic, prenatal, hormonal, etc) and environmental experiences. Given the fundamental role of biological processes, this behavior is not something that the person has voluntary control over, and thus it makes little sense to blame them for it. Why is the NAS, which is supposedly an association of scholars, so subject to bigotry?
by DougD Posted on 05/06/2009
To Doug D. : "Complex biological processes" aside, what exactly do you find "bigoted" and "right-wing" about insisting on privacy, decency and personal safety in a college restroom?
It is clear to me that you are more interested in labeling the NAS in slanderous terms than debating the issue at hand: the possible ramifications of "gender-neutral" bathrooms for the heterosexual majority of students at the University of Arizona. Besides, Sir, it is very much the NAS's right, if not its obligation, to point out such absurd PC phenomena, for even in these liberal times, such a policy can only be implemented and survive on a American university campus. Try "gender-neutral" restrooms under the guise of non-discrimination at any train station or airport across this country -- or any other country for that matter -- and see what happens. I bet you it won't be pleasant -- and I guarantee you that no one will care about your perceived sexual identity.
But intellectual honesty wasn't the impetus for your comments in the first place, right?
by ivorytowerreform Posted on 05/10/2009