The University of Vermont's big new student center doesn't just have
women's bathrooms and men's bathrooms.
It also has gender-neutral bathrooms, a feature added to accommodate
transgendered people, as well as those with some disabilities. The four
single bathrooms in the new Dudley H. Davis Center — each with a
toilet, sink, shower and lockable door — cost about $2,500 a piece to
build. Their wall signs identify each as "gender neutral restroom."
"It's about inclusivity and accessibility and the importance of meeting
all people's needs, not just a few," said Annie Stevens, assistant vice
president for student and campus life.
UVM isn't the only school trying to make its accommodations more
accommodating.
At least 17 colleges and universities have included gender-neutral
bathrooms in their new construction or in retrofitting residence halls,
said Stephanie Gordon, director of educational programs at the National
Association of Student Personnel Administrators.
"A multi-use bathroom doesn't necessarily feel safe to transgendered
students, because they have concerns about how their gender would be
read by others," said Dot Brauer, director of the school's Lesbian,
Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning and Ally Services.
A woman who identifies as a man, for example, may not feel welcome in a
women's rest room. Transgendered people have been the target of verbal
and physical abuse in rest rooms and been arrested, or suspected of
lewd conduct, according to Mara Keisling, executive director of the
National Center for Transgender Equality.
"There are students whose safety and comfort is comprised," Brauer said.
Kelly, a 19-year-old transgendered UVM student who did want her last
name published, said she's been made to feel "very uncomfortable" in
rest rooms.
"I think that they're a really important thing to have," she said of
the new facilities. "Just because there can be tense situations in
gendered bathrooms, especially for trans-identified people, you need a
space to use the rest room and feel safe and comfortable."
In 2003, UVM started retrofitting male and female restrooms into unisex
bathrooms in classroom and administrative buildings by changing the
signs, at $100 each.
Not everyone sees the need.
"I always have concerns when institutions or the government legitimizes
behaviors or practices that could be discovered in the future to be
harmful to those individuals," said Stephen Cable, founder of Vermont
Renewal, a Rutland group dedicated to promoting traditional moral
values.
The group also opposes a new law protecting transgendered people in
Vermont from discrimination.
UVM has taken other steps to accommodate transgendered students. It
allows students to change their first names on their campus
identification cards and offers several gender-neutral residential
suites.
But Brauer said the school can do more. She wants to see more
gender-neutral bathrooms in the library, and private showers in the gym.
"If we can do something, however small, that takes a leap that is going
to make life better for members of our community who otherwise would be
vulnerable. UVM really shows a willingness to that," said Brauer.
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University of Vermont Adds 'Gender-Neutral' Bathrooms
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