Aimee Stephens was fired in 2013 after revealing to her employer that she intended to come back to work as a woman.
Aimee Stephens, at her home in Michigan. By Meagan Flynn Meagan Flynn Morning Mix reporter Email Bio Follow April 30 at 7:03 AM The letter that Aimee Stephens wrote to save her life also upended it, in more ways than she could have anticipated.
She presented the letter to her employer on July 31, 2013, revealing her intention to come to work as a woman. Her boss folded it up and put it in his pocket, saying nothing more than “Okay.”Stephens’s termination is one of three cases that the high court agreed to hear last week that each tackle the long unsettled question of whether federal anti-discrimination laws apply to employees based on their gender identity or sexual orientation.
She was about 5 when she began to believe she was somehow different, more interested in playing with dolls than with the other neighborhood boys, she said. But growing up in a conservative Southern Baptist family in Fayetteville, N.C., Stephens said she was never exposed to transgender people, or to any side of the gay community. Her church, she said, was “definitely against it.”
But while it was a breakthrough, she stopped short of expressing herself at work — fearing the exact outcome that ultimately unfolded. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued Harris Funeral Homes in 2014, arguing that the funeral home had engaged in sex discrimination against Stephens. Last year, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit agreed.
Malaysia Latest News, Malaysia Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
UN boss raises Xinjiang Uyghurs during his trip to ChinaAntonio Guterres has reminded China that its treatment of Uyghurs is still under close watch, during a recent trip to Beijing. Human rights must be fully respected when fighting terrorism, he told Chinese authorities during the weekend's billion-dollar Belt and Road Forum, according to a UN spokesman.
Read more »
Perspective | It’s time to return black women to the center of the history of women’s suffragePerspective: It’s time to return black women to the center of the history of women’s suffrage
Read more »
New abortion rule 'recklessly disregards' women's health, US judge writesA federal judge in Oregon issued a written opinion Monday saying the Trump administration's abortion clinic-referral restriction 'recklessly disregards the health outcomes of women, families, and communities.'
Read more »
Supreme Court appears likely to allow citizenship question in 2020 censusDuring arguments today, the US Supreme Court's conservative majority seemed willing to let the Trump admin. add the question about citizenship to the 2020 census form.
Read more »
Divided Supreme Court sides with business owners over workers in class arbitration rulingChief justice’s 13-page opinion prompts 31 pages of dissent from the court’s liberals.
Read more »
Supreme Court Immigration Case Could Be Bad For BusinessA new Supreme Court case may empower politically ambitious prosecutors to go after restaurants and other businesses on immigration grounds.
Read more »
Joe Biden spoke with Anita Hill, accuser of Supreme Court Justice Thomas, aide saysFormer vice president Joe Biden, who launched a bid for the Democratic nomination for president, has spoken with Anita Hill, the woman whose treatment during Justice Clarence Thomas's Senate confirmation hearings Biden has said he regrets.
Read more »
Supreme Court poised to give Trump victory on census citizenship questionConservative U.S. Supreme Court justices appeared sympathetic during opening arguments toward a bid by the Trump administration to add a citizenship query on the 2020 census via ReutersTV
Read more »
Trump on track for Supreme Court victory on census citizenship questionSupreme Court conservatives appear sympathetic toward Trump's census citizenship query via ReutersTV
Read more »