Target is joining the chorus of corporate entities taking issue with North Carolina’s controversial Public Facilities Privacy & Security Act, which critics have argued sanctions prejudice against members of the LGBT community.
The ubiquitous chain of retail stores has stated on their official company website that their employees and customers will be encouraged to use the restroom that “corresponds with their gender identity.” The statement could be interpreted as act of defiance against the North Carolina law, which has been derisively referred to as a “bathroom bill” precisely because it bars trans people from using facilities that correspond with their identity.
“Inclusivity is a core belief at Target,” they added. “It’s something we celebrate.”
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While Republican Gov. Pat McCrory — who signed the North Carolina bill into law late last month — has said that legislators should consider some revisions to the bill, he has steadfastly stood by it, despite the fact that a number of companies and famous figures have said they will cease to do business in the state because of it. McCrory has seen his poll numbers take a significant hit amid the fallout. Meanwhile, Target’s stance is the latest example of an uncharacteristically progressive bent from a huge corporate entity.
In 2014, after a rash of highly publicized mass shootings, Target formally changed its firearms policy to prevent armed customers from entering their locations. “We’ve listened carefully to the nuances of this debate and respect the protected rights of everyone involved. In return, we are asking for help in fulfilling our goal to create an atmosphere that is safe and inviting for our guests and team members,” John Mulligan, interim chief executive officer of Target, said in a statement at the time.
In 2015 alone, they bowed to public pressure and raised the starting wage of their employees to $9 an hour (and in 2016, increased it to $10 an hour), they removed gender-based signs from their toys, and backed the Equality Act — which provided LGBT discrimination protections to citizens of their home state of Minnesota and around the country. The chain was also among several stores that agreed to stop selling merchandise featuring the Confederate flag following a national outcry over a racially-motivated massacre at a black church in Charleston, South Carolina.
“It’s fantastic to see a brand with the reach and visibility of Target make clear that treating transgender employees and customers with the same dignity and respect as everyone else is the right thing to do. Corporations like Target are becoming increasingly vocal opponents of measures designed to single out not just LGBT people, but particularly transgender people, for harm,” Dan Rafter, a spokesman for the gay rights organization Freedom For All Americans, told MSNBC on Wednesday. “Statements like the one from Target this week are a reminder that at the end of the day, everyone deserves to be treated fairly and equally.”
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