My nephew was not yet school age, but he was old enough to
get angry when my sister wanted to take him into the women’s restroom. Yet, it was a battle for her because she
couldn’t go with him into the men’s room, and she needed to protect him. Fortunately, since that time, unisex/family
restrooms have been added in many public buildings, making it easier for
parents with small children, or caretakers of those who need physical
assistance for whatever reason.
More recently the public restroom controversy has
resurfaced, currently centered in Charlotte, NC, following a recent passing of a nondiscrimination ordinance by the Charlotte City Council despite warnings
from the governor that the legislature would reverse the decision. Like far too
many issues, this one has turned into an angry political one with the
progressives fighting for transgender rights and the conservatives fighting
against public restroom predators. Both concerns are legitimate, and as most
often happens when issues become political, both sides are failing to see the
broader picture, and thus neglecting to seek meaningful and long-term
solutions, the kinds of solutions that come from listening across the table between
concerned voices on all sides of the issues.
In small spaces like medical offices or light traffic
recreation areas (like hiking trails), a single restroom has long been an
unquestioned accepted practice. When I’m out hiking, if there’s one small
restroom facility available I am grateful. It’s usually a single-seater with a
lock on the door. This seems a viable solution for many spaces. One restroom
for the use of one person at a time, regardless of gender, similar to what we
do in our homes. We don’t all go to the restroom together, but we don’t need
separate male/female facilities.
This is not the answer for larger spaces with heavier foot
traffic though, or for spaces heavily populated by teens, for multiple reasons.
Large public spaces like shopping malls
ideally need 3 separate restroom facilities – one for males, one for females,
and a smaller unisex/family one for those with all kinds of special needs.
Spaces where a mommy can comfortably take her little boy, a daddy can comfortable
take his little girl, a caretaker can take an elderly or physically challenged
patient, or a transgendered person can go without being questioned or
confronted.
But now let’s talk about schools, where I’m most likely to
step on toes on all sides. As a 29-year
educator who has plenty of experience with high school and college students and
restroom facilities, I caution us strongly about using our schools for winning
our political battles. Our schools need to be required to provide a similar third
restroom facility, but it must not be a
one-seater with a lock on the door, nor does the idea of fully enclosing the
stalls work for the school environment.
Middle School and High School students are not little
adults. They are struggling youth trying to figure out how to navigate a
confusing world of hormones and choices, often just following their peers or their
own hormonal instincts. Middle schools
and High schools already have restroom issues. It’s where kids go to smoke
cigarettes, squatting with their feet on the toilet seat so they don’t show
under the stall. It’s where they go to smoke pot. It’s where they go to have sex
if they think they can get away with it. Given fully enclosed stalls and/or a
unisex facility with a lock on the door, all school control is handed over to
the students – their own private place to do anything they want to do with or
without whomever they want to do it. This is a school nightmare. So a unisex facility for special needs, yes,
but it needs to be a two-stall space with partially open stalls just like the
gender-specific restrooms, with no private lock on the door.
The transgender issue is only one segment of the restroom
controversy, but is not one that should be swept under the carpet as a
political battle. It is real and far more widespread than most of us have any
idea. In recent years I have had
students every semester who privately request I call them he, or she, or
neither. Middle school, high school, and
college are confusing times for many, and very fertile ground for those who
bully and taunt.
Likewise, the issue of child predators is a real
concern. While most people in public
restrooms are not pedophiles, pedophiles and child predators definitely exist,
and public restrooms have proven an attractive target for them.
The public restroom conversation is an important one but is damaged when framed
within a solely political context. Every public space needs to provide a
unisex/family restroom facility for those who need it, and in addition,
larger spaces and all schools need to continue providing gender-specific ones,
to ensure the comfort and safety of everyone..
To frame the entire conversation as being all about transgendered people
or all about pedophiles is flawed, as flawed as it is pretend that one or the
other does not exist. If a real solution
is to be reached, the conversation must include both political arguments plus
the differences in types of facilities and their populations, and the well-being
of the varied physically challenged people who live and work all around us.
3 comments:
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Thank you for reading and sharing your thoughts, Jayashri and Kabir Khan!
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